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JoumanaKayrouz , in Pooping only every 3 or more days linked with cognitive decline, research finds
@JoumanaKayrouz@lemmy.world avatar

I should shit more.

InDogYearsImDead , in Alabama due to resume executions despite botching three last year

“We can’t let a few botched executions get in the way of us killing people.” - People in Alabama I guess.

girlfreddy , in Poultry plant blames staffing company for hiring 16-year-old who was killed in workplace accident
@girlfreddy@lemmy.world avatar

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division have launched investigations into the incident, a spokesperson said. Any company found to be in violation could face a federal fine of more than $30,000 per incident.

OSHA’s fines mean nothing. Time to raise them to $1,000,000 per incident, 50% of which go to the families of those injured or killed … then companies might start paying attention.

Fredselfish ,
@Fredselfish@lemmy.world avatar

Fuck fines executives and managers and the CEO need to be jailed. Fucking lying bastards.

WookieMunster ,

tbh it’d be hard not to take matters into my own hands if that was one of my family members

TenderfootGungi ,

China had huge fines. People would commit suicide to help their families. They put up nets and stopped the huge payouts to families.

But $30k is absurdly low for a death.

fiat_lux ,

Make it a percentage of the annual worldwide turnover like GDPR. Companies have been very quick to make changes with GDPR's fines of up to €20 million, or up to 4% of the annual worldwide turnover of the preceding financial year.

Nobody is changing anything when killing a child only costs them US$30k and their annual revenue is estimated at US$300 million. They also had a US$7.5 million PPP loan forgiven.

BonesOfTheMoon , in Pooping only every 3 or more days linked with cognitive decline, research finds

I’m on medication which slows my bowel habits and I really do need to be on it. I wonder if it’s the same for me/other people who have that.

Wooster , in Advocates say new Florida standards require slavery to be taught as 'beneficial'
@Wooster@startrek.website avatar

The Florida Department of Education says the new standards don’t teach that slavery was beneficial.

However, one of the benchmarks (SS.68.AA.2.3) states students will be taught, “how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.”

Either this is some very unfortunate phrasing for establishing that people like Phillis Wheatley are required material (and even then it was less ‘thanks to’ and more ‘in spite of’) or something more nefarious is afoot.

Th4tGuyII ,
@Th4tGuyII@kbin.social avatar

Don't think I need to be Sherlock Holmes to figure out the answer to that question

agent_flounder ,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.one avatar

Sorry, why are we giving florida right wingers the benefit of the doubt? In full context this is obviously nefarious.

Fredselfish , in The Senate Judiciary panel will consider ethics rules for the Supreme Court
@Fredselfish@lemmy.world avatar

So according to Republicans if the Supreme Court had ethics it would destroy them?

Then they need to be fucking destroyed.

dhork , (edited ) in The Senate Judiciary panel will consider ethics rules for the Supreme Court

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, the top Republican on the Judiciary panel, said that if the bill were to ever pass, “the Supreme Court as we know it would be destroyed.”

Wasn’t he the same guy who said that if the GOP nominated Trump, it would destroy the party? He seems to have a fetish for destruction.

Jaysyn ,
@Jaysyn@kbin.social avatar

I don't want the Supreme Court to continue existing in it's current form, do you?

He's not wrong, he's just an asshole. 🤣🤣

dhork ,

The Supreme Court needs to be reformed, but simply asking them to conform to the same Ethics guidelines other judges do is hardly destroying it.

Ensign_Crab ,

He seems to have a fetish for destruction.

Among others, if rumors are to be believed.

Snapz ,

Lady G has a reputation among a certain set of young men…

ZombieZookeeper ,

Story goes Lindsey Graham has a lot of fetishes…

girlfreddy , in Detainees and advocates decry 'horrific' conditions at Louisiana ICE detention center

Wayback is saying access is forbidden.

gAlienLifeform OP ,
@gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world avatar

Ah, thanks for the heads up. Looks like I accidentally stuck a letter on the URL when I was going to save it, I’ll edit my OP link in a second here.

e; Should be fixed now

girlfreddy ,

Thanks. :)

Ragnell , (edited ) in Protesters storm Swedish Embassy in Baghdad ahead of planned Quran burning in Stockholm
@Ragnell@kbin.social avatar

This is an overreaction, but I don't see the point of the book-burning either. I mean, I'm a pagan who converted from Christianity but you don't see me out in public burning the bible.

Which is again, not to say that this riot wasn't an overreaction. You have a bunch of people with this idea that if one thing happens in one country, that country has that thing happening all the time. It wasn't even a Swedish dude, it was an Iraqi dude although god only knows what the media is saying. Still, come on. I know it's a sacred text but Christians are going to do that to any sacred text but their own.

The guy shouldn't have done it, especially since the Muslin world has been shown to be very sensitive on this topic. But I can't help but think that if Americans stormed an embassy every time someone abroad burned the US flag, the UN would have to move.

Just burn a Bible in front of the Swedish embassy and go on with your lives.

reverie ,

It’s embarrassing for all parties involved.

