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protist , in Radio Host Who Was Fed Questions by Biden Campaign Leaves Philadelphia Station

Meanwhile, there’s an entire right wing media machine that purposefully collaborates with Republican candidates and their campaigns

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Also, you can’t feed Trump questions because it doesn’t matter what you ask him, he’s not going to answer it anyway.

Cargon ,
Mongostein ,

And the NY Times is part of it

ArbitraryValue ,

Yeah and if that’s the sort of thing that I wanted, I’d be voting for the Republicans.

timewarp ,
@timewarp@lemmy.world avatar

Whataboutism

protist ,

How? I’m not saying what the radio host covered in the article did was right…I just think the difference with how right-wing media operates is striking

timewarp ,
@timewarp@lemmy.world avatar

If the goal is just to talk about random things in Lemmy threads, how’s the weather where you’re at?

protist ,

Dude, I just explained how what I said relates to this article. It wasn’t at all random. Hope you have a great night and get to set that phone down soon

xmunk , (edited )

Pretty fucking hot. I’m in Vancouver and we’ve got a heat wave.

jonne ,

That doesn’t make this right. If democrats are going to make a mockery of the democratic process to “save democracy”, they’re not actually saving democracy.

JayleneSlide , in Airport security missed live ammo in tourists’ hand luggage. The TSA doesn’t know how

I travel a lot for work. US Customs and the TSA are absolutely a sick joke. I could easily write a novella on the extremely poor training of TSA employees. I have a small permanent retainer (read: braces); about 25% of the time, that is considered suspicious, and I get an enhanced inspection. “Ya know, I could just open my mouth and show you what’s in there.”

The TSA always determines that my juggling balls are suspicious, so I never pack them in carry-on anymore. I have NEXUS, yet I always get an enhanced inspection on return to the US. Literally every other country to which I have flown just waves me through, even before I got Pre-Check/NEXUS/Global Entry.

My partner had her rigging knife in her backpack on a flight out and back. She was unpacking and found it in her backpack after the trip. Good catch, TSA.

And the absolute frosting on the TSA shit sandwich: one of my close friends owns a private security firm. His company was approached by the TSA to assist in security audits at a major international airport. He and his team were contracted to “smuggle” fake firearms through TSA checkpoints, any way they could. The TSA repeatedly failed to detect the firearms for each of five audits. The TSA division (district? regional?) manager, frustrated at his group’s 100% failure rate, determined that my friend’s company must have specialized criminal training, and everyone who worked that contract were put on the no-fly list. It took him about 18 months to unfuck that mess for him and his employees.

I had written a few more paragraphs about TSA hassles, but I think y’all get the picture.

Swemg ,

Juggling balls you say?

JayleneSlide ,

If my juggling of balls catches your fancy, you might also be interested to know that I also smoke meat, play the flute, and churn butter. 😆

Evil_Shrubbery ,

He does it every single flight.
All of those things.

An absolute pleasure to share a flight with.

dustyData ,

Are you a Hobbit or something? Because I approve all those things.

Archer ,

Fresh butter on smoked salmon with live entertainment on a flight? What’s not to like?

azimir ,

I’ve carried a set of leather wrapped juggling balls on flights off and on since the 90’s. They used to make every X-ray reader twitch out. They’re about the right size for bad items (explosives, grenades), and I have three, not just one.

Normally it would get a quick search, a moment of confusion, and then no worries.

Once when going through the old airport in Berlin, I got searched at the second checkpoint, they brought out the balls to me, so I started juggling them and did a routine. It was really quiet so I was the only passenger in sight. That was the only time I’ve performed in front of an audience who was carrying machine guns.

IamSparticles ,

This kind of makes me want to take my Renegade pins in a carry-on to see what TSA makes of them.

TheRealKuni ,

The TSA division (district? regional?) manager, frustrated at his group’s 100% failure rate, determined that my friend’s company must have specialized criminal training, and everyone who worked that contract were put on the no-fly list.

What in the fuck?

JayleneSlide ,

Oh, throughout the whole thing, he and his employees were treated like garbage. He would get through security, go directly to the person’s office, and reassemble the pistol in front of the manager. And then my friend (or one of his employees) would get interrogated for hours on unrelated questions, like it was somehow my friend’s fault that the TSA failed their audits.

Dempf ,

Damn I think this might somehow be worse than the Iowa county who had physical pen testers arrested: krebsonsecurity.com/…/iowa-prosecutors-drop-charg…

A_Random_Idiot ,

the only surprising thing in this story is that no one got their genitals full on cupped and brushed.

