Most powerful man in the world started a war and then bent over
22h 23m ago in noncrediblediplomacy@sh.itjust.works from discuss.onlineNot pictured: Tiffany.
Trump Team Dumps Bleach in Reflecting Pool to Hide Renovation Failure
22h 59m ago in politics from newrepublic.comI'm almost afraid to ask: does ivermectin treat those flesh-eating worms invading Texas?
Does this work like not using enough antibiotics and it will actually make the algae stronger?
Fafo
23h 15m ago in science_memes@mander.xyz from mander.xyz"What does this 400-room hotel need to employ a full-time plumber for? The pipes are all fine, and no one ever complains about a clogged toilet. Fire that lazy bum!"
You Can’t Have Both Democracy and Billionaires
1d 14h ago in politics from www.currentaffairs.orgTake Back Your Government is a nonfiction book about how and why to get involved in politics, primarily at a volunteer level. Lots of it is a historical artifact about how political campaigns worked in the 1940s, but it's also got some great glimpses into Heinlein's ideas about governance and one's individual responsibility to get informed and involved.
Some of my favorite bits:
But why be partisan? Why not vote independently, after an earnest scrutiny of the candidates and issues, for the welfare of the people as a whole? It sounds good and it would be very nice if it would work. It would also be nice if pi were exactly 3.000 instead of a bothersome 3.14159 plus.
There are two reasons, one moral and one practical. The practical reason is this: You simply cannot be effective in politics unless you join in the process of compromise and conciliation whereby free men merge little groups into big groups until they accomplish a government. If you are not partisan you are on your own, everybody is out of step but Johnny, and the chances that you can have any effect on how this country is run are 140,000,000 to one against you.
...and...
We need never be afraid of the vote of informed Americans. It is only the ignorant voter we have to fear, ignorant politically, no matter how fine his house or how expensive his schooling. Such people have never experienced democracy; they have merely enjoyed its benefits. It is hard to explain what democracy is; it is necessary to participate in it to understand it.
The former Berlin businessman I referred to earlier told me that he blamed his own group, people with the time and the money and the opportunity to know better, for what happened to Germany. "We ignored Hitler," he said. "We considered him an unimportant fellow, not quite a gentleman, not of our own class. We considered it just a little bit vulgar to bother with him, to bother with politics at all."
They thought of the government as "They." The only possible route to a clear conscience in politics is to accept political responsibility, either as an active member of the party in power or as an equally active member of the loyal opposition.
...and...
If you believe that laws forbidding gambling, sale of liquor, sale of contraceptives, requiring definite closing hours, enforcing the Sabbath, or any such, are necessary to the welfare of your community, that is your right and I do not ask you to surrender your beliefs or give up your efforts to put over such laws. But remember that such laws are, at most, a preliminary step in doing away with the evils they indict. Moral evils can never be solved by anything as easy as passing laws alone. If you aid in passing such laws without bothering to follow through by digging in to the involved questions of sociology, economics, and psychology which underlie the causes of the evils you are gunning for, you will not only fail to correct the evils you sought to prohibit but will create a dozen new evils as well.
Of what use, then, are the American Communists?
They serve one function extremely useful to you and to the country, so useful that, if there were no Communists, we would almost be forced to create some. They are a reliable litmus paper for detecting real sources of danger to the Republic.
Communism is so repugnant to almost all Americans, when they are getting along even tolerably well, that one may predict with certainty that any social field or group in which the Communists make real strides in gaining members or acceptance of their doctrines, any such spot is in such bad shape from real and not imaginary social ills that the rest of us should take emergency, drastic action to investigate and correct the trouble.
Unfortunately we are more prone to ignore the sick spot thus disclosed and content ourselves with calling out more cops.
--Robert A. Heinlein, Take Back Your Government
Anon is a child prodigy
1d 15h ago in greentext@sh.itjust.works from sh.itjust.worksDiogenes has entered the chat
Farmers and Firemen get a pass
1d 21h ago in memesYes...

...but also...

me irl
3d 9h ago in me_irl from lemmy.today
Why do Democrat supporters keep forgetting atrocities committed by their leaders?
3d 16h ago in asklemmy@lemmy.mlBecause government does things that large populaces can't or won't do for themselves. Sometimes that's things like Social Security, regulating companies so they don't enslave us or dump DDT all over the place, or organizing enough coordinated violence to prevent other, more aggressive governments from coming in and taking over. Sometimes, usually when the people aren't paying enough attention, it's horrible things like building Gitmo or supporting Israel.
Ideally, everyone would be well-informed and engaged enough to immediately hold government accountable when it does horrible things in our names, but for a lot of people life is hard, and they've been actively discouraged from having that education and engagement, usually by one flavor or another of psychopath who wants to get away with their atrocities and not be answerable to a decently informed and engaged electorate.
Democrats do, on balance, care more about their leaders committing atrocities than Republicans do, but the phenomenon of "I just can't think about that right now, I've got other things going on" is a universal experience.
It's right to be outraged by this complacency, and I don't even think anyone is wrong for wanting to disengage from any political party or even politics as a whole in response, but wanting to remain morally pure and wanting to achieve anything of merit within the system we currently have are mutually exclusive goals.
If someone finds politics as a whole, and all of the moral compromises involved, so abhorrent that they don't want to engage at all, I get it, but they'd really better start looking up how to engage in violent resistance, because change either comes through politics and all of its attendant compromises or through violence, there's no third alternative.
Is this...?
14d 19h ago in politicalmemes@lemmy.caIt doesn't always have to be sexy centaurs or scorpions or whatever
19d 1h ago in AntiMeme@sopuli.xyzCrabbing
23d 6h ago in dadjokesPIC
25d 19h ago in nocontextpicsEndless hallways
1mon 13d ago in liminalspaceOh to be as blissful as a lab with a ball
1mon 14d ago in dogsI found a physical dad joke from around the 1930s or '40s
2mon 1d ago in dadjokesNew Idea for a One-Dish Dinner, Carnation Evaporated Milk, April 6, 1953
2mon 4d ago in vintageads@sh.itjust.worksIn stere-ereo, in stere-ereo, in stereo
2mon 10d ago in dogsHappy Eostre!
2mon 13d ago in cat














