[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 3 points 8 hours ago

ok but when I got the slipknot DVD 'disasterpieces' in like 2003 or 4 in the backstage footage they revealed that they also piss themselves on stage so....

Steve bannon is nu metal?

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 11 points 14 hours ago

Yeah, I meant the proven wrong part of my post to be facetious. There's no possible way i would believe without so much evidence

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 8 points 15 hours ago

"is your genitals too big/ small/weird"

yes

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 5 points 15 hours ago

When you look at AES countries, places that had the best childcare in human history, absolute job security, super low costs of living, then no, it doesn't work like that. The DDR is a perfect example. Everybody who has experienced it misses the childcare and education system of the DDR, they had a lot more women in the workforce than west Germany, raising kids was so much safer and easier and they still had lower birthrates than the west

Makes sense. I would bet the influence of religious and other societal pressures to have a kid are far more influential than economic stability. Personally I can't imagine having any kids before 30, I didn't, and it's still considered very late. How any of these 20-something parents I meet manage I'll never know.

Hexbears have to get it out of their heads that "anti-natalism" is a rightwing stance. In fact, "anti-natalism" is a nazbol dogwhistle to smear queer liberation and free abortion, people like Haz have used it this way for years and it still just gets thrown around here willy nilly, it's sickening.

I personally think the blanket ban on the topic is a relic of when it and childfree were subreddits that, in typical reddit fashion, became cesspits that used the term 'crotch-goblin' and such. I wasn't aware of the nazbol connection as I don't interact with that stuff at all but it is a troubling connection to consider.

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 21 points 16 hours ago

The logistics of moving thousands of boxes of widgets, each weighing 150lbs, to be stored in an industrial complex would involve a lot of people.

Doing so when those boxes are distributed around the country and in such a fashion that it's not visible to prying eyes would involve an order of magnitude more people, all committed to the purpose of secrecy for these widgets.

Ok now it's corpses of people protesting the government. Someone who thinks Iran did this atrocity and was able to cover it up so well PLEASE EXPLAIN IT TO ME. I have some formal logistics training but I could be proven wrong.

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 42 points 17 hours ago

sports

basketball

ai

The most interesting person in the world

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 38 points 18 hours ago

My special move is falling asleep on the XL couch before the sex stuff happens you all can have fun i'm eepy i have work in the morning

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 13 points 18 hours ago

giant already out here barefoot since the beginning dudes get no love

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 28 points 18 hours ago

The weird pro-natalism / breeding fetish that some dudes on hexbear have

Is this talking about something specific or just the fact that hexbear doesn't allow anti-natalist posts?

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 22 points 18 hours ago

It's hard. It's tiring. It involves a lot of self reflection and emotional regulation. Stressful as all fuck. Annoying, too.

I wouldn't say it sucks, though. I also certainly haven't offloaded my share of the burden onto my wife, either.

The feelings of love and joy I have felt because of my offspring are stronger than any I felt before.

Not for everyone, though, of course.

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 46 points 18 hours ago

full head of hair, perfect scores on all the physical tests, genetic profile ready to go but...

says here you're 5'11" sorry, that's incompatible with our positioning requirements.

[-] Acute_Engles@hexbear.net 34 points 1 day ago

If this is real they're gonna execute the worst land invasion of all time everyone will have tummy upset

49

You're being played for absolute fools

29

Discuss

25
submitted 2 months ago by Acute_Engles@hexbear.net to c/art@hexbear.net

Purrloin chilling

11
submitted 2 months ago by Acute_Engles@hexbear.net to c/art@hexbear.net

Hehe breeder

23
submitted 2 months ago by Acute_Engles@hexbear.net to c/art@hexbear.net

I love goth moltres. This is a picture from my personal collection so it's blurry fight me

43
submitted 2 months ago by Acute_Engles@hexbear.net to c/art@hexbear.net

Ehehehe

36
submitted 2 months ago by Acute_Engles@hexbear.net to c/art@hexbear.net

This card was in basically every competitive deck until recently. Now it's used less because there's a lot more hand-swapping stuff that's standard legal

@WokePalpatine@hexbear.net I noticed you hadn't posted for a few days so I'm taking the torch. If you want to do it I can stop!

