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Vitamin P posted:This idea of the new soviet man as happy queer person has been in my head all day btw, I don't think it's remotely achievable or would even be a good development but there's definitely a real something there. Almost like leaning into how capitalism destroys family and so accidently does also destroy gender normativity and just being like 'look what you've wrought' it's a compelling idea to me. I don't know, I think it might be more possible than you'd think, the normalization of homosexuality has caused absolutely horrific damage to the entire concept of normative sexual and gender performance. And yes there's a lot of pushback, but it wasn't so long ago that there wasn't so much pushback as absolute domination of the normative concepts and everything else had to be done in secret. When the weirdo moralists were asking "what next if we legalize gay marriage, it'll never stop" were 100% right, I think. I think a lot of people and particularly among younger generations who haven't grown up with as much conditioning bullshit, alot of people are asking what the loving point is? Why do you need to be constantly freaking out about whether something is gay or effeminate or whatever the gently caress else? Why do we bother with it? Is it not just all so much loving stress? Moreover I think a lot of social atomization is kinda tied up in that, I don't think it's a coincidence that the far right is popular among miserable, virulently homophobic and misogynist shut-ins. There is a mutual vulnerability that is found among queer communities and also, I think, among anyone who is at least somewhat nonconformist in that area. And I also think there's often a good culture of mutual support there, whereas the far right lot mostly just miserywank each other to death about it because having feelings and sharing them in an environment of mutual vulnerability with others is gay. I don't think it's an accident that a lot of radically progressive spaces are also left leaning.
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# ? May 3, 2020 23:32 |
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# ? May 24, 2024 07:19 |
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just going to leave this here from the political cartoons threadCloud Potato posted:Sunday Telegraph:
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# ? May 3, 2020 23:36 |
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FFS, boomers are just being asked to only go shopping once a week and maintain a respectful distance away from others, no need to be so dramatic about it. They were happy enough to let us wander home from school aged 8 and then sit in front of the TV alone for hours till they got home, why are they so incapable of doing it themselves.
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# ? May 3, 2020 23:43 |
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Angepain posted:just going to leave this here from the political cartoons thread My eyes instinctively searched in vain for the big White DEBT on the ball.
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# ? May 3, 2020 23:46 |
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learnincurve posted:FFS, boomers are just being asked to only go shopping once a week and maintain a respectful distance away from others, no need to be so dramatic about it. They were happy enough to let us wander home from school aged 8 and then sit in front of the TV alone for hours till they got home, why are they so incapable of doing it themselves. Hm well in my local "covid-care" groups a lot of the shopping for groceries, fetching meds and checking up on 'the quiet generation' and others who have to stay home is being done by boomers as many of the younger people have their own families to look after so shopping only once a week isn't really an option. (Disclosure: very late boomer/early x-er. I'm keeping an eye on two neighbours in their 80s which involves occasional extra shopping and my mum who lives 8 miles out of town in splendid isolation and up a steep hill is getting groceries thanks to a similar age boomer with a car otherwise known as my sister.)
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# ? May 3, 2020 23:59 |
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Sarah Vine decided to own her haters by posting a photo of (one of 20) her (& presumably her husbands?) bookshelves https://twitter.com/WestminsterWAG/status/1257044387739172865?s=20 Note the David Irving & The Bell Curve. Very normal books for a member of cabinet to be proudly showing off, but it's Labour that has the racism problem.
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:02 |
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forkboy84 posted:Sarah Vine decided to own her haters by posting a photo of (one of 20) her (& presumably her husbands?) bookshelves Can't help but notice The Strange Death of Europe too. Edit: This is the bookshelf of an absolute brainlet with profound media poisoning. The person who would boast of this bookshelf legit doesn't have a soul. Vitamin P fucked around with this message at 00:08 on May 4, 2020 |
# ? May 4, 2020 00:05 |
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Vitamin P posted:Can't help but notice The Strange Death of Europe too. And also "How Michael Gove Saves The World" https://twitter.com/jewdas/status/1257084214371135492
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:08 |
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Vitamin P posted:Can't help but notice The Strange Death of Europe too. Ayn Rand, but of course
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:08 |
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learnincurve posted:If you want a laugh then Andrew Neil has started mildly criticising the government on twitter and all the people with the Union Jack/George cross in their names/pictures are melting down. lol I ended up on boomer twitter and this is certainly a new spin on "the last labour government" https://twitter.com/rodbishop15/status/1256957798627315712?s=20 the replies are also hilarious, just old people going "I remember when I had the Asian flu, it was nineteen dickety two and I was wearing an onion on my belt, as was the style at the time" my favourite one is this though https://twitter.com/RonPoole13/status/1256984142329380864?s=20 what question?