I’ve had 3 different TSA agents reach down the front of my pants and either full on grab my junk or very heavily brush the back of their hands over it (through underwear)

UnpopularCrow , in Shot in 1.6 seconds: Video raises questions about how trooper avoided charges in Black man's death

“And I’m just scared”.

Maybe it’s time to increase Georgia’s police basic training up from ten weeks to maybe eleven or even twelve! Source: trainingreform.org/state-police-training-requirem…

Irremarkable ,
@Irremarkable@fedia.io avatar

The fact that there isn't a minimum of 2 years classroom work before they even get a ride along is fucking ridiculous.

hoshikarakitaridia ,
@hoshikarakitaridia@lemmy.world avatar

As a German, the contrast in education and training for police is unfathomable. Yes, we still have a problem with some cops being Nazis, but cops don’t kill people because “I was scared” here. They usually kill them after an act of terrorism that killed a lot more people, or if they had a standoff for like 2h and the guy has a gun.

Which absolutely is the better way.

But ofc, banning guns is really helpful in the first place, because wouldn’t you know, banning a killing device rapidly decreases the amount of killings. Funny how that works. I would even argue it’s cause and effect and not just coincidental.

homesweethomeMrL ,

It’s worse than that here. There’s a famous “police trainer” who spends his time giving seminars to officers all over the country telling them they have to have a “warrior mindset” and not only is it okay to kill, they should do it first before they get killed. It’s not proper training, it’s a fear cult indoctrination. Given that cops are - apparently required - to not be the brightest, it results in the horrible situation we have.

Which. Is not helpful.

There’s a lot of them and, extremely unsurprisingly, they are right-wing lunatics themselves.

ShepherdPie ,

A good example of the brainwashing that comes out of these seminars was the cop who heard an acorn drop on his car and then immediately fell to the ground claiming he was shot before unloading his entire pistol into the back of his squad car where a suspect was sitting handcuffed.

Aux ,

I don’t think that 2 years is a must. Here in the UK police officers have 5 months of classroom and 3 months of field training. That works pretty well. What also helps is that British police officers are trained to diffuse the situation and don’t have guns.

Organichedgehog ,

don’t have guns.

bingo

deadbeef79000 ,

They have guns, just like police where I live have guns.

Locked in the car, not on their person.

If a situation requires a gun, they can go and get it.

Afterwards, they have to account for every round fired.

But then, it’s harder to kill “n****rs” extra-judicously then.

ColeSloth ,

Then they’d have to pay them more.

There’s still tons of places that police, firefighters, and EMT’s, like $35k a year starting. Everyone always talks about teachers not making enough, but forgets about the people who show up in 5 minutes in the middle of the night because you called 911 and have no idea what to do and need to get help fast. Firefighters and emts are exploited because of a love of the job and what it means to them. Police are often not of that same track. If you don’t want to just attract the guy who wants to walk around looking for trouble and have a gun, you’ll have to make it worth the money.

Irremarkable ,
@Irremarkable@fedia.io avatar

Oh trust me, I'm well aware how shit most (non cop) first responders have it. Round my neck of the woods, cops start at around 60k will full benefits. That's still damn good money here, and they go up quickly.

Our firefighters don't even make minimum wage. They finally just got a pension. Our EMS hardly makes more than minimum wage.

commandar , (edited )

Already happening. Required training hours were roughly doubled a couple of weeks ago effective Jan 1:

www.11alive.com/…/85-c835bdef-3984-452b-acf0-88b2…

That said, this was a state trooper. GSP have long been known for a culture of cowboy recklessness and special treatment codified into law. They report up directly to the Governor and are explicitly excluded from many of the restrictions put on local police (the moniker God’s Special People has been around for decades for a reason). They are one of the few major agencies in the state that still refuses to use body cameras, for example.

Institutionally, it’s a group set up to be and that views itself as special enforcers that are above the restraints put on others. GSP is routinely involved in high speed pursuits that end in either a fatal accident or a shooting.

More training is always a good thing, but I’ll just say I was unsurprised a trooper was involved here.

homesweethomeMrL ,
cabillaud ,
@cabillaud@lemmy.world avatar

This got to be a joke ?

MorganLeFail ,

The rationale, at least in part, is that people with high IQs get bored and quit and the department loses out on the money they invested in training.

Crikeste ,

The other part is that more educated people have deeper understandings of society and are therefore more empathetic towards the marginalized.

MorganLeFail ,

Can’t have that. Wouldn’t do at all.

homesweethomeMrL ,

You can read it - no joke.

jordanlund , in Disney told L.A. residents to move to Florida for a planned campus. They did, it was canceled and now they're suing
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

If my employer wanted me to pick up stakes and move to the other side of the country, it would require SIGNIFICANT compensation. A massive raise, moving expenses, plus paying all the added on costs of selling my house.

