ricecake

joined 2 years ago
[–] ricecake 10 points 2 months ago

Yes. You'll have to learn some new things regardless, but you don't need to know how to program.

What are you hoping to make happen?

[–] ricecake 129 points 2 months ago (10 children)

Remember all that critical theory stuff people were freaking out about a few years ago?

It's basically about how society arranges itself to benefit the people who have the power in a society.
Like how crimes against business and capital are serious crimes, but crimes against workers are usually treated as paperwork errors.
Compare the number of people arrested for shoplifting as opposed to the number arrested for wage theft.

Or about how the murder of one CEO gets weeks of media attention and a potential development of new systems by the police to keep it from happening again, but we've already moved on from the last school shooting, and our official policy is "yeah, that'll happen from time to time"

[–] ricecake 12 points 2 months ago (2 children)

It's more common in high population areas, but it does happen.
The obsession with running government services like a business results in some notions about efficiency where someone getting paid to work and not being busy all the time is worse than people regularly waiting for critical time sensitive assistance.

It also has the zesty side effect of making the dispatch operators overworked and rushed. This usually just manifests as mistakes, but sometimes results in anger and critical mistakes. The famous example of the operator who yelled at a kid for calling because his mom had a seizure in the bath and she didn't believe him comes to mind.

[–] ricecake 18 points 2 months ago (2 children)

God forbid anyone under 18 knows that gambling exists without actually engaging in it.

You do know that you can play a card game without it being gambling, don't you? Or that you can gamble on not just any card game, but just about anything?

By your logic we should rank solitaire as 18+, since people actually gamble on it in casinos.

[–] ricecake 2 points 2 months ago

I feel like the author wanted me to get bored by the over the top depravity and violence as part of the feel of the book and the characters mindset.
On the plus side, it was an effective technique that worked and added to the character of the book.
On the downside, it worked and made the later parts of the book obscenely tedious.

[–] ricecake 1 points 2 months ago

Why don't you tell me, since you seem to disagree with my "build mass transit before people can't get to work", and "let people build higher density housing near necessities".
All the "modern societies" I can think of opted to invest like that rather than exacerbating regressive tax schemes.

I never disagreed that higher gas prices gave an incentive. I disagree that that's the only incentive, or the best incentive. A regressive tax disproportionately impacts the people least likely to effect change. It doesn't matter how high prices get, the person making minimum wage can't afford a more efficient car.
High fuel prices are literally part of why someone who actively wants to flood the market with gas and penalize EVs was elected. If the effects of your solution are worse than the experience of the problem, people will attack the solution.

Pushing freight off the road still reduces gas consumption. A grant program to build bus routes to a minimum level of timeliness, service area and access would give people a viable option to actually not use cars in our existing cities.
Raising registration costs on low efficiency vehicles would let you push people away from them in a way people can budget for, while also making it possible to waive the fee for people who can't afford it.

You'll have to be more specific about which of my examples is too egregious for you. I think I only gave examples based on the actual weather and bus system where I live, and the actual business district where my doctors office is. Metropolitan area of about 500k.

Please don't tell me what I'm advocating for. You might disagree with me on what the impact of my plan would be, but that doesn't mean that I'm not actually wanting us to get to the same place you do.

[–] ricecake 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I interpreted it as a week with a holiday. If you get labor day off, taking the rest of the week gets you 9 days off for 4 days PTO.
Likewise, if your birthday is near there and you get it for free, it's 9 days for 3 days PTO.

[–] ricecake 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

There are also some places that might just do a nice, if not grandiose, gesture for someone on their birthday.

Previous place I worked it was pretty routine for a manager to grab one of those containers of store made cupcakes if it was someone's birthday and they knew they didn't mind, make sure they got one and leave the rest in the break room.
Never anything more or less than just a nice gesture.

I'm guessing someone tried a nice gesture and it came out looking sad, so they posed for a picture for a chuckle and moved in. I don't know anyone who would be really upset by being given a pizza bagel on their birthday.

[–] ricecake 8 points 2 months ago

Yes, you want representation and the ability for people to play as someone like them. But we also can just tell stories about a character without needing to make the story for every character.

Adding women, anyone not white, or different gender and sexual orientations was notable because they were very underrepresented.
Women were by and large not saying they couldn't play games as men, just that they'd like more chances to be women.

[–] ricecake 6 points 2 months ago (3 children)

A tent or a cat?

[–] ricecake 30 points 2 months ago (7 children)

My workplace gives you a free day within a month of your birthday. Most people take the closest Monday or Friday to get a three day weekend, but some people are lucky and get to bump a three to a four.

[–] ricecake 2 points 2 months ago
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