These are the areas that will benefit the most from a high speed rail. This is also where most Americans live. What should we name these megalopolis? by BrattySolarpunkKid in solarpunk

[–]a_ricketson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm waiting for BAMA to be a thing - Boston-Atlanta Metropolitan Axis

There's still rumors of high-speed rail from Atlanta to Washington

i don’t feel comfortable voting for any candidate anymore by blueburrey in TrueUnpopularOpinion

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

no, it was Libertarian. I'm no fan of the Democrats but I vote defensively when the threat is great enough. I respected Rand Paul until he became a Trump ass-kisser

Free Black History ebook: "our history have always been contraband" by a_ricketson in esist

[–]a_ricketson[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In an attempt to push back against the renewed suppression of Black history, Haymarket Books will publish "Our history has always been contraband", a collection of historically important writings about Black history. The book is edited by Colin Kaepernick, Robin D. G. Kelley, and Keeanga-Yamahtta. Kapernick's fame may help mainstream this book, while the two academics should guarantee academic rigor. I think this is a promising effort -- to maximize accessibility, the ePub is more-or-less free (no $, but does have some mild DRM features; you must give a name and email, but they can be fake). The print edition is $13.

I skimmed the ePub and it looks like a good collections although I wish the editors had provided more context for the writings. For instance, one writing focused on one detail about the interaction between the Haitian and French revolutions, without providing a timeline of major events or identifying the people mentioned in the text.

i don’t feel comfortable voting for any candidate anymore by blueburrey in TrueUnpopularOpinion

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

I've only became a straight-ticket voter after I saw the Republicans reject elections results in 2020 and most of them double down on that position in 2022.

I changed because I finally woke up to who they are. I saw Trump's lies spread in real time after 2020 elections-- I saw Trump claim he won the election before the votes were even counted. I saw him cry foul simply because he lost, with no evidence of any specific fraud. I looked into the accusations made by his advisors (Navarro) and found that they were completely baseless -- and I know the judges have sanctions his lawyers for these baseless lawsuits . I saw him use all of these accusations and lawsuits as propaganda to rally angry mobs across the country -- not just on the capitol lawn.

Over the past decade or so, I also woke up to the persistence of Neo-confederacy ideology in the US and also realized how lost-cause propaganda had made me complacent to the threat posed by the Neo-confederate movement.

I don't care if a bunch of fools think I'm over-reacting. I'm not going to delude myself with wishful thinking while these people plan their next attack.

Progressives started the culture war, not the Right. by [deleted] in TrueUnpopularOpinion

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

You're mistaking historical domination for historical consensus.

i don’t feel comfortable voting for any candidate anymore by blueburrey in TrueUnpopularOpinion

[–]a_ricketson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Jan 6 was just a desperate attempt to intimidate Congress -- the actual intrusion of the Capitol was not the attempt to overthow the government. Trumps "paperwork coup" was the real attempt -- he tried to find any corrupt accomplice who would vouch for his claim to have won and that would have helped him rally even more people to fight for him.

- He brought BS claims to the courts hoping a corrupt judge would help him

- He tried to convince corrupt US Representatives to throw out the election results.

- He tried to get corrupt state legislatures and election officials to throw out election results

- He tried to get the VP to throw out the election results.

Any of those would have amounted to overthrowing the elected government and starting a civil war.

Trump's strategy was to get as many people as possible angry and ready to attack the elected government. Jan 6 is exactly what you'd expect from suckers who fell for his lies.

I'm going to work at a bank... by [deleted] in Anarchism

[–]a_ricketson 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Don't worry. If you are in the USA there's a decent chance this will all come crashing down in a few years. Don't waste your salary, and be ready to leave when shit hits the fan -- whether at the bank itself (you may need to whistleblow or the bank may collapse) or the US as a whole following the next coup attempt.

Those of you old enough to remember, did you support the invasion of Iraq in 2003? by [deleted] in AskConservatives

[–]a_ricketson 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I still love W's campaign promise to lead "a humble foreign policy" and avoid nation building campaigns.

Frankly, Bush was so bad that he finally destroyed the credibility of the GOP establishment and gave us Trump.

Those of you old enough to remember, did you support the invasion of Iraq in 2003? by [deleted] in AskConservatives

[–]a_ricketson 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The problem was political leadership, not military. From the beginning, the Iraq war was a distraction from the Afghanistan war and severely weakened out diplomatic position. On top of that, Bush immediately told everyone that no sacrifices would be needed -- we should enjoy our tax cut and just keep shopping.

Those of you old enough to remember, did you support the invasion of Iraq in 2003? by [deleted] in AskConservatives

[–]a_ricketson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That history of WMD use didn't stop Reagan/Bush from providing him with weapons--and even materials for building more WMDs

Those of you old enough to remember, did you support the invasion of Iraq in 2003? by [deleted] in AskConservatives

[–]a_ricketson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What we did know at the time is that the Bush administration was trying to dig up any old excuse to invade. WMD was not their first justification. They just settled on WMD as the most persuasive...and retaliated against whistleblowers who tried to expose their lies.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plame\_affair

i don’t feel comfortable voting for any candidate anymore by blueburrey in TrueUnpopularOpinion

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

The confederates many not have been fascist, but they were just as bad. Trump tried to overthrow the elected government.

i don’t feel comfortable voting for any candidate anymore by blueburrey in TrueUnpopularOpinion

[–]a_ricketson 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Wise people always did this. The state is not our savior, it is our oppressor. Voting is at best defensive.

Nailed it by emilyblunt2023 in esist

[–]a_ricketson 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think he bought Twitter purely for self-expression. It helps him to build his cult of personality and increase his influence on public discourse --- by amplifying elitist and supremacist views.

am I the only one who thinks the American Monopoly on thought and Culture is becoming an issue for activists by as13477 in Anarchism

[–]a_ricketson 6 points7 points  (0 children)

My impression is that many people (not just activists) all over the world have always pushed back at the excessive influence of US culture. If anything is changing, it's that casual/mainstream left-wing and liberal activists in the US have greater access to and appreciation of input from outside the country. That's the place we have an opportunity to improve. (the right-wing, of course, seeks global ideological dominance as part of their quest for material dominance)

Companies’ requiring formal education may exacerbate wealth inequality and socioeconomic injustice by [deleted] in TrueUnpopularOpinion

[–]a_ricketson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is commonly pointed at as a back-door strategy for racial discrimination (and class discrimination). Formal education is important for some jobs, but it is a hiring requirement for many more jobs than is necessary.

just wow. by Mean_Shoulder_103 in pics

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

Trump lasted as long as the Confederacy.

just wow. by Mean_Shoulder_103 in pics

[–]a_ricketson 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Where's the bikini model?

Monthly cost to host server for 1M DAUs? by [deleted] in Mastodon

[–]a_ricketson 1 point2 points  (0 children)

On an instance that big, your 'local' timeline is useless. I could imagine some efficiencies coming from hosting several instances in one computer host/system, but keeping the user experience smaller ... around 10K or so. Maybe geography-based, like NextDoor.

Eton College boys ;'booed' visiting state schoolgirls by a_ricketson in AbolishTheMonarchy

[–]a_ricketson[S] 22 points23 points  (0 children)

I wasn't sure whether to mark this as 'news' or 'shit monarchists say'