I’m not choosing to move, you’re choosing to move me. Pay me. Full stop.

JoMiran ,
@JoMiran@lemmy.ml avatar

This is exactly how it worked during most of my career which dates back to the Y2K preparations. I’ve noticed a significant shift in attitude in the past decade where even top tier IT resources are seen as easily replaceable as a mop and bucket.

ramble81 ,

Best we can do is: do it or you lose your job.

HeartyOfGlass ,

This has become a common strategy for large businesses to cull their employees - “return to office”, relocating HQ; it’s done in hopes most of those employees opt to quit so the business doesn’t have to fire them / give them a severance or whatever.

Sounds like in this case the bluff was called.

jordanlund ,
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

This is a little different than “return to office”, these employees were already working at Disneyland and were told “No, no, we need you for an expansion at DisneyWORLD… Get up and go!”

Then after they went it was “jk, just foolin’. U mad bro?”

teejay ,

It’s crazy when you think about it. They picked up their lives, sold their homes in southern california, and moved to fucking central florida of all places. It’s such a massive, massive downgrade in every conceivable category to move from socal to central florida. Then to have the company that mandated this (probably under threat of termination) pull a bait-and-switch once the employees and their families had moved, I’d be lawyering up and suing too. I’d sue them to make me whole – put me back in the same neighborhood I left, in a same or better house (with the same or better loan amount and terms), and offset any losses (with interest) related to moving, my spouse’s loss of job and income, provide equivalent income and job placement for my spouse until they find an equal or better job, and guarantee my employment at current job and comp for the next 10 years (with a sparkling golden parachute if they terminate me earlier).

paddirn , in To fight poverty, some Texas cities gave aid with no strings attached. Conservatives are pushing back.

“I don’t want none of MY tax dollars going to the poor and needy! If we’re gonna give anything away it needs to go to chickenshit police departments, global corporations, and the obscenely wealthy.”

TrickDacy ,
@TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

Don’t forget the military!! If we spent a penny less than 2 trillion dollars per year that would make Jesus very angry!!

Fedizen ,

As jesus said “the meek shall inherit thee earth” “The military shall conquer the earth”

KingOfSleep ,

“'cause Ima Christian!!!”

veni_vedi_veni , in A heat dome will send temperatures into the triple-digits across the West as fires burn

Climate change effects are compounding, as polar caps melt they release trapped methane which is more effective greenhouse gas than CO2.

As temperatures heat up, people just gonna turn up HVAC more, more energy usage, which means we either get green real quick, or this feedback loop will continue until we break.

But all this is known. We’re all gonna be scrambling when we reach that point, spouting “We didn’t listen” like that episode of South Park about this very issue.

Meh, im sure the rich fucks have contingencies for themselves, so it’s all good.

skuzz ,

But all this is known. We’re all gonna be scrambling when we reach that point, spouting “We didn’t listen” like that episode of South Park about this very issue.

That’s the thing though, we, the we being your average human on the planet, are put in a position to have very little power to do anything about it. In America specifically (not so sure about the rest of the world) you’re kept busy trying to manage your health insurance (if you have it), your retirement fund (if you have it), your job (that may or may not have unpaid on call), your home (maintaining and cleaning your home/apartment/townhouse, trying to do repairs yourself because you can’t afford to pay for others to do it as prices for service/repair work have skyrocketed), your food (it is too expensive to even buy fast food anymore so you gotta cook to save money), your car (gotta own a vehicle as the US doesn’t have meaningful public transport, gotta make sure it is insured, maintained, etc.), your bills (gotta juggle those credit card and points cards and discount cards to get the best deals on every purchase!), if you have children, then you have to manage all the facets of their lives as well including making their food, cleaning up after them, taking them to/from school and other extracurriculars, deal with any school system issues, and on and on.

By the end of the week, you just want to have five minutes to catch your breath, but you can’t, because you only (maybe) have two days off of work and those will be spent catching up on whatever chores you didn’t get done during the week.

Democratic governance was meant so that we could vote people into office to manage the governance, but now that is so bloated and broken, we also have to collectively stay on top of our nation, state, county, city’s issues so we can be aware and try and “fight” back whenever we can with a letter or a council meeting. Never going to have time to go to a protest or skip out of work for a week to protest with your work/dollar because living paycheck-to-paycheck with no safety net means you’re homeless if one thing fucks up.

