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(Thread IKs: Platystemon)
 
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Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

turkish propaganda is a weird blend of hamhanded and also... pointless? in the literal sense that there seems to be no real point to any of it?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qqNYMiW6ggU

like the point of this ^^^ is armenian genocide denial. or armenian genocide questions-asking. apparently. a... at least the dancers Got PaidTM?

Willie Tomg has issued a correction as of 02:59 on Jan 17, 2018

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Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6b0ftfKFEJg

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

oh my god they proactively went out of their way to make things look more like Demolition Man

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
$300 ketchup system tyvm

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

Alpha Mayo posted:

Is this real

it absofuckingloutely is.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
furthermore,

quote:

Dozens of news anchors robotically intoned “This is extremely dangerous to our democracy,” after reciting what turned out to be a script by Sinclair Broadcast Group, owner and operator of 193 local TV stations. Dan Rather called it Orwellian, and many have asked in amazement: why would local journalists across the nation allow themselves to be used in such a demeaning way?

The answer is clear to me, as a lawyer with decades handling cases involving low-wage workers: people need jobs. But the anchors may have an even more specific concern: an employment contract that doesn’t just bind but entraps them. Among other things, Sinclair contracts contain a requirement that employees must pay their employers if they leave their jobs before their contract terms end. For example, an employee making $50,000 annually might have to pay in the ballpark of $10,000 if she wanted to leave after one year of a two-year term.

While it’s plainly illegal to impose a penalty on employees for leaving a job, the contract describes this requirement as “liquidated damages”. But such damages are allowed only in very limited situations, such as when an employee leaves a job shortly after receiving, at the employer’s expense, costly, specific, and transportable training. This is hardly the situation for Sinclair employees.

The Sinclair contracts also contain a non-compete clause, barring employees from working for competitors for a set time period after separation. Non-competes have come under considerable public scrutiny of late, covering around 20% of workers, according to a recent report.

Some states already limit non-competes: they’re unenforceable in California; banned for low-wage workers in Illinois, and prohibited for broadcast employees in New York and, as of last week, in Utah. Many other states have active legislative proposals.

And even where there is no statute, state case law typically allows non-competes only to protect the employer’s legitimate business interests (like trade secrets), and requires them to be reasonable regarding time period and geographic scope. Preventing a journalist from working for BuzzFeed or Facebook anywhere in the world seems, well, not very geographically limited.

Sinclair is not alone in using contracts to reduce workers’ rights. More than half of private sector non-union employees can’t bring cases in court because they are subject to forced arbitration, sometimes even as a requirement of applying for a job. The furniture chain Raymour and Flanigan contractually slashes the time for bringing discrimination claims in half, with mixed results in court. One New York tutoring company had contract provisions requiring employees to waive their right to apply to unemployment benefits, and to indemnify the company if they applied and lost.

Given the importance of an independent press, the Sinclair example may be particularly sinister. But the use of employment contracts to trap and exploit workers is a growing trend, including for low-wage workers, who may “sign” the contracts rapid-fire among a pile of papers in the HR office or among a string of touch-screens, and who often don’t receive copies of their own contracts. Worst of all, they have no real ability to consult with lawyers or understand what they’re giving up; and they have no choice but to sign if they want the job.

Companies that try to limit their liability by hoodwinking their employees into signing abusive employment contracts are taking advantage of the extreme power imbalance between an employer and a working person. People need to put food on the table and a roof over their heads. Abusing that fact to keep people tethered, and to steal away basic rights, is reprehensible. And as the disturbing Sinclair videos demonstrate, disempowerment of workers has an effect that pervades things we value in society – among them the free flow of information and journalistic integrity.

What would help this sad situation? Ideally, federal legislation would outlaw some of these practices, including use of forced arbitration for workers. More realistically, states can take the lead, for example, by banning or limiting non-competes; prohibiting shortened statutes of limitations for key workplace laws; and requiring pre-hire disclosure of key employment terms in simple, accessible language, with adequate opportunity for workers to understand what they’re signing.
State enforcement agencies can pursue violations of the laws that already exist, like the prohibition on penalties for leaving a job, and private attorneys can file lawsuits to challenge abusive contracts. High road employers – who realize that workers are their team and a key component of their success – can treat their workers fairly in their contracts, as well.

Above all, workers and their allies can take the lead in joining together to unearth and combat these abusive practices. Teachers from West Virginia, Kentucky, and Oklahoma are rising up, seeking better conditions for themselves and their students. Workers at media companies have been electrified, too, organizing new unions in recent years.

The Sinclair anchors spoke in unison delivering the company’s message. Maybe one day soon, they can take back the power and again speak in unison, this time delivering their own.


you can tell the article was written in the UK because the last sentence doesn't have a rimshot or laugh track

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
i have a vision of unlimited free pizza


now gimme 'da money. i need it to buy wine.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

hans.... are we the baddies?

