[-] UnkTheUnk@midwest.social 5 points 5 months ago

editorially? yea there's still investigative pieces that are worth reading on there sometimes

[-] UnkTheUnk@midwest.social 14 points 5 months ago

I use https://gitlab.com/magnolia1234/bypass-paywalls-firefox-clean and I almost never reach a paywall, not sure if there's a chrome version

[-] UnkTheUnk@midwest.social 1 points 7 months ago

murder is in general bad, fed-posting is inadvisable

also there's a broader boring argument about the dangers of violence being normalized as means of political change, but those arguments are boring

[-] UnkTheUnk@midwest.social 4 points 2 years ago

Fascists think they do

[-] UnkTheUnk@midwest.social 13 points 2 years ago

I can't really imagine danger being particularly extreme for anyone other than trans people, for trans folk updating passports is likely a good idea. But keep in mind that blue states would still be relatively safe.

If shit truly gets to the point where it's death squads and fascist street gangs, realistically there would not be anywhere in the world that would be safe.

[-] UnkTheUnk@midwest.social 132 points 2 years ago

I don't think we need to be worried about full-blown civil war, but preparing for an increase in stochastic terrorism probably isn't the worst idea.

[-] UnkTheUnk@midwest.social 6 points 2 years ago

truth is dead

[-] UnkTheUnk@midwest.social 12 points 2 years ago
[-] UnkTheUnk@midwest.social 25 points 2 years ago

new skill learned: "investigative journalism"

[-] UnkTheUnk@midwest.social 5 points 2 years ago

An important aspect of the success of D&D/40k has been fan creations and lore explainers. A challenge for growing a creative commons (alternatives is that there isn't a unified set of "cannon" stories for independent creators to make "TOP 10 WACKIEST THINGS IN [franchise]" which are the intellectual equivalent to baby food (which I don't mean as an insult).

then again, d&d and 40k are popular because the companies that own them decided to let smaller creators do the work of reprocessing the decades worth of lore into easily consumable and marketable chunks. Both the small creators and the central company got to symbiotically feed off of the brand value of the other. Then begins the enshitification once the brand reaches the mainstream

The problem for less centrally controlled media isn't just that there isn't decades worth interconnected lore within one overarching franchise, it's that stories that aren't centrally controlled will mutate and be remixed too much to have the sort of symbiotic brand growth of 40k and d&d

7

It would be extremely funny

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UnkTheUnk

joined 3 years ago