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:08 |
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Isomermaid posted:Ayn Rand, but of course The Strange Death of Europe is Douglas Murray, he's an extremely careful writer but I would bet my life he's legit an actual nazi at heart.
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:11 |
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Vitamin P posted:The Strange Death of Europe is Douglas Murray, he's an extremely careful writer but I would bet my life he's legit an actual nazi at heart. Haaaaa of course they have that ball bag's lovely book. And yeah, of course they have Rand, at this point as much as it is both boring and sociopathic it's the book of choice for conservatives in this hellworld. My personal fave is the small Vince Cable book shamefully in the bottom right, almost obscured.
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:13 |
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Vitamin P posted:The Strange Death of Europe is Douglas Murray, he's an extremely careful writer but I would bet my life he's legit an actual nazi at heart. Oh yeah, no, I mean, Atlas Shrugged is on there too. Not the dodgiest thing on the shelf it appears, but still powerfully poo poo.
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:15 |
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I can't imagine how unbelievably boring you'd have to be to have that many lovely books.
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:16 |
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Isomermaid posted:Oh yeah, no, I mean, Atlas Shrugged is on there too. Not the dodgiest thing on the shelf it appears, but still powerfully poo poo. That book gave me a deep desire to work for the railway which I did end up doing for several years. I get the impression I missed the whole point of the book. Ed: I never read the speech bit.
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:18 |
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Jaeluni Asjil posted:That book gave me a deep desire to work for the railway which I did end up doing for several years. This is like finding out that someone got into interior design and furniture upholstery after watching silence of the lambs.
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:35 |
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Payndz posted:DId you study geography at Keele university in the late 80s, perchance? No, so there's possibly more than one of them. I do, however, work in the same office as Charles Manson.
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:39 |
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https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/coronavirus-sage-dominic-cummings-david-king-a9496546.htmlquote:Top scientists set up ‘shadow’ SAGE committee to advise government amid concerns over political interference
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:51 |
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Scientists don't necessarily actually know how to run a country though do they to be fair.
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# ? May 4, 2020 00:58 |
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Total Meatlove posted:This is like finding out that someone got into interior design and furniture upholstery after watching silence of the lambs. I was just considering this in the light of some of the things that Corbyn has been done over for. We look at things through our own lens and can miss other interpretations. Eg Corbyn's "mis-steps" seem to involve his anti-capitalist lens (eg 'the foreword to the 1920s book' and 'the mural') and other interpretations just don't (or didn't) occur to him. I read that book through a 'woman does good in a man's world involving engineering' lens.
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# ? May 4, 2020 01:02 |
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NotJustANumber99 posted:Scientists don't necessarily actually know how to run a country though do they to be fair. Maybe not, but neither can the tories. At least they might give scientific advice direct and not have it filtered through Cummings. Also, they're going to make all the data and models etc public so other scientists can put their 2p in.
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# ? May 4, 2020 01:04 |
Spoke to my wife's friend yesterday. She works for a British medical device company. They were being contracted by the gov to design a ventilator which could be made rapidly and efficiently in response to coronavirus, despite not having made ventilators before... The contract got cancelled this week, apparently because they've decided "they don't need loads of ventilators anymore". Just utterly shambolic.
