Sometimes it's hard to remember that I loved the lives I lived before
Who knew that one of the reasons to appreciate DW not being the algorithmically slammed febrile chamber of FB would be that I can actually spend time on this platform without constantly having in my face the same photos of a man in need of a damnatio memoriae stat throwing an enthusiastically received Hitlergruß. I think of myself as possessing a reasonable tolerance for hateful language and gestures, since it is fairly impossible to survive in the world as currently constituted without one, but I could be doing several very different things with my life if I wanted to look at wall-to-wall Nazi salutes. I know that it happened. I have seen the responses and the responses to the responses and I have some responses of my own. Please get the outrage bait out of my eyeballs; it's got to take a number and stand in simultaneous line with all the rest of the corrosive Gish gallop, which actually if I hear one more person refer to the destruction of human rights as a distraction, get in that same line and load yourself into the sun.
Nonetheless, as people with whom it was my only regular medium of contact bleed off FB, I get to feel left behind once again. I am as unlikely to have an account on Bluesky as on original flavor Twitter for the same reason that its structure is terrible for my brain. I appear to have been wired by nature for exactly one form of internet communication and resent that I am supposed to accommodate to ones that make me feel like someone is treating my concentration as a pincushion. Discord is not congenial to me, either. Meanwhile I continue to hate the expectation that it is universally easier to extract information from videos or podcasts rather than written articles.
The original concept of the Etruscan saeculum is a valuable one, because it measures in historical memory: it ends with the death of the last person who was alive at the time of a crucial event, such as the founding of a city. Obviously I am trying not to feel that we are at the fraying end of one of these cycles, especially since Strauss–Howe generational theory appears to have run off a pseudoscientific and rather millenarian cliff with the notion.
To conclude on a not completely unhelpful note, Mamaleh's has had for some time a feature at their register where you can round up to the nearest dollar on an order, donating the difference in change to a charity of the restaurant's choosing. This month they went with the MIRA Coalition—Massachusetts Immigrant & Refugee Advocacy. The good news is that you can donate to them on your own time with or without a bagel or a milkshake or a 50/50, although I am obviously in support of the latter, too.
Nonetheless, as people with whom it was my only regular medium of contact bleed off FB, I get to feel left behind once again. I am as unlikely to have an account on Bluesky as on original flavor Twitter for the same reason that its structure is terrible for my brain. I appear to have been wired by nature for exactly one form of internet communication and resent that I am supposed to accommodate to ones that make me feel like someone is treating my concentration as a pincushion. Discord is not congenial to me, either. Meanwhile I continue to hate the expectation that it is universally easier to extract information from videos or podcasts rather than written articles.
The original concept of the Etruscan saeculum is a valuable one, because it measures in historical memory: it ends with the death of the last person who was alive at the time of a crucial event, such as the founding of a city. Obviously I am trying not to feel that we are at the fraying end of one of these cycles, especially since Strauss–Howe generational theory appears to have run off a pseudoscientific and rather millenarian cliff with the notion.
To conclude on a not completely unhelpful note, Mamaleh's has had for some time a feature at their register where you can round up to the nearest dollar on an order, donating the difference in change to a charity of the restaurant's choosing. This month they went with the MIRA Coalition—Massachusetts Immigrant & Refugee Advocacy. The good news is that you can donate to them on your own time with or without a bagel or a milkshake or a 50/50, although I am obviously in support of the latter, too.

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And yes, not being bombarded with all those images here is a relief.
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So many things are so bad--yes, they need to take a number.
I very much liked seeing the clip of Mariann Edgar Budde speaking truth to power, though, while Mr. Constitution Shredder had to just sit there and listen. It was like the man in front of the tank at Tiananmen Square, but she's still standing.
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I agree completely about wanting printed text, not video or podcasts, with few exceptions, mostly for how-to videos where being able to see what the instructor is doing, or look at the results. For example, I may benefit from seeing what someone means by a "low simmer," but I know what a bowl of soup or an ice cream cone looks like, and I need things like oven temperatures in text.
That said, I do somewhat better than you with some bits of Discord and Bluesky, though it occurs to me that I haven't looked at the latter in a couple of months.
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I feel very much the same. Especially for social and political analysis.
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I like DW and Bsky and former Twitter and Discord and Slack and Instagram and even (once in a while) TikTok for different purposes, but IMO this makes me a privileged consumer and has no bearing on what anyone else ought to suffer or put up with. One nice thing IMO about DW's it-takes-intentionality image upload interface is that people tend not to fling images like paint at a wall.
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Thank you for being in receipt of all the stupid, inconsequential letters I send you after I report the morning's horrors to agencies that have abandoned us, even while we shout the fight is here. I am not leaving social media because it is our best early warning system, but I want to stop communicating by it.
One of the things I like very much about you is how you don't change to fit time. IJS.
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*Hugs*
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what else can I say but WORD
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I'm so in agreement about having to extract information from videos or podcasts, too. Often I'll just need one piece of information (so which type of battery does my car key need?) and I just don't want to watch ten minutes of video to find it.
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Same here!
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That is a very neat concept.
I also do not want to see the human cybertruck ever again.
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(Also god, yes, I'm so incredibly sick of that picture. We know, we get it, thank you; if anyone runs into someone who lives under a rock they can pull it out again to a targeted purpose but otherwise let's all put it away again and work on the damnatio memoriae, thanks.)
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it's not that the ragebait isn't justified, it's that it's exhausting and i think that is by design. i wish we would all use that energy to take concrete actions, of any sort, in the world instead of just yelling on the internet.
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I actually do need to get back to checking FB once a week because that’s how I keep in touch with my relatives and local friends (and also how I mainly follow local news)
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