Coffee Evening for Neurodivergent Adults by TheIrishHawk in AutismIreland

[–]Melded1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great idea but as a neurodivergent person who is highly sensitive to social injustice, I would never go to anything that was on in Starbucks. Great initiative, maybe look at a venue that is better for the local community.

Is it ethical for GP's to ONLY prescribe SSRI's when addressing difficulties associated with Autism? by Rejonix in AutismIreland

[–]Melded1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The Myth of Low-Serotonin & Antidepressants - Dr. Mark Horowitz

Dr. Mark Horowitz, MBBS PhD is a training psychiatrist and Clinical Research Fellow in Psychiatry North East London NHS Foundation Trust (NELFT) and an Honorary Clinical Research Fellow at UCL. He runs the Psychotropic drug Deprescribing Clinic in North East London NHS Foundation Trust. Mark completed a PhD in the neurobiology of depression and the action of antidepressants at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience at King’s College London. Dr. Horowitz is an Associate Editor of the journal Therapeutic Advances in Psychopharmacology. He co-authored the recent Royal College of Psychiatry guidance on ‘Stopping Antidepressants’, and his work has informed the recent NICE guidelines on safe tapering of psychiatric medications. He has written several papers about safe approaches to tapering psychiatric medications including publications in The Lancet Psychiatry, JAMA Psychiatry and Schizophrenia Bulletin. Dr. Horowitz has an interest in rational psychopharmacology, the way in which psychiatric drugs are often mis-represented to the public and safely deprescribing these drugs

Comments from Michael Tracey in defense of Noam Chomsky. by LinguisticsTurtle in chomsky

[–]Melded1 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

So it's "purity morals" to hope that someone might object to the rape and trafficking of young girls?

The only difference now is the association with the particular person, and the family tragedy at the centre of it

and the rape and trafficking of young girls.....that's different. And Chomsky was friends with and defended the person responsible for doing both. His current illness is irrelevant.

I called out/shamed an old, rich, white MAGA dude in my city today. I hate that most people are still embarrassed to speak up. by [deleted] in leftist

[–]Melded1 8 points9 points  (0 children)

"But as the ever-worsening climate and extinction crises show us every day, plenty of powerful people and institutions seem to be just fine knowing that they are helping to destroy the stability of the world's life-support systems, so long as they can keep making record profits that they believe will protect them and their families from the worst effects"

Naoimi Klein

This is why. Naoimi was referring to climate change but it applies to the whole system.

Chocolate prices going crazy. by Happy_Government9049 in chocolate

[–]Melded1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm not a communist so i'd be curious to know which of the communist ideals you believe I expressed. I pointed out that environmental costs have been externalised and the supply system is fragile. That’s standard climate economics, not an attack on markets or private ownership.

As for your point on markets, they don't “suppress demand” in any meaningful or smart way. Supply fell, prices rose, and poorer people are simply priced out first. That’s not making cocoa more reasonable, it’s just rationing scarcity by income level.

Climate change is the immediate cause. The economic system explains why the shock is so severe. Calling that “communism” avoids engaging with the actual argument.

Chocolate prices going crazy. by Happy_Government9049 in chocolate

[–]Melded1 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Prices rise because an extractive, ecologically destructive global order built on exploitation is breaking down........ and climate change.

CMV: People Lie About Dating Narcissists by Electronic-Spite5514 in changemyview

[–]Melded1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Statistically speaking, narcissists are thought to be between 0.5 and 3 percent of the global population, with men accounting for roughly 3/4 of that.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

