The far right is seriously outnumbered. Encouraging people to apathy helps them, because most people who get involved are their enemies.
It's amazing how "righteous fury" people seem to get over folks protesting sporting events because the fucking planet is on fire.
"Oh but couldn't they be more calm and quiet about it, I want to watch the race!"
True, but not new. It's been this since before "fight terror" in fact.
One Elon musk can feed a family for a year.
One farm fertilized with musk mulch can feed a city block!
What better way to show how much you don't care about Reddit than to spend all your time talking about it?
I use Lemmy to talk to strangers, but I use discord to talk to specific people. Unless I can convince the vast majority of them to switch to matrix it doesn't matter how much I prefer the foss service, it's useless to me. I still have an account, sure, but I don't use discord out of laziness. I use it because matrix literally can't provide that service.
"Under my window alone I've had a shootout — guns blazing between cars. So my understanding is you'll have benches in the middle of the street and people can gather. It's not a great place between Amsterdam and Broadway to open up to the nefarious folks, you know."
God this is frustrating. Literally sees problems happening with the cars and somehow assumes it will be worse without the cars.
Nah. That's what Local is for
I saw, and smelled, things in my medical student days that are just best not explored too deeply online. There are holes, abscesses that form in dark places, abscesses that fill with things, and age, and rot. There are things that can make even experienced colorectal surgeons get a bit queasy. The details are best left unspoken.
I had been an advocate of getting just an ordinary person to do the first Lemmy ama but apparently we've got an absolute legend.
Have you ever had a favourite reference to your joke come up?
That employee mentioning the time card modification sure did the fired manager dirty, hope they didn't face serious legal consequences for that.
My issue with it in Starfield (and any game in its genre) is that the game seems to be confused about how it feels about encumbrance. Am I supposed to be looting everything I see? If not, then why is it the major income source, why are so many random objects worth selling and taking? If so, why do merchants have such low credit stores? Am I supposed to be collecting cool stuff to display? If not, then why all the display objects? If so, why have my companions constantly nag me about bringing junk? Why make ship storage so low? Or, am I supposed to be carefully considering what I want to bring as loot? If so, why is there so much of it and why isn't there some way to quickly see what's worth taking? Am I supposed to spend an hour after each combat carefully weighing what to take home?
It's entirely unclear what they want. If they want looting to be less of a game loop, junk items should have no sell value and missions should be more of a reward, and item value/kg should be easy to assess. We should be quickly able to discard valueless items from inventory. Otoh if they want looting to be a bigger part of the game, I should be able to readily carry and sell my loot and doing so shouldn't make me so rich it breaks the economy.
It's one of my main complaints, not so much about starfield, but pretty much anything in this genre. It feels like they can't tell if they want me to loot everything or not, the design is fundamentally at odds with itself.