• Hyggyldy@sffa.community
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    1 year ago

    That reminds me. Anyone here ever hear about the bureaucratized rape in West Virginia coal mining camps back in the day? If a man was injured and couldn’t work his wife could take “Esau scrip” which she would have to pay back with her body. Capitalism! The entire situation is a stark reminder that capitalists wil LITERALLY rape and murder you to protect their position.

    • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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      1 year ago

      Somehow that topic didn’t come up in 7th grade WV History class. Going to have to dig into that as it would make a great post.

      Edit: JFC, I had no idea this happened. And I live here and have toured the Whipple Company Store (again, in 7th grade).

      https://wvpublic.org/what-was-the-esau-scrip/

      “We’ve had multitudes of women and tell us as little girls they remember their mothers coming to the company store and one of the things that a lot of more the lovely ladies had to do was come upstairs. Some of the young girls had the stories shared by their mothers stating that they would be escorted in the shoe room. There would be a selected guard that would be waiting for them and they would receive a brand new pair of shoes with no accountability other than to perform whatever the service the guard wished to have in lieu of pay. We had one woman in particular share with us that her mother was a young girl about 25 years old and bought her first pair of shoes here and the women’s entire life those shoes remained in the shoe box on her closet shelf never to be worn and she refused to wear another pair of shoes her entire life. She made her shoes out of cardboard, newspapers and twine.”

      - Joy Lynn, owner and tour guide, Whipple Company Store

      • Hyggyldy@sffa.community
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, they don’t teach a lot of things in school. I only know about it because of BtB. The whole episode on The Battle of Blair Mountain is nuts and shows how far the owner class will go to keep people in line.

  • dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    Lol invade Ukraine after promising not to. Getting entire generations of sperm makers killed in illegal war. Force female prisoners to be baby factories. Ladies and gentlemen: the bad guys.

  • Infiltrated_ad8271@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Prisons in russia are starting to look like revolving doors. Women get out if they choose to give birth, men if they choose to throw themselves into the meat grinder.

  • palal@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Note to self: whenever some whacko in Congress says something, make sure to write an article saying that AMERICA said that same thing.

  • JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    ‘Fall rather than decrease’ wtf? And it’s a good thing for there to be less people, there are too many in the world anyway.

    The fantasy of infinite growth seems to include people as well to capitalists, and as I already mentioned, it’s a fantasy.

            • HikingVet@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              We currently produce more than enough food and clothes for every person on this planet and could easily house them all.

              The problem is that because of capitalism we can’t get what everyone needs to them because it might hurt someone’s profits.

              • originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com
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                1 year ago

                this is the reality no one wants to admit because it points out a major flaw in the human psyche… that is, the ability to lack empathy by distance. the farther away people are, the less we care about them.

                this is obvious is every facet of our daily existence, and is provable by the lack of dense conservative centers and how easily swayed those brought physically close to those remote entities (mentally or physically) become empathetic.

                humans suck, and we are the cause of resources not going where they are needed.

      • xePBMg9@lemmynsfw.com
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        1 year ago

        Infinite growth is inherently incompatible with life. It does not work. The biosphere is under immense pressure already. Humanity extinct 4 species every day and has killed off 90% of wild animals in the last 100 years. Nature is the greatest repository of knowledge that we have. It is invaluable to our science, though we treat it as expendable. It’s like burning all libraries. We are simply using too much land in an effort to support a shitty economical model that is based on population growth, forever. This is the kind of problem that humanity has proven to be ineffectual at solving. Long term and noone will take action unless it blows up in their faces, personally, right now. Let the next generation deal with it. That is what they said in the 50s and that is what they will say in 10 years too. The damage done to the biosphere is practically permanent. Once an animal or plant is extinct, it is gone. Once enough of them is gone, the planet no longer supports complex life.

        • Lmaydev@programming.dev
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          1 year ago

          We don’t need to be using resources the way we do. It’s again a result of consumerism.

          We could easily support a way bigger population if we used resources better.

          If we stopped worrying about money so much science would easily be able to fix many of these problems.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    1 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A member of the Russian State Duma has proposed releasing women convicted of minor charges from prisons so they can conceive, part of an effort to boost the country’s low birthrate amid a period of high mortality.

