neckspike

contemplating a crab's immortality


sasuraiger
@sasuraiger

Pretty recently, I had a conversation with a new person in a games group that went towards the kind of pain Discord servers can be and how it's nice to have one that isn't exploding in drama.

The guy said "Yeah, tell me about it. One time I was in this discord where they didn't like me so I just posted from my archive of medical gore pictures until they had to ban me."

I immediately realized I was talking to the wrong person, which I guess came through later that night when I went to the bathroom and the guy had everybody ditch, like a high school popularity prank. Thank god I'm old now.



numberonebug
@numberonebug

So an observant Jew is not to use electricity on shabbat, this is because of the prohibition against completing something (in this case a circuit) which is violated by flicking a switch or pressing a button or turning on a screen ect

My synagogue does have an elevator though, and it is not a shabbos elevator (some hospitals will have elevators that on every Saturday stop at every floor without being called, which wouldn't be practical in this circumstance). I was curious how it can be used on shabbat and turns out my rabbi's husband is an electrical engineer who as a pet project built the elevator lol

The way it works is that ones button press provides an opportunity by which the circuit could be completed, with some randomness and some delay. Because of this the circuit completes after the button is pressed but not because the button is pressed, so the person pressing the button has not violated any prohibition

Working out roundabout loopholes to make the space more accessible is just delightful and I'm so glad I asked how it works



fwankie
@fwankie

Looking stuff up about the late 90s in the US for a ttrpg and realising again that like a third of that country lost their fucking minds after 9/11 on the same kind of level as the red scare



SomeEgrets
@SomeEgrets

sometimes i don't think people who started to grow up here after the 90s quite realize just how stark a difference there is pre- and post-9/11

at least certainly in north america, but the effects have absolutely rippled outward

like just on the surface, you could get on a plane without being body scanned and felt up - there was still some screening but literally the TSA did not exist, the US DHS did not exist as an entity. "but TERRORISM!" was... okay it was still sort of a thing but way more abstract and not used to justify atrocities on the daily

the 80s and 90s were far from perfect and certainly plagued by their own problems i don't want to minimize. but i suspect for a lot of us millennials, watching how we reacted to 9/11 and how our culture changed as a result represents a singular point where hope that a better world was possible died

the saying goes, "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice," but living through the before and after, it feels like this is... a crack, where, if the metaphorical arc truly had a hopeful bend to it, it was snapped, broken, and dragged into the pits of what would become the seed of rising hatred, intolerance, and a bend toward global conservatism and fascism (ah, but i repeat myself)

again, not to trivialize the unique problems we had in the 80s and 90s1, but sometimes i wonder what the experience of being a 2000s baby is like, never knowing what a pre-9/11 world looked like


  1. i cannot stress enough that there's some real bad shit in there and i dont have to tell most of you about that


fwankie
@fwankie

I was an incredibly insular nerd outside the US during that period with no interest or knowledge of politics and let me tell you even then the flood of not just browser games and clickbait ads but actual published games with incredibly crass focus on killing terrorists who were just middle eastern stereotypes around 2002/3 felt fucking bewildering