We probably don’t agree.
I probably said something you didn’t like.
You look lovely, by the way. New shirt?

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  • 30 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • I live in Australia, and I hate the lack of seasonal variation. Almost every day of the year is sunny with a varying temperature between 15C-45C, or overcast/humid. On the west coast, it rains a whole lot in winter. Visually there aren’t a whole lot of environmental changes, and as an Aussie, the year is generally split into “too hot, less hot, cold, less cold, and repeat.”

    I get the appeal of seasonal stability to those in the northern hemisphere, but live here long enough, and you’ll probably miss the way the passage of time seems to pass when each quarter of the year brings with it refreshing scenery and liveliness.

    I’ve always wanted to live in a country that experiences and celebrates the changes of the seasons and all the visual beauty it brings, and truth be told, Aussie culture and pastimes don’t appeal to me at all. I feel very alone here.


  • Is Session actually secure though? I know they’re based in Australia, and as an Aussie myself, holy fuck would I not trust this country for even a fraction of a picosecond with anything private or sensitive. We have some of the world’s most draconian and far-reaching digital privacy and surveillance laws, and I’m not ready to accept that Session hasn’t been secretly compromised by the AFP, given the law against revealing government backdoors.

    Happy to be proven wrong, but I always err on the side of extreme caution when it comes to Australia. Digitally, we’re closer to the CCP than any of our fellow western nations.



  • Exactly. The issue with incels is that they actively do nothing to improve their chances in the dating world, and then instead of looking inward, blame women for their own shortcomings. “I’m a stupid moron with an ugly face and big butt and my butt smells and… women should still want to fuck me because I’m owed sex.”

    Fuck these people.




  • Kidney stones are second only to biliary colic for me. I’ve never fucking felt pain like it, and I’ve got a very high pain tolerance. I had an attack come on that was so bad, I passed out twice between bouts of writhing around on the floor like a worm, unable to even speak.

    An emergency run to the hospital, 4 shots of fentanyl, and an ultrasound later, and it turns out my gallbladder was set to explode. Also turns out it’d been fucking rotting inside me for years, and a previous hospital stay failed to mention it in 2019 despite them knowing about it.

    So FUCKING glad that’s over now. Towards the end, merely drinking water would set off an attack.




  • Agreed. It actually terrifies me, because the implications are huge on a cultural level with regards to feelings of autonomy, ability to ascertain when rules or social conditionings are inherently detrimental and should be ignored (or outright fought against), not to mention the erosion of critical thinking, the rampant dopamine regulation issues that’ll follow the youngest members of society potentially for life, etc.

    I am EXTREMELY worried for the young gen Z/gen Alpha cohort, as this kind of thing already seems so deeply-ingrained in their attitudes and acceptance of, quite frankly, bullshit corporate-driven cleanspeak, that I’m certain future governments are just rubbing their hands together waiting for an era where passing oppressive speech restrictions and destructive online privacy policies will be a certainty, assuming that by voting age, the youngest among us don’t realize what they’re unknowingly being influenced by and push back against it.

    I know this post comes off as alarmist, but people have to realize that massive cultural shifts take place after, what at the time seem to be unimportant social attitudes or opinions, begin to take hold of a generation… and I’m personally very, very worried.



  • This complaint about wind power has always come across as the kind of thing people say because they heard somebody else say it. imo, it’s just stupid people who desperately want to have an opinion on the topic weighing in with the only piece of criticism they’ve overhead some Sky News host parrot at some point in the past, and because that host had authority on the matter in their minds, it gives them some kind of false confidence to then go forward and proclaim the visual pollution argument, as if it has any real basis in anything.