katsumojo
katsumojo t1_j964ixq wrote
Reply to [OC] Gendered Movie Favorites: The favorite movies of Letterboxd users broken down by the pronouns they selected for their account by throwbarrieaway
Where TF is LOTR? WHAT AM I?
katsumojo t1_j7hfmrt wrote
Reply to [OC] Spotify Streams by Every Song Nominated for "Song of the Year" At The 65th Annual GRAMMY Awards by dvd5671
The Bonnie Rait sign is true artwork. Not saying any of the other songs aren’t. I listened to Just Like That for the first time last night and it was emotionally captivating. Great subject matter, great story telling, emotionally connects…makes for a great song.
katsumojo t1_j56da5t wrote
Reply to comment by Aleyla in The world is heading for a 'quantum divide': here's why it matters by Gari_305
The problem with this statement is it places all of the fault on the people stuck in the cycle. Yes, they play a role BUT they are just making the best choices that are in place for them.
Imagine an example where Frank and Lisa are leaders of their respective population groups in the same country. When the war in Ukraine breaks out all grain supply is cut off to their country until a few months later when negotiations finally allow for a modest amount of grain to be exported to their country. It’s not as much as before the war and this instantly puts Frank and Lisa at odd’s. If Frank gets more grain, Lisa might try to negotiate but that would be fruitless because it’s not even enough grain for Frank. Next Lisa might resort to political/economic/social pressure. And if it get serious enough, Lisa’s people will demand war. They’re starving after all.
This is a dumbed down situation but this dynamic occurs in developing countries all over the world as a result of action without forethought by developed countries. Layer decades of this happening again and again and that’s how you end up with regional conflict zones.
katsumojo t1_j3cygxb wrote
Reply to comment by FinalJuggernaut_ in I asked chatgpt to write a UN resolution in favor of universal basic income, and this is what it returned. by AnneBancroftsGhost
The most famous proponent of this idea, Andrew Yang, went to Columbia University and Brown University. Seems pretty educated to me. And you can do a quick Google search on his work experience, he has it.
The point of universal basic income is multifold- give people a safety net so we have fewer homeless people, recognize and make possible the work of stay-at-home parents, invest money in the masses because we know that when the masses have money it is the most liquid; in other words, poor people spend their money more quickly than rich people--> when people spend money business does well--> when business does well there are more jobs available and the economy does well.
There is real thought and strategy behind the approach, the problem is it offends the American notion of "work for everything you have." The real problem is hard work alone barely pays for people's basic needs.
My grandfather was a Culligan salesmen..yes, he sold the giant tanks of water door to door. My grandmother was a homemaker. They were also parents to 7 children that all were cared for enough that they could grow to adulthood and live lives of their own. CAN YOU IMAGINE, someone working ANY modern day job and supporting a family of 9 on their own? The game has changed and the rules need to follow suit.
katsumojo t1_j3ckyv4 wrote
Reply to comment by daarthvaader in I asked chatgpt to write a UN resolution in favor of universal basic income, and this is what it returned. by AnneBancroftsGhost
My understanding is that universal basic income would be enough to cover the essentials: food, housing, heat, clothing, maybe internet, etc... There wouldn't be enough in the funding to do much more than that. If you wanted things like vacations, restaurant outings, extracurricular activities, to have enough money to buy a house instead of rent, nice clothes, etc.. you would have to work to create that kind of income. The idea is most people want those things and would be willing to work for them.
katsumojo t1_j1zkbwt wrote
Reply to what could be the next big resource or science that will change our lives? similarly to how Electricity, a wheel or fire did it. by minde0815
We just had the next wheel/electricity. It's called the internet. It's why things are simultaneously so fucked up and great right now.
katsumojo t1_j97ekgb wrote
Reply to comment by throwbarrieaway in [OC] Gendered Movie Favorites: The favorite movies of Letterboxd users broken down by the pronouns they selected for their account by throwbarrieaway
Oh thank God, I was beginning to suspect i was a he