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garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Ending world hunger costs less than 1% of military spendingEnglish
3·26 天前In some cases sure, but there are places that require emergency food supplies because their local sources have been destroyed (usually by war or colonization/genocide), so you need to be able to feed people in the interim while they rebuild their means of food production.
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Trump humiliated by fact-check after claiming Canada used AI for 'cheat' Reagan adEnglish
24·2 个月前I fucking hate Doug Ford, but this is by far the funniest shit he’s ever pulled. This is more elbows up than our spineless PM has claimed to be and I am here for it.
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•People dont believe protesting works if they will only do it on their day off.
2·2 个月前You can’t… that’s my point. I’m really confused about what you’re trying to say here. If you don’t think that doing all of the other actions I mentioned are a sacrifice, I’m not sure I can help you see any of the points I’m trying to make. Sure those actions are not as visible as protesting, but people do them every day, and that’s where change starts.
A few years ago a small group of transit riders in my area teamed up to put pressure on local governments to provide free transit to children. With enough pressure those municipalities came together and agreed to do it, and now we see free transit for children across our province. This wasn’t done through “passionless inaction” but the hard work of people spreading awareness and putting pressure on their local governments. They continue to spread their message to improve transit by attending rallies and protests, but the majority of their work is behind the scenes. This might look like inaction to you, I guess, if you are not a part of one of those communities.
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•People dont believe protesting works if they will only do it on their day off.
2·2 个月前I disagree with you because protesting every day wouldn’t be an effective way to enact change. Like I mentioned, the point of protests is networking, solidarity and awareness-building. The change happens from the other actions that are less visible/get less media attention (fundraising, community building, letter-writing campaigns, putting pressure on local governments, boycotting, disrupting events, etc.). Going out to a protest every single day would ignore the actual work that needs to happen, and it would burn you out almost immediately.
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•People dont believe protesting works if they will only do it on their day off.
61·2 个月前Okay, so reading your title again, you are saying: people that only go to protests on their day off (and don’t engage in any other type of activism), think that protests don’t work. Is that accurate?
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•People dont believe protesting works if they will only do it on their day off.
71·2 个月前I’ve met people at protests who have organized boycotts, advocacy campaigns, fundraisers, and many many more things that enact measurable change. These people often meet through these types of events and I can guarantee you, if it wasn’t for rallies, I wouldn’t have even known where to start or how to find people that are doing the work.
Your “truth” is only true if you (or whoever the fuck you’re talking about) isn’t benefiting from the protest/rally/event. So maybe you should go to a protest and find a network and do some work if you feel like you’re not getting what you need from protests.
And just to be clear, I’m not judging people who only go to protests and then go home. That’s fine too. The whole point of activism is to do the best you can, and if it just means showing up on a weekend for 2 hours, that’s fine. Other people will see you, they will feel your support, and they will feel motivated to keep working toward whatever they were advocating for in the first place. That is the real point of protests.
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•People dont believe protesting works if they will only do it on their day off.
233·2 个月前Protesting is one part of a variety of anti-establishment responses. I’m tired of hearing people say it doesn’t work - obviously, on its own it doesn’t, but combine it with the many other aspects and there can be change. Of course, not everyone is fit to do every single one of the things required, but stop shitting on people who are trying to do even one of the things.
Protests are what get people fired up. Protests are part of what connect people and provide networking opportunities to organize other actions. Protests make people realize that they arenot alone, and that they CAN do something. Will they? Some of them will, and that’s the fucking point. Protests are a warning. Telling people “protests don’t work” only harms the fucking movement, so fucking stop it.
Tl;dr the billionaires won’t give me their petty cash if I start taxing them :(
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•[Cereal] When do you start looking for a new place to rent?
18·2 个月前I’ve done this a couple of times and I’d say if you can afford it, it’s definitely worth it. But renting often leaves you in a tight financial situation so it’s not often realistic to be able to do it.
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What technologies were ubiquitous ten years ago and are much less common now?
14·2 个月前I don’t think it’s about them being cheap, it’s that they want to sell you the matching wireless headset
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What technologies were ubiquitous ten years ago and are much less common now?
4·2 个月前I like my tablet for ancestry research and not much else. But I think maybe still good for artists?
Nah, while I agree the book ending was great in its own right, the movie would not have succeeded without the ending they gave it. It would’ve felt anti-climactic and probably a little boring tbh. The movie was for entertainment, the book was for thought.
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•BBC and Netflix sent legal letter over Israel film boycottEnglish
92·2 个月前The American government are genocidal terrorists. American people are individuals and they can (and should) fight against genocide all over the world, including within their own borders.
If these highly influential people can use their power for any kind of good, anywhere in the world, there is no reason to shame them.
They are also fighting their own government while doing this (“fixing their own dumpster fire”) considering the fact that American politicians are funded by the genocidal state of Israel.
Tagged so I can recognize you later bro, you matter
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•I once heard someone say, 'Jobs are like high school but with adults.' Would you say that's accurate?
16·2 个月前Really depends on the workplace I think. Even within similar sectors, I’ve been in situations where it was definitely that way, but in another similar workplace there was absolutely none of that. A lot of it has to do with leadership, I think. But also humans are prone to gossip and be judgy and not everyone grows out of that or learns to keep it to themselves, so there will always be people.
The last one sounds like a win-win for both you and society.
garbagebagel@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Good morning Mr. President! You wake up after a snap election in the US to find out that you are the new POTUS, what are the five first things that you focus on to reverse the current course of the US
51·2 个月前Fucking up your political opponents or dissenters sounds a lot like fascism, but I really hate capitalism so I can’t stay mad.



Idk if it’s a real quote but I got a new plan, listen: “the way to crush the burgeoise is to grind them.”