The whole system (again, in the US at least) is designed to keep one so busy that one doesn’t even know their way out of the week, let alone to take individual action to collectively organize and kick these politicians and corporations in the teeth for destroying the human habitability of the planet.

Dempf ,

You are absolutely right about all the challenges facing average Americans that keep us too busy to do a lot about issues like these.

Still, there are lots of different ways to help. Some do require more time, and are probably out of reach for someone who’s just barely getting by. But some require less.

Today I dropped off at the post office 350 hand written postcards to low propensity climate voters in my state. I wrote and addressed the postcards while I was watching TV, so it didn’t really take much more of my free time (I would have been watching TV anyways). Elections in my state have been decided by only a few hundred votes, so actions like this do make a difference.

Next week, I will be meeting with staff for my member of Congress in person in D.C. I have the luxury of having the time and money to make this happen, but if you pick up the phone or write an email every single month to your congressional office and mention climate change, it makes it much easier for us to get these meetings and get our point across. Pressure on congressional offices alone doesn’t get the job done, but it makes them take us more seriously when we meet with them and present a bill that we want them to support.

Congress is pretty dysfunctional right now, but we still have managed to get some climate friendly legislation through. Every bit of help and support we get along the way makes a difference.

The group I volunteer with is Citizens’ Climate Lobby, and I think they are the best, but there are other groups out there. The American Conversation Coalition is more right-leaning and has been gaining traction recently. The Sunrise Movement is more left-leaning, though for some reason I haven’t heard much from them recently, at least in my state. I’m sure there are other groups out there besides those three.

GiuseppeAndTheYeti ,

Of those 350 postcards, 330 were immediately thrown in the trash without being read.

Edit: Also 350 postcards with the proper postage would cost $185.50

Dempf ,

I’m sure that many will be thrown away, and the cynical take sounds logical at face value. But that’s not what the data shows:

www.environmentalvoter.org/results

Postage costs were spread around among volunteers. Some people have more time than money, some have more money than time. Personally, I paid for about 250 postcard stamps, and got a roll of 100 from the group. Others got more or less rolls of stamps.

Cynicism among folks who care about climate change is understandable, and widespread, which is a big motivation for sending postcards targeting climate voters. The data shows that we tend to vote less than the average voter. If we really want the political changes that we say we do, then we need to show it and take action.

It’s entirely possible that it is too late to do anything about climate change. But if we act as if it’s true then we make it a certainty, where now it is only a probability.

GiuseppeAndTheYeti ,

Climate change realists (people that have common sense) voting less than the average population is not something I expected. If anyone believes that climate change is real and isn’t voting Democrat, you’re the problem.

Climate change has become reality because of apathy. Not evil actors. They’ve always been the minority relying on inaction.

Couldbealeotard ,
@Couldbealeotard@lemmy.world avatar

Dude responds to a post about having no time and money by saying he hand wrote hundreds of postcards in his free time and also volunteers…

Dempf ,

Thanks for your reply. I think I might have introduced a bit of confusion here, as I’m making two points in a bit of an implicit way.

My first point is a bit of a refutation of the OP. It’s basically the same as you’ve heard from any other political non-profit: “you can make a difference with just 5 minutes of your time! It doesn’t matter if you’re broke and struggling under late-stage capitalism just like the rest of us, your voice matters!”

There is both truth, and deception in that statement.

The truth is that small actions do make a difference. I’ve seen the link between how getting more contacts from my district to congressional offices helps me set meetings with the office. Anyone can pick up the phone and call Congress, it doesn’t take a special skill, or money. Similarly with the postcard thing – if someone felt like doing it, and if postcards & stamps were provided by the group, it wouldn’t take a lot of extra time or money to do like a couple dozen, and I’m sure that person would feel more involved and empowered. I’m not trying to say everyone should do it, just that it takes less effort than you might think to make a real noticeable difference, even if you’re struggling under late-stage capitalism.

The deception is thinking that it is enough for a movement to rely solely on these actions as a strategy. It is not enough on its own and leads to slacktivism, and is probably part of why most of us have felt so burnt out for so long on the idea of making changes – we’ve been burned before (remember Net Neutrality?)

Therefore, my second point, and the reason that I shared a bit more about what I’ve been doing, is that I’m trying to give people a little bit of hope. I’m trying to build on the first point (it’s easier than you think to take a small action). And what I’m building on that to say is: “don’t worry that you (person who has very little time/money to contribute) aren’t doing enough, because I’m here to pick up the rest. I’ve got this. We are a team, so pass the ball to me, and put me in the play”.