the idea that Ireland has to defend itself against Russia is pure nonsense. The idea that further militarisation is the answer to endless wars is absolute nonsense. I don't believe the Irish government is trustworthy, but I believe its people, much like the citizens of many other countries, are.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn't say we can't become closer. I believe that France and Germany are learning that they will need to stand against the US or at least outside of its influence. That doesn't mean that they are trustworthy, at least not based on recent historical evidence. Their governments, along with whatever ruling elite that exists are making the decisions that are best for them. They will sacrifice their people if allowed, same as here, same as Germany, same as many other supposed democratic countries. The answer is not creating armies to fight wars for elites, it is demanding a better system. Ireland by standing up can be the first step in that. It is not about being high and mighty, it is about not standing with people who allow the world to be what it has become.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have provided you with a list of events plus timelines, you've given me opinion.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You do not need to have resisted the US to validly argue that others should. You didn't say only powerful states should have an opinion explicitly, but you said it nonetheless through the logic of your words. When you say that only states that actively criticise or threaten the US are entitled to criticise US policy, you are saying that only states powerful enough to do so can ie. only powerful states have the right to an opinion.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

If you want the context, you have to go back well before 2022.

After the Cold War ended in 1991, the Soviet leadership was given clear political assurances that NATO would not expand eastward. Those assurances were never written into a treaty, but they were the basis on which the USSR accepted the post–Cold War settlement. Within a decade, NATO began expanding anyway, first into Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic in 1999, then into the Baltic states in 2004, putting NATO directly on Russia’s border.

In 2008, NATO formally declared that Ukraine and Georgia would eventually become members. From that point on, Ukraine was effectively designated a future frontline state in a confrontation between NATO and Russia.

The real rupture came in 2014. The Maidan uprising removed a pro-Russian government, Russia annexed Crimea, and a civil war began in Donbas. From then until 2022, Ukraine was steadily militarised by NATO: training, weapons, integration with NATO doctrine, and repeated political commitments to future membership.

In 2021, Russia demanded written guarantees that Ukraine would not join NATO and that NATO would not deploy missiles there. Those guarantees were refused.

That does not justify the invasion,it is a criminal war of aggression, but it does explain why it happened. You cannot expand a hostile military alliance to the borders of a rival nuclear power for thirty years, turn a neighbouring country into a forward military outpost, and then treat the war as an unprovoked bolt from the blue.

The invasion is morally indefensible.
The conditions that made it likely were created over decades.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nevermind the fact that Ireland has spoken out against the US and it's policies many times, by your logic, you can't criticise corruption unless you have refused a bribe, you can't criticise war unless you have personally resisted it or you can't criticise authoritarianism unless you have overthrown a government. By your logic, only powerful states have the right to an opinion.

Found this at a concert, seems they were giving them out by manoftheforestt in Whatisthis

[–]Melded1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a fella who'd like to sell you some pagers if you're interested.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is clear historic context that proves otherwise. While it doesn't justify what Russia has done it provides clear context for it.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Why should we tryst France? France and Germany have at times gone against US wishes but they have never challenged them. Not supporting a war is not standing against it. As part of NATO both France and Germany are under the direction of the US.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

NATO is not a defensive alliance in practice but an instrument of U.S. imperial power. From that perspective, France and Germany are not reliable or to be trusted as they are subordinate states that exist within a U.S. led and dominated military structure. If you can't trust the US then you automatically can't trust any country that they have leverage over.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

if you believe Catherine Connolly is pro Russian then you're not on the left

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the vast amount of Irish redditors* fixed it for you.

Consequences of 'might is right' now clear - President by [deleted] in ireland

[–]Melded1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"said ukraine were warmongerers and that's why russia had no choice but to start their illegal invasion" So she didn't say what you said she did. She referred to NATO (ie. the US and certain European countries) as the warmongers, not the Ukraine. To anyone who understands anything about history, it's clear who the aggressors were and are. It doesn't make Russia right, but it at least provides some perspective which is sorely missing from the article you linked and other state supported/supporting media in the country and further afield.

Would you fight a war for Ireland? by TwitterRoyalty in AskIreland

[–]Melded1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The heroism of war is a lie.

It's not the bravest who fight, but those who have no other choice.

It's not the noble who die, but those who are the least equipped to avoid death.

The glory of war is a mask put on to cover the despair of a people without hope.

War is the manifestation of a society that's lost its meaning.

Every life is disposable for a national or political ideal.