    Julia Davis, journalist and creator of the Russian Media Monitor, posted a photo Thursday on X (formerly Twitter) showing a billboard featuring a split image of a baby in the womb on one side and a young child wearing military fatigues and saluting.

    In a piece published Thursday by The Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA), Davis documented how Russia’s population dwindled by about 997,000 people between October 2020 and September 2021—its largest ever peacetime decline.

    She also noted that the Kremlin has attempted to combat the population decrease by forcibly bringing in Ukrainian refugees, women and some 700,000 children—of which war crime warrants were issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC) against Putin and Maria Lvova-Belova, commissioner for Children’s Rights in the Office of the President of the Russian Federation.

    The foundation, which has allegedly received grants and funding directly from the Kremlin, also openly instructs its volunteers to employ “manipulation” and deceit when talking with pregnant women.

    Dasha Yakovleva, co-founder of the Feminitive Community women’s group, told the Associated Press last month that a public protest involving 60 or so pro-choice advocates at a bookstore in Kaliningrad was meant to send a message to Putin and his ilk about attempts to ban abortions in private clinics.


    The original article contains 1,008 words, the summary contains 245 words. Saved 76%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

    • TotallynotJessica@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      No. It’d be very difficult to actually have humans go extinct. Bad things will happen, but extinction would require a Children of Men level situation.

      • bitsplease@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        True, but Its 100% possible for us to get knocked back into the iron age, and if that happens, there’s a very real chance we won’t be able to climb up again.

        Easy to access sources of a lot of the resources needed to rebuild a modern civilization are gone, the only reason we can get to the remaining deposits is because we already have the advanced equipment to extract it. It’s entirely possible that if we get knocked back down the tech ladder, we may never climb back up again

        • mob@sopuli.xyz
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          1 year ago

          I think that is an extremely unlikely scenario. Do you think modern technology is just going to disappear?

          • bitsplease@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Dissappear? No, of course not

            Fall out of repair, and be unable to be repaired effectively without tools, resources, or knowledge that are no longer accessible?

            Abso-fucking-lutely

            Take a deep sea oil rig. How long do you think it’ll be operational without maintenance with all that sea water? After not too long you won’t be able to repair the damage without serious industrial capabilities, and that’s assuming you even know how to fix it.

            Really even as relatively little as a few decades of total chaos and disorganization would be enough to make crawling back really hard. A century and more and it really could be impossible, or at least improbable - especially given that the humanity that comes out of the other end of the crisis is the same one that got us into it. So the remaining pieces of major valuable infrastructure left will probably get wrecked as the survivors fight over them

            • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              ChatGPT:

              As the fiery tendrils of the celestial catastrophe engulfed the world, humanity found itself cast back to the primordial embrace of the Stone Age. The once towering achievements of civilization crumbled into dust, leaving survivors to navigate a world stripped of its technological marvels. In this new epoch, where the remnants of mankind struggled to eke out an existence, a daring expedition was conceived in the sun-scorched lands of Argentina. A ragtag crew, armed with little more than salvaged tools and an unyielding spirit, prepared to embark on a perilous voyage across the treacherous seas to scour the mysterious ice-clad wilderness of Antarctica and the riches entombed on the base therein. Their mission: to uncover forgotten secrets, salvage survival, and reclaim a semblance of the ingenuity that once defined their species. On the timeworn deck of a makeshift sailing ship, the brave explorers cast off into the unknown, setting forth on a journey that would either revive the flame of human innovation or be swallowed by the icy abyss of a desolate world.

              • TransplantedSconie@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                Guy I jam with in a band is a coder. He said that ChatGPT is fucking nuts. It’s getting to the point where it will be able to point out the flaws in his code and offer fixes. Only a matter of time when we can take a photo of something and our personal Jarvis will tell us: what it is. What it does. How to use it. How to fix it. Shit is wild man.

                • winky9827b@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  ChatGPT is mediocre in a silo. It has no context for distributed systems and will never compete with real developers. The benefit of ChatGPT is the time it will save a good developer from writing boilerplate. Nothing more, nothing less. Anyone who says otherwise is bitten by the bias bug.