What I’m trying to say is, a movement needs both pieces. Again, movements that have the first (popular pressure) but lack the second (volunteer development, engagement, active lobbying, etc.) tend to fizzle out like the Net Neutrality movement.

On the other hand, some movements have heavily dedicated and invested volunteers, but can’t convince an average American to do things like regularly contact their representative. The feedback we get in my state from congressional offices is something like 100 contacts per month, every month on a particular issue will cause them to start taking it more seriously. Without meeting that threshold, a movement will never get traction no matter how enthusiastic their core volunteers are. Nobody will take them seriously.

RememberTheApollo_ ,

Meh, im sure the rich fucks have contingencies for themselves, so it’s all good.

Yes. Die after everyone else does when they finally figure out that there’s nothing left to live for, money doesn’t mean shit if you’re king of a dead world.

madcaesar ,

🤣 The joke is that if society were to start collapsing, it won’t, but if, the rich people’s homes would be raided and looted first.

So the rich are fucking up doubley.

Semi_Hemi_Demigod ,
@Semi_Hemi_Demigod@lemmy.world avatar

Like the idiots in World War Z who created a compound and then started livestreaming from it.

ininewcrow ,
@ininewcrow@lemmy.ca avatar

No one is safe including the rich.

The biggest major effect that global warming will have in the next few years or about 20 to 30 years is … mass migration. Once that starts in earnest, countries will be breaking out in conflicts everywhere. We aren’t cooperating with ourselves within our established borders now, what do you think will happen when millions of people start moving around to avoid the heat and more natural disasters.

Everyone will suffer … the only thing the rich buy themselves is time because we are all headed to the same global environmental apocalypse.

I feel good that I’m middle aged now because I will have lived my younger years when the world was doing relatively OK.

I feel bad for anyone born right now because they’ll either see the beginning of the end or start surviving it.

Semi_Hemi_Demigod ,
@Semi_Hemi_Demigod@lemmy.world avatar

All of this has a silver lining: Dumping this much CO2 into our atmosphere will clearly signal that something weird is going on at interstellar scales, so maybe what’s left of humanity will finally make first contact. This is compounded if we use nuclear weapons during the resource wars.

Olgratin_Magmatoe ,

Space is big, any civilization analyzing the composition of exo planet atmosphereres wouldn’t know for quite a while. It’s for more likely that they wouldn’t discover it until after several decades of passed, at which point it will have been too late.

That, and there’s the fact that first contact almost universally goes bad for the group with less technology, which is us in this case.

So you may as well just start playing the lottery.

Semi_Hemi_Demigod ,
@Semi_Hemi_Demigod@lemmy.world avatar

The only hope I have left is a Star Trek civilization at some point in the future and this is the only path I see to it.

Don’t take that from me.

AngryCommieKender ,

Star Trek required WWIII, a major nuclear conflict, and the Eugenics Wars for humanity to pull their head out of their asses and not immediately shoot the first Vulcans that came by to see what was going on with the warp drive that Zephram Cochran had just turned on.

Semi_Hemi_Demigod ,
@Semi_Hemi_Demigod@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, hence my hope that a collapse and resource wars will teach us how to work together

afraid_of_zombies ,

We are talking about ppb. Very hard to detect that from a distance. We couldn’t detect it on Mars from earth.

FlyingSquid , in Neo-Nazi who protested drag shows has been arrested on child porn charges
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I think they need to start telling us which right-wing nutjobs aren’t also pedos to save time.

midnight_puker ,
@midnight_puker@sh.itjust.works avatar

A short list, indeed.

RavenFellBlade ,

Zero… point… zero.

meco03211 ,

Repeating of course…

AceSLS ,

I compiled a list for you, here you go:

acockworkorange ,

Bravo!

MrJameGumb , in Trump supporters call for riots and violent retribution after verdict
@MrJameGumb@lemmy.world avatar

Is anyone surprised by this? He’s spent basically the last 8 years training his cult members to commit homicide anytime they are even mildly inconvenienced…

andrew ,
@andrew@lemmy.stuart.fun avatar

Oh man, they’d be super offended by your comment if they could afford Internet. And read.

MeekerThanBeaker , in Ticketmaster hacked. Breach affects more than half a billion users.

Am I going to get another free year of credit monitoring?

Awesome. Wow. 🙃

I feel like I get another free year every year from different companies.

