I found this and I love this picture so much.
It hurt so many butts.
But like...
Saying this these days really is like yelling at a brick wall but here goes again:
You cannot gleefully take part in the dehumanisation of an entire group of people based on their nationality, their ethnicity, what have you, rejoice in the suffering of that group, and be on the side of human rights, ethics and morals.
You just cannot. But so many of you try to square that circle. You want so badly to be seen as righteous, that when people call you out for your violent, rancid rhetoric, you throw a paddy and hurl insults through inboxes (always on anon, though, because you’re spineless fucking cowards).
The Circleville Herald, Ohio, April 2, 1928
I am literally begging Queer people on this site to realize the Holocaust was not about them
Yes gay and trans people were also targeted, we're denying that, but it was because homosexuality and transgenderism was seen as something caused by the Jews
The holocaust was about the Jews. Please stop pretending like it wasn't
Image ID:
A flowchart.
Is it antisemitic? [proceed to next step]
Does it mention Jews? If yes: go to step 5 If no: go to step 3
Does it mention dogwhistles for Jews? (Zionist, elite, triple parentheses). If yes: go to step 4 If no: Probably not antisemitic
Do they seem aware they're using antisemitic dogwhistles? If yes: go to step 6 If no: probably not antisemitic
When it mentions Jews, is it in a good way? If yes: Probably not antisemitic If no: Go to step 6
Does it hold Jews/dogwhistles to a higher standard than others? If yes: Probably antisemitic If no: Go to step 7
Repeat antisemitic stereotypes? If yes: Go to step 8 If no: Maybe antisemitic
Is it a joke about antisemitism by and for Jews? If yes: probably not antisemitic If no: Go to step 9
Are you Jewish? If yes: Probably antisemitic If no: Go to step 10
Are Jews saying it's antisemitic? If yes: Probably antisemitic If not: probably not antisemitic
Except for the disclaimer, this is licensed under CC BY 4.0. This means that as long as you attribute me (preferably by including a link to this post or an archived version thereof), you are free to do whatever with this. You can change its look or content, you can sell it, you can change it to be disgustingly antisemitic (please don't), assuming you don't have rules in your country that prohibit any of that. For reference, this work is by tumblr user indecisiveavocado, indecisiveavocado.tumblr.com.
Disclaimer, abbreviated and with one addition: Not recommended for children under 12. Flowchart current at time of creation. Read at your own risk. Parental guidance advised. Sanitized for your protection. Actual mileage may vary. No animals were harmed in the making of this flowchart. Batteries not included. Not a toy. At participating locations only. Do not ingest. No purchase necessary. Slippery when wet. Flammable. This flowchart may contain chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer, birth defects or other reproductive harm. Warranty does not cover meteorite strike, nearby supernova and other Acts of God, typographical errors, or electromagnetic radiation from nuclear blasts.
HAPPY NEW YEAR, CHARLIE BROWN! (1986), dir. Bill Melendez & Sam Jaimes
80 years ago, today, Auschwitz-Birkenau was liberated by the Allies. The camp, one of six death camps created specifically to end all Jewish and Romani life in Europe, was the site of unspeakable horrors and over one million deaths.
It is probably the most infamous and recognizable portion of the tragic and evil story of the Shoah, the Holocaust. The date of its liberation was designated International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
But by now, I think, it is quite clear that too few gentiles actually remember.
Like many Jews, the Shoah is not some history lesson I read in a textbook with black and white pictures in middle or high school. It’s personal. It profoundly impacted my family in every conceivable way.
None of my relatives were at Auschwitz-Birkenau, that we know of. No, they died in Ravensbrück, at SS Polizei stations, and in pits in Lithuania. Five survived. Two are with us still. And we’ve all watched as the world has forgotten.
We’ve watched as, regardless of politics, a murderous regime that destroyed two-thirds of European Jewry - over six million people, one and half million of them five years old or younger - has been used as nothing more than a rhetorical weapon. We’ve watched as phrases used to justify our deaths 80 years ago, in living memory, are casually used again today.
We’ve watched as, once again, we are blamed for the harms others inflict on us. We weren’t loud enough, we were too loud, we didn’t say the right things, we didn’t say anything at all, we didn’t look how we should, we looked too much like ourselves. And so violence against us is not only understandable, but acceptable.
I remember the Holocaust. I have no choice. It is deep in my bones. It’s in my DNA. I can never forget what happened. No Jew can.
And it disturbs me, profoundly, that so much of the rest of the world has.
May the memories of the victims of the Holocaust be for a blessing. And please, remember them.
By the way, you know how sometimes on this site we talk about right to repair and preventing excessive e-waste? If you're a visual learner, I have an example for you.
I replaced my computer fans today. Technically only one needed replaced, but I wasn't sure if it was one or both when I ordered parts, so I replaced both and the older-but-still-working fan will be stored in case I need a backup.
Here's what capitalism would have liked me to throw out.
Here's what's actually going away.
Oh, and also it cost $19 and an hour of my time instead of $900 and many hours doing setup and import.
Fix your stuff. I used a combination of my roommate's IT knowledge and a YouTube tutorial and now have a functioning fan (and my computer's guts are much cleaner). If it's a thing you can't do--for example, you have an iPhone and need a new screen--there are professionals out there who would be delighted to have your business and it'll still be cheaper than buying new most of the time. Sometimes you may have to convince them that yes, you really do want the $250 repair on the five-year-old laptop because you're not interested in shelling out a grand for a new one. Do it. It's worth it.
ed zitron, a tech beat reporter, wrote an article about a recent paper that came out from goldman-sachs calling AI, in nicer terms, a grift. it is a really interesting article; hearing criticism from people who are not ignorant of the tech and have no reason to mince words is refreshing. it also brings up points and asks the right questions:
if AI is going to be a trillion dollar investment, what trillion dollar problem is it solving?
what does it mean when people say that AI will "get better"? what does that look like and how would it even be achieved? the article makes a point to debunk talking points about how all tech is misunderstood at first by pointing out that the tech it gets compared to the most, the internet and smartphones, were both created over the course of decades with roadmaps and clear goals. AI does not have this.
the american power grid straight up cannot handle the load required to run AI because it has not been meaningfully developed in decades. how are they going to overcome this hurdle (they aren't)?
people who are losing their jobs to this tech aren't being "replaced". they're just getting a taste of how little their managers care about their craft and how little they think of their consumer base. ai is not capable of replacing humans and there's no indication they ever will because...
all of these models use the same training data so now they're all giving the same wrong answers in the same voice. without massive and i mean EXPONENTIALLY MASSIVE troves of data to work with, they are pretty much as a standstill for any innovation they're imagining in their heads