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
so the idea of blockchain is that its a publicly auditable ledger of transactions, right?


it, uh. it seems like that could become a problem, with the ol' voting.

yes, i'm aware that's like the dozenth-in-line problem with the concept, but even folk with headline awareness of what blockchain is should be aware that this idea might go over like a lead balloon.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
there will never be a show like Mr. Rogers for online platforms without massive revolutionary bloodshed and thats hilarious in the sense that one mind cannot reasonably process that much sorrow at once and it necessarily goes to the next best fit for such hysteria.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

mastershakeman posted:

Wasn't parkland elite enough to be a de facto private one

just goes to show what happens when our fine grooming institutions let the riffraff in.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

Food Boner posted:

i wish there was a second internet or some sort of fora with which people could discuss their views on things


oh well

self organized and strictly controlled communities of people with known character and integrity--basically communes of the Online--is about as close as it gets to good-faith discussion on the internet without brainwormed morons hijacking every single discussion and driving it into the dumbest possible territory.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8v_XqFO8Bc

this is also true irl. relationships and communities are going to be more and more important, the more alienated and schizophrenic and scared and duplicitous and maliciously cowardly individuals become

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
as the 70's ticked over into the 80's i think there was a general sense of All Not Being Entirely Well for everyone.

if a vertiginous sense of historical doom on the cusp of the Reagan/Thatcher Power Hour is your aesthetic jam, you'll really like season 2 of Fargo

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

literal decimation, in the roman sense, lmfao

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
im the developer who implements the Mad Max mode in an autopilot and shrugs and goes "its a living!!"

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
https://twitter.com/Kaneryyy/status/1012038043816153090

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
https://twitter.com/Akiraonfire/status/1012475409592614912

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
i watched that video and now i think im having a psychotic break. time to order pizza on my phone.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
the costuming and wardrobe necessities of what is increasingly inevitably looking like America's version of The Troubles are going to own massively

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

mrmcd posted:

Please 🔪 me I want to ☠️

thread title

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

hook it up to OpenAI and give it a gun

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

Dreddout posted:

Imagine having to be the Thai intern that has to humor Musk's emails

he has a fawning reddit AMA up right now because everything is stupid everywhere

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

Peanut President posted:

I know it's been said, and it might just be because twitter restricts your letters to the point you have to type this way, but I cannot help but read Musk's tweets in Trump's voice. Like it's the same syntax.

twitter is a malignant growth on the english language.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

they really do all tend to blend together into one SuperThread

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
Politics.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

MeatwadIsGod posted:

Netflix sucks so bad in terms of its original content. They still haven't made a better original movie than Beasts of No Nation - their first one. And their original TV shows are even shittier and more numerous. Their best TV series is a spoof of true crime documentaries, which is by far their most consistently strong content. At least we'll always have The Wire, Rome, Carnivale, and Deadwood.

instead of a carnegie-esque rehabilitation of his legacy with philanthropic works promoting literacy and civic engagement, jeff bezos will burnish his reputation by making slightly less lovely TV shows for prime video than every single telecom and streaming service, who are apparently congenitally unable to figure out why anything was good or watchable ever

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
Breaking Bad, but walt and jesse settle their differences with a best of 5 smash bros. tournament on Nintendo Switch, working real hard for Gustavo Fring: the Cool Boss

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
the awful karate movie parodies we made in high school to get out of doing Actual Work are lit and photographed and edited better than a team of professionals trying their hardest to earn a living in the employ of Netflix.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXt2aCBoPRA&t=40s

we were kids who didn't do any martial art, were either fat or emaciated, didn't know a single thing about photography, and didn't have the slightest inclination toward acting, but we'd seen a loving movie before and play-fought before while horsing around like teens and we knew what did and didn't work. kinda. sorta. not really.

i dont know what these guys fuckin' excuse is. america used to be good at this. there must've been a time we were good at this.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

Peanut President posted:

"If that happened, as Wilson tells it, he was ready to launch his Defcad repository, regardless of the outcome of his lawsuit, and then defend it in an armed standoff. "I’d call a militia out to defend the server, Bundy-style," Wilson says calmly, in the first overt mention of planned armed violence I've ever heard him make. "Our only option was to build an infrastructure where we had one final suicidal mission, where we dumped everything into the internet," Wilson says. "Goliad became an inspirational thing for me.""

Goddamn kids these days don't remember Waco. If the US Gov wants your rear end there's not going to be a standoff they're just gonna drive a tank through your loving living room you shitforbrains.

"Oh yeah? You wanna become a martyr? Well maybe I'll kill you, raghead ah ha ha ha" --an Troop

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
i miss the days when i could earnestly ask if folk were so dense that they didn't realize that suicide by Other is a valid tactic that works pretty well, historically

for instance: Waco was so effective in its goal the bundy clan has now, officially, legally, committed no crime.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

this is how we'll all talk in 30 years

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

kind of my point, really.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

comedyblissoption posted:

activists critical of american foreign policy could easily be branded as conspiracy theorists and banned under similar justifications

this is what will happen, lol

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
at the very loving least, back in the day you could go to Online and find out what happened and correlate it with the news sources of record

looking ahead, its really just going to be one State Media and the Astroturf Crazies vs another. it sucks.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

I am continually astounded these things don't happen more often. The opportunity cost of a drone and some ANFO or whatever is real, real low.

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
https://twitter.com/Max_Fisher/status/1031930084381339648

Willie Tomg has issued a correction as of 18:21 on Aug 21, 2018

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
https://twitter.com/lib_crusher/status/1032029043439398917

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

anime was right posted:

or maybe, get this, maybe the people who still use facebook are vile racists

n.... NAWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW

Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006
uh. what is supposed to be happening in that clip?

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Willie Tomg
Feb 2, 2006

not a cult posted:

what in the everloving gently caress is that?

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