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Flight attendants at American Airlines now face being terminated if they catch COVID-19 after the Fort Worth-based carrier reinstated its pr
Also preserved in our archive
Yearning for the inhuman again. I need to defy perception. I need there to be something unnameably but persisently Wrong when other people look at the physical form I inhabit. I need my existence to blur and shatter at the edges so nobody can look at it head on. I need to light up as a different creature type when the cursor hovers over me. Instead all these people are trying to talk to me as if we are the same species and i am here clawing at the bars of my enclosure so i can be let out to Unsettle people
i think vox as a person should become more unstable and emotionally dysregulated every time he updates his brain to be able to take calls/navigate the internet/manage a city-wide surveillance network/whatever other new task that neither he, televisions, nor the human psyche were designed to perform. he was already fucked up to begin with now he's off-loading all those incidental little mental functions like metacognitive awareness and affective empathy to clear up space for tracking analytics
Daniel Martin Diaz, “The Coming Era” 2023
In “The Coming Era” a colossal skeleton represents the dark influence of technology and censorship by major tech companies and governments. Towering ominously, it destroys a once-bustling city, illustrating the potential erosion of culture, freedom, and individuality. The intricate details of the skeleton emphasize the complex nature of technology, while its stark contrast with the cityscape highlights the looming threat these powerful entities pose. Crushing buildings and dropping humans onto the devastated landscape, the scene symbolizes the exploitation and disposability of humanity in the face of unchecked technological advancement — written by ai
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Sometimes I see folks and critters talk about struggling to explain their identity to those outside of their community due to the negative connotations. Some folks enjoy pronouns that aren't traditional, wear things in order to feel more themselves, and some even wish to be treated as something other than human (in one way or another). Many humans see this as an odd sort of self deprecation.
"It/it's pronouns are dehumanizing." "Being treated like a/an [inhuman animal/entity] is cruel." "Wearing that doesn't allow people to take you seriously." Sure, alterhumans may (almost) always seem strange and unconventional. There's not much to be done about that. I however think that the negative speak around it has a little more to it. I believe that the confusion lies in the misunderstanding that nonhuman and subhuman are the same. Mankind has separated themselves from the natural world so much that everything that isn't human or modern is deemed lesser. If someone wants to be referred to as an animal, they aren't telling you to be mean to them. They don't consider themself to be less than a human. They're just not a human. If someone wears a collar, they aren't degrading themselves. They aren't calling themselves property (unless that's their thing, but that's a bit different). They're just expressing themself. If someone uses neopronouns, they aren't objectifying themselves (at least not in a negative way). They're not calling themselves lesser. My yap basically boils down to inhuman ≠ subhuman. Thank you for your time.
Your beauty transcends human perception. It only makes sense to describe you as.. nonhuman.