FlyingSquid , in Florida Board of Education approves new Black history standards that critics call ‘a big step backward’
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I barely learned anything about black history in school in the 80s and 90s in Indiana. I don’t even remember Black History Month being acknowledged. Things should have gotten better since then, not worse.

flipht ,

That's why the regressive troglodytes are on a rampage.

They can't stand that people are actually comparing notes on their Christofascist abuse. So they try to block anyone talking about race or anyone who is happy, well adjusted, and queer. It ruins their narrative for their own brainwashed members.

captainlezbian ,

And the notes aren’t just what they do, it’s what works at stopping them. They know better than most how a lot of effective organization in the gay rights movement came from people who had been involved in labor struggles/communist organizing and/or the black civil rights movement.

Nothing scares them more than solidarity and cooperation

Maajmaaj ,
@Maajmaaj@lemmy.ca avatar

I learned more about indigenous people while in elementary school in Indiana and Florida than I did about my own AA ethnicity. Late 90s-early 00s. I remember having to to a group activity (Indiana school) where we all had to pretend we’re living in times before the civil war and basically come up with what decisions we would be making. I told the teacher I wouldn’t be making any decisions because I would have been a slave.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I remember learning about slavery and the Underground Railroad and not much else. Not slave rebellions, not Reconstruction, not lynchings and massacres, nothing about Jim Crow, etc. Maybe vague stuff about MLK and Rosa Parks in high school? Certainly nothing about Tulsa or Osceola.

captainlezbian ,

Growing up in Ohio we learned a ton about slavery because we were one of the biggest “good guy” states in the fight against it. We even had field trips to Underground Railroad Museums.

Which makes the number of confederate flags in the state all the more infuriating

But yeah Nat Turner showed up in like a sentence in the John brown paragraph.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Oh there are a shit ton in Indiana too. So aggravating.

ChrisLicht ,

Ugh, Indiana, where the Klan resurrected itself.

BonesOfTheMoon , in Alabama Failed to Carry Out Its Last Two Executions. It’s Trying Again This Week.

I think execution is just wrong. I think many of the people who are executed have done wretched things but surely we don’t have the right to kill them.

chuckleslord ,

Even if our justice system was perfect and only convicted the people who actually did the crime… I would still be against the death penalty. But here in the real world we frequently murder innocent people and we, as a collective, have their blood on our hands.

BonesOfTheMoon ,

You’re absolutely right. (Cops are especially guilty).

lolcatnip , in Texas’ Harsh New Border Tactics Are Injuring Migrants

The cruelty is the point.

Jaysyn , in Poultry plant blames staffing company for hiring 16-year-old who was killed in workplace accident
@Jaysyn@kbin.social avatar

Error my ass.

Chozo ,

The "error" was getting caught. They'll do it again. They'll just be sneakier about it.

assassinatedbyCIA , in The Senate Judiciary panel will consider ethics rules for the Supreme Court

It’s not easy to fuck up ethics rules for the Supreme Court. Watch as the senate tries its best to do so.

fische_stix , in Roald Dahl museum condemns author's 'undeniable' racism

One thing a modern world needs to come to grips with is that a person can both be extremely talented and have negative qualities. Humans by their very nature have both good and bad traits, thoughts, and opinions. We can’t bury the fact that someone who contributed work that we enjoy had some awful views. But on the other hand, that doesn’t mean when you need to completely wipe his work from the face of the Earth. We have to find a way to show that someone is capable of creating great work and still not be a perfect or necessarily even good person.

Crackhappy ,
@Crackhappy@lemmy.world avatar

See orson Scott card as another more modern example. Still a great author.

HelixDab ,

Pity about being Mormon though.

FlowVoid ,

I don’t have a problem with that. There are plenty of decent Mormons, just like there are plenty of decent people in any religion.

But I do have a problem with Card’s rabid homophobia.

HelixDab ,

The fact that there are decent Mormons doesn't mean that the entire religion itself isn't a steaming pile of rancid dog shit.

I was raised in it.

stardustsystem ,
@stardustsystem@lemmy.world avatar

I feel like the art is what needs judged here, not the artist. We put all this emphasis on Dahl thought this and Lovecraft said that, and people use that as reason to disregard the entire body of work the person produced. But we lose a lot of work that isn’t really affected by those views and actions because we can’t disconnect it from the person involved in the creation.

What throws a wrench in that is when the person is still alive, and still profiting from those works. Hence why most of your queer/trans friends haven’t bought anything Harry Potter related in a while. Marilyn Manson is my personal example of this. I was a huge fan of his work as a teenager and well into my 20s. When all the stuff about what he did to Evan Rachel Wood came out, I stopped listening to his albums for a long time. I intentionally avoid streaming his tracks because I don’t want to give money to someone I see as abusive toward others, but those albums are still worthy of attention for what they say beyond that subject. Still, it’s hard to hear his voice and not think about what he did.

On the other side of that coin, those managing the estates of these creators that are gone need to be aware of what’s wrong with their charge as much as what’s right. The museum in this piece is doing it right at the end of the day - making the best of a lifetime of antisemitism.