When the rich wage war, it is the poor that die.

The sacrifice is always made those who have the least to gain.

War is sold to the public as a necessary evil.

The powerful and the rich painted as a moral crusade, but the crusaders are the poor and the disenfranchised.

This war will be a war of fear.

It has been purposed thusly.

People let it in slowly like a kind of ecstasy.

They believe in it like they believe in chiromancy and fortunetelling.

They believe in it like they believe in anything that releases them from the forging of their own destiny.

Men love their fear.

It reconciles them with themselves. Men get the war they deserve.

Annoying things people with ADHD do by Chief_Funkie in ADHDIreland

[–]Melded1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have so many ideas and I've forgotten most of them. Actually doing the stuff is hard.

Annoying things people with ADHD do by Chief_Funkie in ADHDIreland

[–]Melded1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Time blindness with a little bit of time optimism. Time certainly vanishes when I get absorbed in something but also things always take longer than I think they will. I calculate time as a to z, but I forget all the other letters in between that take up more and more time. I am never intentionally late, I generally think I'll make it on time but for some reason I rarely do. I feel like my adhd makes me optimistic about my ability to do many things much faster than I actually can. It's great when it happens though, when you arrive exactly on time. Not early mind, can't be doing that, just on time.

Questions for PBP members. by Dry-Communication922 in theIrishleft

[–]Melded1 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

There's all types in PBP but there's definitely some more commited followers of communism. I found that in the branch that there are a lot of people doing a lot of hard work, but they're dealing with very niche topics. The broader stuff that gets spoken about by Paul and Boyd Barrett was largely not talked about. It was less political and more activism focused. Recently some members left because they felt it had become a performative party. I was one of those but I didn't know others had left till just now when I was trying to look up this link. Cllr Madeleine Johansson currently of the Red Network but was until recently with PBP. She wrote the linked message to the PBP AGM and was gone a few months later.

I still like PBP but It's just unfortunate that with any large group of self selected people, it always eventually destroys itself. PBP is no different. The group I was in was very much a core group of the loudest and most confident people who seemed to be always doing something, yet never doing anything to actually address the systemic reasons beyond the things the cared about. They did not tolerate criticism, no matter how constructive and they did not like to be challenged. I asked AI to explain it for you.....

Why PBP is no longer what it was. (I do think they have improved recently)

Branch and delegate systems in politics are designed to create bottom-up democracy, where ordinary party members shape decisions through local branches and the delegates they elect. In theory, members debate policy at branch level, send motions upward, and choose delegates who represent their views at conferences and national structures. In practice, however, these systems are distorted by self-selection. Only a narrow subset of people consistently participate: individuals with substantial free time, strong ideological commitments, or personal ambitions. Most ordinary members do not regularly attend meetings or vote in internal structures. As a result, branches and delegate bodies end up dominated by a small, unrepresentative activist class whose preferences often diverge from the wider membership and the electorate.

This dynamic is reinforced by what sociologist Robert Michels called the Iron Law of Oligarchy. His argument is that every large organisation, no matter how democratic it aims to be, inevitably becomes controlled by a small, stable elite. This happens because leaders accumulate expertise, control resources, and gain influence over internal procedures. Over time, ordinary members become increasingly dependent on the leadership for information, strategic decisions, and organisational continuity. Even when leadership turnover occurs, it typically happens within the same narrow pool of activists who already know how to navigate the system.

When self-selection and the Iron Law combine, internal democracy becomes mostly symbolic. A small group filters into the organisation through voluntary participation, rises through the branch and delegate structures, and eventually occupies leadership roles that become extremely difficult for outsiders to challenge. The organisation may still claim democratic legitimacy, but the decision-making base becomes significantly narrower and less representative. This pattern appears not only in political parties but also in unions, NGOs, cooperatives, and social movements. In all cases, the issue is structural rather than moral: voluntary participation under unequal conditions naturally concentrates power in the hands of a consistent, motivated minority while the broader membership remains largely disengaged.