15

"... yeah that's not the left you know the US republicans ended slavery not the democrats..."

I was driving a scissor lift and don't know anyone involved in the conversation or I'd likely have asked.

Someone tell me this is a quote from the hot new TV show pluribus or something because that small set of words had me off my game all day.

Like what could he have been saying 'thats not the left' about? America didn't end slavery? We don't even live there?

26

Obviously if the doctor switched me off vyvanse it's not ideal. I'm having serious executive disfunction and it's going to be weeks until they let me refill.

I don't remember the brand name of the one I'm supposed to be taking but if it's important I'll get the chemical name off the bottle.

Priority 1 is still finding the bottle but garbage bag man needs his pills.

19

(screenshot of a site tagline that references a story about being trapped in honey, i forgot to copy it for the transcript oops)

Even if it was just made up on the spot i need to know. It's so perfect

37

My cat had to be euthanized today. She would often times climb onto my lap as I played my little children's card game on my computer after the kid has gone to bed. Then I would lean back as far as i could and she'd cuddle on on my chest right under my chin and give me kisses like a dog does.

I have so many of these codes and idk i feel like spreading something to people and I'm between jobs right now so i can't do meaningful aid stuff

if you use them all, please comment so i can add moreNN4-4ZZV-HDZ-N7G

M7H-TX7B-DVJ-KCM

CCZ-6749-LHD-DDH

V27-4QHD-C7J-YVH

CHR-QYD6-NC4-YVC

WNC-9Y29-GGB-CN4

CXN-R4LJ-PDK-6B2

HTX-MWCP-KQX-JZP

JJY-ZZNR-24N-JDK

ZY4-ZPPX-BKQ-NHG

4TJ-76NX-HHK-R4D

QH7-WXBL-BVN-M7N

I'm going to post another bunch of codes in the den (hexbears only!) because I want most of them to go to comrades

Pretty sure these only work on live but if they work on pocket, I'd be interested to learn that!

49
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Acute_Engles@hexbear.net to c/chapotraphouse@hexbear.net

But I think some of the anti-consumerism is driven by less noble motives. The wealthier you are, the more accessible the alternatives are to buying things off Amazon. You can afford to get products custom-made for you, or make them yourself; you have more leisure time to go pick things up off Facebook Marketplace or drive up and down half the coast thrift shopping. Related

Most people can’t. For them, the ability to purchase cheap consumer products at affordable prices is life-changing. And I think that, as the Trump administration tries to rationalize its tariffs by assuring us that we don’t need affordable goods, it’s high time to acknowledge that, in fact, it is a good thing when goods are affordable.

If amazon didn't provide cheap treats for the poors, they'd have no treats at all!

I think it’s good when consumer goods are affordable; I think it’s good when people on a very limited income can still buy a pile of Christmas presents for their kids; I think it’s good that people can be financially responsible and also have lots of hobbies and fund lots of activities for their kids and their kids’ friends.

Just imagine what this person's idea of "a very limited income" is or what that hypothetical "pile" of gifts would be composed of.

Full article text

archive.ph The case for cheap products as Trump’s tariffs raise prices | Vox 6–8 minutes

We live in a consumerist society. But at least speaking for my own social circles, we also live in an anti-consumerist society: We purchase lots of things, and we also feel vaguely guilty about it and brag about all of the ways we do without. (Buy secondhand! Get things off a Buy Nothing group! Reuse! Recycle!) Future Perfect

Explore the big, complicated problems the world faces and the most efficient ways to solve them. Sent twice a week.

Some of this anti-consumerism is driven by concerns about work conditions in the developing countries we trade with, and I certainly think improving work conditions in those countries should be a high global priority. Some of it is driven by environmental concerns, and I would similarly rejoice at a carbon tax that tried to capture the externalities of our consumption.

But I think some of the anti-consumerism is driven by less noble motives. The wealthier you are, the more accessible the alternatives are to buying things off Amazon. You can afford to get products custom-made for you, or make them yourself; you have more leisure time to go pick things up off Facebook Marketplace or drive up and down half the coast thrift shopping.

