[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 4 points 1 hour ago

Except that I’m fine if the cost of my meal increases if they paid their servers what they deserve.

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 9 points 11 hours ago

If the war hawks can bend his ear. Raytheon and Co can throw around almost as munch money as Musk and could easily bribe him.

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 23 points 11 hours ago

It boils down to two main things in that article, possibly one… the Billionaires bought the media knowing full well the power they could wield with it, but more so, dismantling education leads to an easily influenced populace.

The pandemic was a boom for them because it created another “lost generation” and pushed so many educators to hit the breaking point and quit.

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 6 points 20 hours ago

You made me waste bandwidth and time trying to figure out what the difference was….

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 19 points 20 hours ago

I’ve said this before but the DNC is actually just another wing of the Oligarchy. They exist to provide a fabricated conflict so that people think it’s a divide based on ideals, not on class divide it truly is. Look at the wealth of all of the leaders in the DNC. It’s pretty much the same circles and wealth as the RNC.

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 9 points 1 day ago

And they’ll hike it regardless, blame inflation and reap the profits. Oh wait, that’s what they’re doing already.

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 161 points 1 day ago

When Harris was nominated, I told a friend of mine that my biggest fear was it was going to energize racists and sexists because she was black and a woman. I though she was great candidate, but the level of racism and sexism in this county is beyond insane.

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 14 points 1 day ago

He had momentum, the DNC, also run by our oligarchs denied him of the opportunity.

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 2 points 1 day ago

I wish they would have come out with another season of Asterisk Wars. Not to mention the first ED song was absolutely amazing. Ended up buying the whole album and wasn’t disappointed.

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 9 points 2 days ago

This is my rifle. This is my gun. This is for shooting. This is for fun.

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 8 points 3 days ago

I live in Texas and completely disagree with your point there. Sure things have been gerrymandered to hell, but they’ve done so based on voting trends and not registered voters. We could easily flip even the most gerrymandered districts if people got out. Also don’t forget that the Governor and the President are decided by results that don’t care about Gerrymandered districts.

Texas also allows early voting, and all you need is your drivers license. Will it get 100% of people: no, but enough to make a difference. It feels like you’re falling into the same trap as the OP response here, that unless it’s 100% perfect it won’t make a difference.

[-] ramble81@lemm.ee 39 points 4 days ago

This is the Bear vs a Strange man all over again and they still don’t get it.

282

You always hear the phase “9 to 5” and also the song with the same name. Assuming you include 1 hour worth of breaks (30 minute lunch and two 15 minute breaks), you’re only working for 7 hours a day which comes up to 35 hours a week.

Now it feels like you have to work 8 hours a day (for a total of 40 hours of actual work), plus your other time off meaning you’re really there for 9 hours each day (for a total of 45 hours). Am i looking at that wrong, or did expected times change, and if so, when?

17
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by ramble81@lemm.ee to c/piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com

I know that recently Spotify requires a credentials.json file and not just a user name and password. I can’t seem to find a method though that works in creating that file. I’ve tried librespot and librespot-auth, both of which should expose themselves as a speaker on my network for Spotify to cast too but it doesn’t show up. I’ve tried them both in a WSL instance and compiled directly for Windows with no luck.

Is there another way I’m missing to generate those credentials? I have a valid account, so I know there’s not an issue there.

-9

No pun intended

51

I’m curious if there’s a name to the belief I have. I wouldn’t exactly call it atheist, though i generally lean that way, but I wouldn’t call it non-theist. The thing is, I just plain don’t care if God exists or not. They could, or they couldn’t, it really has no bearing on how I live my life. For that reason along I think I go in the atheist camp, but I always thought that was used to describe people who don’t think he exists.

51
submitted 1 month ago by ramble81@lemm.ee to c/asklemmy@lemmy.world

And not a monkey’s paw moment.

35
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by ramble81@lemm.ee to c/nostupidquestions@lemmy.world

I have a CFL in the bathroom that went out on me. I’ve been too lazy to change it because there are other bulbs that are working. Well after a couple weeks, it magically decided to turn back on. It’s nowhere that it would be jostled or anything, so I found that weird.

31
submitted 2 months ago by ramble81@lemm.ee to c/askhistorians@lemmy.world

I was thinking about Rome and there is one place that’s a 17th century church, on top of 14th century monastery on top of a 1st century apartment. And if you go to the Forum section it’s visibly below the surface of the current city.

For the fact that the city has been active for thousands of years, how do things end up getting buried? Does that mean the elevation of the city is higher now than it was in 0 AD?

194

I was listening to a Weird Al song about prank calls and realized you can’t really do them anymore now. Also it was funny that he mentioned dialing 7 digit numbers instead of 10

82
submitted 3 months ago by ramble81@lemm.ee to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

Or do you prefer other adjectives? Do you consider it to be insulting or do you take it for a compliment if it was meant as one? (Assume an amenable relationship between the two people, not a random stranger or creeper)

60

Due to its asynchronous and discreet nature, people don’t have to be in physical proximity or expect immediate responses.

25

I don’t like to sleep in near pitch black rooms. It just feels unnatural to me. It may be more the fact that it prevents the gradual transition to daylight unless you’re using an artificial light, so that bothers me more because you don’t know when morning is. But even when traveling I love to keep the curtains open through the night and sleep to whatever the natural light level is around me even if it’s in the middle of a city.

46

Well this is interesting. I plugged my phone into my computer to pull some photos off of it and I just happen to start browsing it via Windows Explorer since the device shows up there. Imagine my surprise when I saw things that were in my Hidden folder show up clear as day. It seems that lock is only at an application level and just browsing the file system it’s there to see.

Does anyone else experience something similar? Is there a note I missed that it’s still be available via other means?

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ramble81

joined 1 year ago