n̛̠̫̪̰̜̗̭͇̊͂̋́̒̾̐ͯ̈́̓̑͛̉͒͡ͅͅỉ̷̷̴ͦͦ̇̋̈ͪͣ̽ͥ̽͗̔ͨ̎̚҉̣̝̘̺͚̥̱̜̹̪͎̣̱̳̠̰ͅh̎ͧ͐͐̑̆̃̈́̀̌͛̏͒ͣ̾̓͟҉̡̘̥͖̺͓̫̬͕̕i̷̢͍̫̫̩̮̖̥̫̣̦̯̖̰̼̟͚̎̇̎ͩ͛̉̓̑̾̒ͧ̈́̍ͨͩ̓ͤ́̕͡͞l̵̷̡̯̼͈̯̥͖͈̪̻͚̙̭̘̻̣͙̠͂ͫ̃̈́̚ ̩̙̥ͭ̋̇̌̂͐ͮ͐̓ͮ͢͞t̸̸̢̻̤̣̬̗͚̜͇̼͈͍̥͍͎̟̤͖ͭ̒͆̌͢͠i̶̴̞̣̫̹̥̥͎͉̱̖̦ͧ̊͊̄̊͋ͭ̀͜m̨͚̟͖̻̮̖̞͙̣̠͖̦̉̽̃ͬͯͣ͐͆͌͐̿̃̋̃̇ͫ̚ę̃ͬͧ̄̇͑ͥ̋̓̿̂̐͘͠҉̵͕͓̳̤̻̖̳̞̦̳͎̙̰̱̣̱͇n͈̜̦̣͉͓̗̓̍ͮ̇̎͜͟d̠̝̲̹̠̰̞͎̘̖̮̹͗̃̅̄̀͢͡͡ͅṷ̷̧̮̫̬͔̽͛ͧͥͧ̈́̎̒̋͊m̏̃ͥ̓̌͌̓̃́͒͏҉̺̬̞̪̝̰̯͓̱͈̘̥̞͙̮̦ͅ



posts from @hellscape tagged #politics

also:

I’ve had to start employing a very simple philosophy to make social media useable, again. Any time I see a political post, I ask myself, “What purpose does this post fulfill?” If the answer is “nothing,” then I tell the algorithm I’m not interested and/or I block the account, and I move on.

In addition, if I can answer the first question, I ask the follow-up question of “What can I do about it, right now?” If the answer is “nothing,” I tell the algorithm I’m not interested and/or I block the account, and I move on.

Really helps decrease your emotional intake from useless political dunks and panic-bait Twitter screenshots, tbh.

Like, I get the importance of being informed, but being informed is only powerful if there’s something you can do with the information. If a post’s entire point is just to be like “look at this bad thing and be upset,” then it’s entirely pointless, and it shouldn’t be paid any attention.



hellscape
@hellscape

“Let this radicalize you, not discourage you.” Well, bestie, it’s kinda hard when this is the twelfth piece of “radicalizing” news that I’ve seen today, alone.


hellscape
@hellscape

And, like, I’m already radicalized and have been for quite some years, now. Eventually you just end up going so far up that you hit the spillover number and start back at 0.