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# ? May 4, 2020 01:22 |
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WhatEvil posted:Spoke to my wife's friend yesterday. She works for a British medical device company. They were being contracted by the gov to design a ventilator which could be made rapidly and efficiently in response to coronavirus, despite not having made ventilators before... I don't suppose they gave any hints as to why they thought they needed so many and now don't? Same like they're going to mothball the Nightingale Hospital because it had no admissions this week and only 35 max before that. How are they getting their figures so wrong? Or was it really because they couldn't get the staff? I was wondering last night if they could somehow repurpose it for the many hundreds of people who have lost their jobs in hospitality etc let alone the existing homeless and now living on the streets in London - not ideal but better than nothing. Wasn't that another government promise? Get all the homeless off the streets by April 1st or something like that? Then there are the 600000 people who volunteered to help the NHS most of whom haven't been 'called up'.
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# ? May 4, 2020 01:29 |
Jaeluni Asjil posted:I don't suppose they gave any hints as to why they thought they needed so many and now don't? Nothing solid, just supposition. Somebody said that UK hospitals are only actually running at 60% capacity used at the moment? Also I figure if they're not using Nightingale then that's all tied into the same thing. Who actually knows if that's because it's not needed or because they can't get the staff? That said, somebody on the zoom call did say their brother (or something) is a doctor in training, had been rushed through to work with patients but that's all been cancelled now? I dunno, very patchy info tbh.
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# ? May 4, 2020 01:35 |
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WhatEvil posted:Nothing solid, just supposition. Somebody said that UK hospitals are only actually running at 60% capacity used at the moment? Also I figure if they're not using Nightingale then that's all tied into the same thing. Who actually knows if that's because it's not needed or because they can't get the staff? Can only supply anecdotal info from my partner's hospital - they cancelled all elective and outpatients, and they have two empty wards for Covid-19 surge that aren't getting used. They never hit capacity in ITU. Drop in A&E admissions and electives has left the rest of the hospital relatively quiet. Lots of their covid admissions are from care homes - less people from general population but they suspect a huge amount more just never left care homes, but died there.
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# ? May 4, 2020 01:46 |
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We have the highest death rates in Europe. The hospitals cannot be relatively empty because the virus isn’t as bad as predicated. There is only one possible answer: the government is letting a lot of people die without treatment in order to stop the NHS from being overwhelmed. The Conservative government is murdering thousands of people.
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# ? May 4, 2020 02:07 |
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Well at least the multi-part documentary series looking at tge uk response to the coronavirus is going to be riveting stuff Riveting for those of us still alive to watch it, that is
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# ? May 4, 2020 02:19 |
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Zephirus posted:Can only supply anecdotal info from my partner's hospital - they cancelled all elective and outpatients, and they have two empty wards for Covid-19 surge that aren't getting used. They never hit capacity in ITU. Drop in A&E admissions and electives has left the rest of the hospital relatively quiet. That makes me so sad and just furious. I dread to think what's going to happen if they end lockdown and all of a sudden you have a general population that's mostly been able to avoid it so far suddenly exposed to it, and spreading it round to all corners.
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# ? May 4, 2020 02:20 |
Jaeluni Asjil posted:Then there are the 600000 people who volunteered to help the NHS most of whom haven't been 'called up'. I was "called up" from being a CFR to train in emergency medical dispatch for some reason. After a week of sitting in a lovely semi-furnished office unit, listening to CFRs spout poo poo for hours [oh my god CFRs are just the worst people] I got trained, and went off to do my bit and it turned out we were being brought in as whatever a scab is before they actually start scabbing? Like, working in ambulance control is poo poo anyway, since it's reading the same script over and over to people in grim situations and there's gargantuan consequences for failure and the money's crap and the hours are hideous, and as it turns out their existing staff are threatening industrial action because so much additional bullshit's being heaped on them in the name of "crisis measures", so they brought in a gaggle of happy dunderheads, delighted to be NHS HEROES YAAY CLAP FOR TEH NHS, to give themselves protection against potential strike action. But hey, two of the people on the course were coughing continuously and one was absolutely pishing with sweat, so that's fun!
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# ? May 4, 2020 02:23 |
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You know how the two metre distancing rule is more important indoors than outdoors because of relative airflow and particle dispersion? Well...https://www.bbc.com/news/business-52524344 posted:Two metre distancing may be eased for work https://www.bbc.com/news/business-52524344 Looks like I'll be working from home for a while yet.