ThunderingJerboa ,
@ThunderingJerboa@kbin.social avatar

I haven't read a ton of Dahl's work as a adult but I have been going through the Lovecraft collection and the racism is sort of baked into the work. I'm not saying throw it out if anything the only thing positive I can say is Lovecraft work probably wouldn't have worked so well if it wasn't his idiotic racist views since in a way a ton of his work is based on fearing the outsider and basically is racism in a super hyperbolic way. I do however agree mostly with your other point that the big problem is supporting currently alive creators since consumption does sort of benefit them allowing them to push their views in the real world.

Cylusthevirus ,
@Cylusthevirus@kbin.social avatar

What does racism have to do with cosmic horror?

Nutteman ,
@Nutteman@lemmy.world avatar

Learn a lil about lovecraft homie. It started deeply rooted in racism.

Cylusthevirus ,
@Cylusthevirus@kbin.social avatar

The entirety of human civilization is deeply rooted in racism, so yeah, makes sense. What I'd like to know is what's especially bad about cosmic horror specifically as depicted in, say, The Mountains of Madness.

ThunderingJerboa ,
@ThunderingJerboa@kbin.social avatar

I'm not saying cosmic horror is inherently racist but how HP Lovecraft wrote it was absolutely inspired by his racism. Shadow over Innmouth could be seen as a very heavy handed metaphor for Interracial marriage. Also can't remember the actual name of the short story but HP Lovecraft for some reason found the need to point out a Jewish merchant gave someone a cheap or free Necronomicon, it was really on the god damn nose.

I mean I love the concept of cosmic horror but we would have to be blind not to see how racism especially HP Lovecraft version of it was heavily flavored by his bias and racism.

Cylusthevirus ,
@Cylusthevirus@kbin.social avatar

Ah, yes I can see that for sure. I wondered if you were arguing that the whole genre was racist because it rests on the idea of "fear of the unknown" as some folks seem to be. Lovecraft himself was a shithead, but that's kind of why I enjoy stuff like Lovecraft Country so much.

stardustsystem ,
@stardustsystem@lemmy.world avatar

Lovecraft work probably wouldn’t have worked so well if it wasn’t his idiotic racist views since in a way a ton of his work is based on fearing the outsider and basically is racism in a super hyperbolic way

I never really thought about it that way, but you’ve got a solid point. The people fear the unknown, and the unknown acts in ways that provoke and reinforce that fear, turns it into cosmic horror. If you were to take away the Cosmic part, all that’s left is the fear of the unknown.

4am ,
@4am@lemmy.world avatar

To build on a reply I left above; Lovecraft’s work isn’t currently (to my knowledge) funding the KKK for example. He’s not diddling kids, or raping actresses; he’s dead. Is his estate racist? Are the royalties from his published works being used to embolden TERFs? Do lovecraft-estate-licensed board games hold anti-abortion rallies?

That’s the difference. When people don’t want to separate the art from the artists is when they’re out here doing actual harm still.

4am ,
@4am@lemmy.world avatar

The problem is when you pay for their work and they use their money to exert undue influence for racist, homophonic, or transphobic causes.

I don’t recall the part where I have to spend my money on art that’s good. All this bullshit about “cancel culture” is basically people with gross ideas whining about the free market actually working.

girlfreddy ,
@girlfreddy@mastodon.social avatar

@fische_stix @MicroWave

I mostly agree with you, tho the issue I have deals more with the current batch of rapey Hollywood dudes and still being able to enjoy their incredible body of work.

I still can't bring myself to watch anything of Kevin Spacey's even tho some of his roles were astounding.

chrischryse ,

Agreed.

I honestly feel if we censor stuff like this how can we learn and become better ourselves?

Like Looney Tunes or Disney cartoons that had racism back in their day.

We should never cover these things up no matter how much of a piece of shit the author was, we need to learn.

Puzzle_Sluts_4Ever ,

The context matters a lot.

There is absolutely no reason to play one of the many yellowface episodes of Bugs Bunny on saturday morning cartoons in the 2020s. And there is potentially a lot of value in curating a couple shorts that aren’t racist and packaging those up for kids to watch.

And that is the logic by which a book might be edited to remove/replace some of the rampant racism. The value is not all the many ways Huck Finn found to give himself n-word privileges. The value is in juxtaposing the idea of growing up with understanding that the world around you might not have.

But something like… any of the works of HP Lovecraft? The racism is front and center there. So much of the idea of being “other” has to do with “racial purity” and similar insanity. And the two can’t be decoupled. Which is why it has been so effective as a backdrop for the LGBTQIA+ community (often with perspective shifts). Ignoring the inherent racism of that is just, for lack of a funnier term, whitewashing.

One thing that has stuck with me through life was a high school english course. I forget exactly what we were reading, but it was very much “Huckleberry FInn” levels of rampant racism. And the copy of the book we had specifically had like a ten page foreward about the edits that were made and why they were made. And I’ll always remember Ms Sell in front of the class looking borderline manic as she explained the racism inherent to the work. And that very much helped with my own ability to critically look at a work. Because you can’t NOT consider the inherent bad parts of work and… you often end up with that toothy rictus of a grin as you are trying to acknowledge all the heinous shit and “move past it” without actually moving past it.

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