Nurse_Robot ,

I don’t even check anymore. I get a credit / “your info was found on the dark web!” Email literally every week, what’s the point. I’ve been fucked by giga corps and I have nothing to show for it besides weekly notifications of my compromised info

dohpaz42 ,
@dohpaz42@lemmy.world avatar

My favorite is when I get emailed by “hackers” who have one of my old passwords. 🤣

7U5K3N ,

That reminds me… I need to renew my ñortõn antiviral softwares for $499.99

pikmeir ,

Dude that’s totally a scam. I’ll do it for only $399.99 but I also need your mother’s maiden name and your favorite book for some reason.

acetanilide ,

I think I’ve gotten 3 or 4 so far this year. All or almost all from medical facilities/services.

ArchRecord ,

The best (worst) part is that they almost always just point you to the ways that you can already request your credit report and monitoring for free from the credit bureaus. 🥲

jaybone ,

And the best part of that is, who ever authorized these credit bureaus to monitor and maintain your credit info in the first place. (Spoiler alert: no one.) And they get hacked every other year anyway.

Imgonnatrythis ,

Really takes the sting right out of your raw asshole when they give you one of those coupons don’t it?

yeahiknow3 , in NYU Nurse Is Fired After Calling the Gaza War a ‘Genocide’ in Speech

Pointing out that killing women and children is bad is “divisive.”

Amazing.

ArmoredThirteen , in Consumers are so demoralized by inflation and high rates they've given up on saving for the American Dream and are spending money instead, economist says

I’m saving up for the American Dream 2.0™️: Moving to another country

astreus , (edited )

It’s not just America though.

Where I’m from:

UK average income before tax) £34,963 - £27,911 after tax (assuming NO student loan and NO pension) (for context: a band 3 nurse with 3 years experience makes £24,336 before tax or £20,631.51 after with no pension)

England average house price: £375,131

Approx ratio after tax: 13:1

Minimum deposit: 5% - £18,756.55

Tax: 0% on first time buyers

Fees: about £1,000 - £5,000

Total cost to get going: Approx £21,750 - nearly a years wage.

Now let’s look where I live: Spain!

Turns out Spain really is a load of countries wearing a hat so getting unified stats is not easy. Let’s try Barcelona:

Average income before tax: €33,837 - €25,470 after tax

Average house price: €376,399

Approx ratio after tax: 15:1

Minimum deposit: 10% - €37,639.90

Purchase tax: 10% - €37,639.90 (plus 1.5% for new builds)

Fees: 2 - 5% - 7,527.98 - 18,819.95

Total cost to get going: €82,807.78 - €94,099.75

Turns out treating housing as a market to speculate on might just be the problem all along.

BeardedGingerWonder ,

Just to add to this, there’s zero chance you’re getting a 13x mortgage. For a 375k house on a 25k salary you’re going to need something more like 250k to start.

astreus ,

To add to this, the rule of thumb in the UK is your maximum loan is 4.5x your salary.

The average worker could borrow about £157,000.

JustEnoughDucks ,
@JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl avatar

To be fair, the UK is essentially aiming to be America 2.0

Many countries are trending more expensive (Belgium went up 30% house price in 4 years) but the UK is on another level of the wealthy literally owning all property and purposely leaving tens of thousands of houses empty just to spite the working class.

astreus ,

I knew someone would say this, which is why I also used Spain where the houses are as expensive, the pay is worse, and the tax is higher!

It doesn’t matter where you go in the West, the dream of liberalism is dead

djsoren19 ,

Yeah, I hate this American-centric idea of “Oh, only my country is experiencing this totally unique problem, I’ll just go somewhere else.

As if late-stage global capitalism would somehow be a problem that is unique to a single country.

Semi_Hemi_Demigod ,
@Semi_Hemi_Demigod@lemmy.world avatar

The fediverse is a lot more multinational than That Other Site, and I’m seeing the same sort of articles from all over the place.

pantyhosewimp ,

Yep.

The theatre is closed. There is no place else to go.

And by “theatre” we mean the theatre of conflict not the cinema.

It is time to stand and fight.

GiddyGap ,

Unfortunately not much better elsewhere, if at all. What would make me move is the idiotic healthcare system.

ID411 , in Biden announces 100% tariff on Chinese-made electric vehicles

Ahhhh the free market lovers !

tim Apple can use Chinese Labour to build his shit and make a trillion dollars.

You try to save a few thousand bucks on Chinese car ? DIE, TRAITOR.

disguy_ovahea ,

GM and Ford manufacture in China. It doesn’t affect American designed and Chinese produced vehicles, only companies that are based in China.

credo ,

These “free market” arguments keep missing the key detail. Reading is hard.

subsidised Chinese goods

I don’t remember China subsidizing American products and then shipping them back to us.

ID411 ,

Why do you think that might be ?

disguy_ovahea ,

One funnels money into American business, the other into the Chinese government. It’s not some secret plan. It’s clearly declared.