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# ? May 4, 2020 02:24 |
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Comrade Fakename posted:We have the highest death rates in Europe. The hospitals cannot be relatively empty because the virus isn’t as bad as predicated. There is only one possible answer: the government is letting a lot of people die without treatment in order to stop the NHS from being overwhelmed. STAY HOME PROTECT THE NHS that's been the advice all along though, right? if you catch it, isolate yourself til you're over it. call 111 if you really have to and they might ask if you've been to China or something. Didn't someone say they were shipping old people with the virus back to care homes instead of admitting people to hospital?
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# ? May 4, 2020 02:43 |
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OwlFancier posted:I don't know, I think it might be more possible than you'd think, the normalization of homosexuality has caused absolutely horrific damage to the entire concept of normative sexual and gender performance. And yes there's a lot of pushback, but it wasn't so long ago that there wasn't so much pushback as absolute domination of the normative concepts and everything else had to be done in secret. You're definitely on to something here - what most trans people manage to do hinges on mutual support networks (hence the joke that trans people are just sending the same $13.71 around Paypal indefinitely because we all need it but we're all immediately there to help others in the same boat). Another aspect I expect exists is that, once you've broken a social taboo as fundamental as being trans requires, you'll be of a disposition - whether through experience or inherently - to take a long hard look at everything else wrong in society and going "Hmmm wait, could we maybe do... better?" and being willing to write a far more strenuous prescription than the liberals do in answer to that. Plus of course you won't find too many people who don't conform to being cishet on the right because they hate us and want us back in the closet or dead, which rather limits the appeal It's highly telling, of course - the right say they support the family but the second that family is gay, suddenly they hate it, and they CERTAINLY don't want orphans or the like being raised by loving gay homes; they say they support the individual and that others, including the government, shouldn't have the power to oppress, but the second that individual says they're trans, they're ALL ABOUT the government getting involved.
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# ? May 4, 2020 03:45 |
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ShaneMacGowansTeeth posted:And also "How Michael Gove Saves The World" IS TONTY BLAIR BEHIND THIS? Oh wait no, front and centre
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# ? May 4, 2020 08:09 |
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blunt posted:You know how the two metre distancing rule is more important indoors than outdoors because of relative airflow and particle dispersion? Well... It's OK, extensive surveillance will make sure the https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2020/may/03/coronavirus-health-passports-for-uk-possible-in-months
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# ? May 4, 2020 09:05 |
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Ms Adequate posted:
I think this is a rare case where you can take the right wing at its word; they do support the family, but what they mean by The Family is the nucleus of capitalist social reproduction or of like, the rule of the father. It's all a bit loving Freudian.
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# ? May 4, 2020 09:45 |
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forkboy84 posted:Sarah Vine decided to own her haters by posting a photo of (one of 20) her (& presumably her husbands?) bookshelves https://twitter.com/WestminsterWAG/status/1257074045805309956 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAMgT8LuZaw
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# ? May 4, 2020 10:03 |
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https://twitter.com/misslucyp/status/1257234249075363841
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# ? May 4, 2020 10:17 |
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Some utter oval office that I work with has pitched "if this app works the police should be out doing spot checks and fining people who haven't got it installed, and shops should be checking at the door and refusing to let people in if they don't have it" What the gently caress is wrong with people
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# ? May 4, 2020 10:20 |
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Jaeluni Asjil posted:Then there are the 600000 people who volunteered to help the NHS most of whom haven't been 'called up'. These volunteers include a company in Cumbria who produce COVID-19 test kits. They have had to furlough half their staff because the government declined their services. This isn't just mass murder on the part of the government, it's a cover up.
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# ? May 4, 2020 10:23 |
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# ? May 24, 2024 07:19 |
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History Comes Inside! posted:Some utter oval office that I work with has pitched "if this app works the police should be out doing spot checks and fining people who haven't got it installed, and shops should be checking at the door and refusing to let people in if they don't have it" Boots are delicious
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# ? May 4, 2020 10:23 |