Most people can’t. For them, the ability to purchase cheap consumer products at affordable prices is life-changing. And I think that, as the Trump administration tries to rationalize its tariffs by assuring us that we don’t need affordable goods, it’s high time to acknowledge that, in fact, it is a good thing when goods are affordable.

Cheap things are good

In practice, everyone wants cheap consumer goods, everyone votes for cheap consumer goods, and everyone chooses cheap consumer goods. But, generally, they do it with a lot of hand-wringing.

I wrote earlier this week on X about some of the things that cheap consumer goods have made possible in my life and for my family. I run a civics class at my kids’ school; there are 10 kids, and purchasing 10 of anything adds up quickly. But because consumer goods are cheap, I was able to buy equipment for papermaking when we wanted to learn about papermaking, model trees and people for our talk about urban design, dress-up costumes for the occasional special lesson, and much more.

I can try a hobby I’d otherwise never try if it were a $1,000 outlay to get the equipment my (large) family needed. I bought plastic dice when I wanted to get into Dungeons & Dragons. I don’t have to jump down my oldest daughter’s throat when she inexplicably manages to rip the hem off every single dress she owns because we can afford to replace it.

My family is wealthy; we could make do with higher consumer prices. But a lot of families cannot. And even for the well-off, lower consumer prices mean I can donate 30 percent of our income to charity and give my kids good lives and save for retirement.

I am in my local Buy Nothing group; I do borrow from my neighbors, and lend to them.

Nonetheless, access to cheap consumer goods makes my life wildly better, and it makes things accessible that otherwise wouldn’t be possible at all for me. I think some of the responses I received were less about how to live in harmony with the planet (for which living in a walkable neighborhood and not owning a car matters far more than buying things off Amazon) or how to improve economic conditions in poor countries (for which free trade is actually one of the best tools we know of) and more about if they represented a reflexive disgust of each other’s consumption habits.

And so I’m anti-anti-consumerism, at least in its current form. It’s full of harsh judgment of other people for not sewing their children’s outfits by hand, which is willfully ignorant of all the ways that — even if you personally rely on thrifting and Buy Nothing groups — your lifestyle is made possible by the fact that consumer goods are affordable.

I think it’s good when consumer goods are affordable; I think it’s good when people on a very limited income can still buy a pile of Christmas presents for their kids; I think it’s good that people can be financially responsible and also have lots of hobbies and fund lots of activities for their kids and their kids’ friends.

The tariffs will make our lives worse

All of this is a major reason why I think the tariffs are extraordinarily bad. (One estimate on the tariffs as of Thursday — which, of course, may change any moment — is that they amount to a $4,400 tax hike per household.)

I don’t think that hiking up the price of consumer goods will make our trading partners overseas better off, and I think it’ll make our lives worse and more difficult, impacting the people who are struggling to get by most profoundly. I think our society is so wealthy that in some ways we’ve lost sight of why, yes, material things do matter, and their inexpensive availability is something to celebrate.

That celebration need not be unnuanced or clueless. Each week on Shabbat, my family says the traditional blessings and sings a song that’s not at all part of the traditional Shabbat liturgy, Vienna Teng’s “Landsailor” — a love song to trucks and trains and cargo ships and the global supply chain, a hymn of celebration for deep winter strawberries and the abundance that has made every person in America richer than a medieval king.

It is also about the price in human suffering, animal suffering, environmental damage, and danger we’re inviting as we build a world increasingly powered by people and sacrifices we don’t see. But the spirit in the song is one of joy and celebration, tempered by awareness of the bigger picture — not one of condemnation, contempt, or disgust.

Right now, it’s a MAGA talking point that affordable goods have somehow corroded our society and we have a patriotic duty to accept high price increases in the service of Trump’s vision. But their argument has a lot in common with the loathing of the American consumer on the left. I am generally in favor of a world where we tax externalities and ban forced labor, but I want a world where more people can consume like Americans, not a world where no one is. The good is something to celebrate, and abundance is a form the good takes. It’s also something that frees us up to tackle the world’s ills in both their ancient and modern forms.

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Acute_Engles

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