Kecessa ,

The reason why you’re saving on Chinese cars is because of huge government subsidies on their side, so they don’t play by the rules of the free market either.

Einstein ,

I mean, Our government could do the same thing to keep costs low and competitive instead of just making them more expensive for everyone.

Kecessa ,

Government giving money vs government getting money

Yeah, basically the same thing 👍

Maddier1993 ,

Yeah but the right way to do it is to stop oil subsidies

Kecessa ,

That won’t make US made EV cheaper. China relies on what is basically slavery as well, if that’s what you want for US factory workers in order to be able to buy a car for cheap car then I think you don’t have your priorities straight…

steventrouble ,

deleted_by_author

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  • Kecessa ,

    My comment wasn’t about Uyghurs specifically but Chinese work conditions in general

    ID411 ,

    I think you might be in a bit of a bubble mate.

    theguardian.com/…/us-prison-workers-low-wages-exp…

    Prison Labour Contribute 11bn to the US economy.

    Kecessa ,

    Right, those prisoners working unionized jobs in car factories

    guacupado ,

    Tell me how much money the CEOs make then tell me how much worker wages have to do with how expensive the cars are.

    Kecessa ,

    GM’s CEO makes 28m/year

    A drop in the bucket with their 170b in revenue

    Their factory workers make way over 20$/h, some make way over 50$/h.

    How much do you think Chinese factory workers get paid?

    UnderpantsWeevil ,
    @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world avatar

    GM’s CEO makes 28m/year

    Looking back at the last 5 years, General Motors’s selling, general & admin expenses peaked in December 2023 at 9.656 billion.

    Selling, General & Admin Expenses For General Motors

    If you include the incentives across the entire business, rather than just fixating on a single employee, you discover a figure equal to around 5% of the $171B in gross revenues. It should be noted that even this is a conservative estimate, as General Motors licenses and contracts to third-party businesses with their own administrative expenses.

    How much do you think Chinese factory workers get paid?

    In the China versus US size stakes, it’s what you measure that counts

    This matters for the debate over which of the US or China has the larger economy because, measured at market exchange rates, US GDP is still around 40% larger than that of China. (See Chart 1.) But when measured at PPP exchange rates, China’s economy overtook that of the US in 2016 and is now about 20% bigger.

    Because of the cheap cost of living in China, their factory workers can earn less on paper and still live much higher on the hog. Often literally (Chinese consumers eat about 5kg more pork per capita than their American peers). But also in terms of home ownership rates (90% in China to 60% in America) and retirement age (54 in China compared to 59 in the US) and life expectancy (78 in China compared to 76 in the US).

    If you consult the Gini Index, the US and China are within 2 points of each other as of 2021.

    This is largely thanks to the big public works financed and administered by a unified national government. A relatively poor country can produce quality of life superior to the global leader simply by doing the old FDR style tax-and-spend tricks that put America at the front of the pack 80 years ago.

    brlemworld ,

    Also uiger slavery

    Breve ,

    Oh, like the time in 2009 when the US government gave $81 billion dollars to the automotive industry? Or again in 2023 when Biden put $12 billion in incentives on the table for them to make EVs?

    3volver ,

    Nailed it. Sick and fucking tired of hearing the “oh China’s unfair subsidies blah blah” bullshit. The US has been doing the same thing, just we’ve had our futures sold to corporation’s profit margins.

    Kecessa ,

    Show me where I said the USA doesn’t do something similar?

    BastingChemina ,

    Plus the $7500 tax credit for buying an electric car, this is another form of subsidies for car maker.

    tsonfeir ,
    @tsonfeir@lemm.ee avatar

    It’s a free market.

    Kecessa ,

    So is imposing tariffs then

    tsonfeir ,
    @tsonfeir@lemm.ee avatar

    And as a free market, I should choose if I want to pay them.

    ID411 ,

    Google “US subsidies to auto industry”. Add to the numbers . Come and share your result with the class.

    Kecessa , (edited )

    So? I never said the USA plays by the rules, I even used the word “either” in my previous reply.

    Hugh_Jeggs ,

    I think what they’re saying is that both countries are subsidising the industries.

    Chinese companies are thinking ahead and using the subsidies to sell more vehicles

    American companies are, surprise-sur-fucking-surprise, stealing the subsidies to make a few billionaires richer

    njm1314 ,

    Nobody has ever played by the rules of the free market. It’s been a scam from day one.

    Brickardo ,

    In order to get subsidies, companies have to concur in public exams pitching their plans. It’s no different whatsoever from getting private funds somewhere else. Private funds are often obtained by way of being close friends with someone - which happens a lot in my country. If anything, getting government subsidies is proof that you have your act together.

    guacupado ,

    It’s funny how everyone tries to make China subsidizing cars for its population a bad thing. The US should bet taking note. Taxes should be used to help the population, not the people in charge of the population.

    buzz86us ,

    The reason you’re saving on the running costs of a gas car is because of huge government subsidies on the fossil fuel industry.

    Kecessa ,

    Show me where I said the USA doesn’t do something similar

    UnderpantsWeevil ,
    @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world avatar

    huge government subsidies on their side

    China’s public education, public health care, public housing, and public mass transit: Evil Subsidies

    America’s $7500 tax credit: Sensible free market EV incentive

    Cowbee ,
    @Cowbee@lemmy.ml avatar

    Then the US should match that and subsidize Electric Vehicles. Everyone wins.

    reddig33 ,

    Apple has been getting the hell out of building things in China — if you hadn’t noticed.

    ID411 ,

    And what ?

    seaQueue , in Target Pride merchandise only available at select stores after rightwing backlash
    @seaQueue@lemmy.world avatar

    Oh neat, now we’re letting fundamentalist extremists dictate what can and can’t be sold in stores. Surely this can’t go wrong.

    DeadWorld ,

    I guess we do negotiate with terrorists in america

    BruceTwarzen ,

    Can't negotiate with terrorist when you are the terrorists

    OutlierBlue ,

    Now they elect them to office.

    Passerby6497 ,

    Haven’t we always?

    IMO, the only difference between the past and now is that they have to actively fight against it instead of it just being suppressed by the dominant culture (that felt the same way, but didn’t have to openly enforce it).

    cabron_offsets , in Judge in Trump’s classified documents case cancels May trial date; no new date set

    what the fuck

    Bipta ,

    He chose the judge for where he moved to commit the crimes... We shouldn't expect anything less.

    Diplomjodler3 , in Two people killed in Texas after 350,000 pound load detaches from trailer, crushes vehicle: officials

    Let me guess: it happened because the relevant safety regulations were repealed or the authority in charge was dissolved or muzzled.

    Stovetop ,

    Or perhaps because the owners of the transport company may have refused to listen to safety concerns from employees because it would require expensive upgrades and additional personnel that they didn’t want to pay for.

    In either case, I am sure this will be a “No one could have predicted this” situation, the driver of the truck takes all the blame, and nothing changes regarding company policy or safety regulations.

    Semi-Hemi-Demigod ,
    @Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

    While this is probably what will happen because Texas, there was a really horrible limousine crash in New York and it basically destroyed the stretch limo industry

    VieuxQueb ,
    @VieuxQueb@lemmy.ca avatar

    I’m guessing the people involved in the limo crash that changed things where not poor normal people.

    Semi-Hemi-Demigod ,
    @Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

    Yeah, and it shocked a lot of the rich folks to learn they'd die horribly if they were in an accident so they took action

    frezik ,

    I thought it was all the gaudy shit they started putting into the back of stretch Hummers. It’s a plastic facsimile of being rich.

    ShepherdPie ,

    I think the 1990s, 2000s, and beyond killed the stretch limo industry. I don’t think anyone finds them that cool anymore and they’re a pain in the ass to own and operate I’m assuming.

    Diplomjodler3 ,

    The company can only get away with this sort of thing if there isn’t adequate oversight. The root cause is political. If that indeed had anything to do with it, which is speculation at this point.

    Stovetop ,

    Yep. No matter the cause, I expect the responsible parties to face zero meaningful consequences.

    b3an ,
    @b3an@lemmy.world avatar

    And they wonder why we’re so fucking jaded 😂😂 but for real. Justice doesn’t exist anymore.

    SaltySalamander ,

    Fairly certain that it never has.

    Neato ,
    @Neato@ttrpg.network avatar

    Man I hope not. The owner or the truck or trucking company, or whoever was paid to transport the load, should be held liable. They paid the driver, subcontracted to an independent contractor and are therefore responsible for the performance. They could sue the driver/sub if they felt they misperformed by insurance should eat that trucking company alive for this.

    assassin_aragorn ,

    Depending on how the contracts are written, the transport company may now be extremely fucked too.

    This always happens. Skimp on safety to save pennies, then lose millions in equipment in a disaster. The person buying this equipment is going to demand a new one for free, and the supplier is going to point at the transporter.

    Justly so. Let them lose everything for trying to cut corners and killing people as a result.

    Thann ,
    @Thann@lemmy.ml avatar

    The load was 10 times the standard limit

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