Signtist

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago (4 children)

My friends and I still love to quote those. My friend Brian pretty much always walks into a room with "Hey everybody! I'm the new kid - my name's Brian! I like to Skateboard!"

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 week ago (1 children)

While that's true, it was mostly just because Mondale was from Minnesota, and even then he only won by 0.18%.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Nobody was chained with 2 options. The options were chosen and rallied for by representatives picked by the people who actually thought about and participated in local government elections. (I'm dropping the metaphor, since it glosses over the process by which these 2 options came about in the first place)

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago

I always liked the name Woodrow, but I hate the nickname Woody, so it's a bit of a wash.

[–] [email protected] 28 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

So... You cum here often?

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 weeks ago

Would you be arrested? Probably not, but you're more likely to be than Trump. See, committing a crime isn't the only factor that influences whether or not you get slapped with the punishment for that crime, even if it's plainly obvious to everyone you committed it. Another major factor is whether or not someone is going to go through the effort of ensuring you get punished - if nobody does, or if they try, but can't get to that finish line of getting a judge to declare you to be guilty in court, then you walk away scot-free.

So, the thing that's keeping you from being arrested is your relative insignificance. You're just some person, so it's unlikely that anyone will go through the trouble of ensuring you receive the punishment for the crime you committed, even if it's a relatively easy thing to do. Now, if you were to go on TV and say it, that would significantly increase your risk, since now more people are seeing you and someone who gives a shit might decide to go after you. That would be damning for you, since it would require very little effort to punish you - you clearly committed the crime, and you have no way to influence the court to make you harder to punish.

For Trump, his protection isn't insignificance - there are plenty of people who would like to ensure he's properly punished; instead, his protection comes from making it really difficult for someone who wants to punish him to be successful in that endeavor. He has a lot of money and influence, so he can hire good lawyers that can drag out the expensive legal process - something he can afford, but a lot of people who might try to go after him can't. His lawyers are also good enough to find loopholes in the law to avoid punishment, so even if you can afford a cheap lawyer for a long time, he'll likely still walk away unscathed. He's also shown that he has the ability to influence what judge gets put on trials he's a part of, which is another factor that influences whether or not he might get punished for the crime.

Ultimately, you'd have to have a rock-solid case presented by a team of very good lawyers working non-stop for months to years in order to bring Trump to justice, and the only people who reasonably have that power are almost exclusively on his side to begin with. Trump has knowingly committed multiple major crimes, and has shown that he has the ability to prevent them from hurting him, so he knows that he has virtually no chance to be punished for minor crimes, and commits them openly all the time.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago

Correct - every government eventually welcomes corruption that needs to be flushed out, and if it gets too strong of a hold on the country, it may need to be forced out. When the US was founded, it was prosperous for the wealthy and non-wealthy alike, and continued to be prosperous for a while. There were ups and downs, but it slowly got worse for the common citizen as the wealthy used their power to influence the country in their favor over time. It came to a head about 100 years ago, and we were able to get through it nonviolently back then.

It's happening again now, and we might be able to pull through democratically again, but we might not. 100 years ago there was much more of a sense of solidarity against the rich and powerful, but now that we live in a world with a much better understanding of human emotion and motivation, a huge percentage of the country has been thoroughly convinced to fight for their own exploitation by the wealthy. Pair that with all of the war going on right now that we're more aware of than ever given the technology that globally connects us, and we're a lot more divided than we were back then.

I hope that we don't need violence to solve our current political issues - democracy has certainly worked before - but it's always been the backup plan when civility doesn't get the job done.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Again, it's not necessary, but it did work. I hope we can resolve the issues in our country democratically, but I'm mentally preparing myself for the violence that will inevitably follow if that doesn't work. If our country falls to fascism, it'll take a real fight to get it back.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

I mean, our country was founded through a bunch of people getting really uncivil and violent. Sure, it still needed - and still needs - a lot of improvement to be fair for everyone who wasn't part of the "in-group," but the same could be said for most countries at the time ours was founded.

I certainly don't believe that it's necessary to be uncivil and violent to achieve a fair and civil society, but it has shown past success at ridding a country of leaders who don't have the people's best interests at heart.

[–] [email protected] 40 points 2 weeks ago

This is the biggest thing. If he were to actually tell the full truth here, he'd be less successful in getting his message across to the people who listen to him. Full truth is the ultimate goal, but we're so far from it that for half the country it's an impossibly huge leap to go from where they are now to the truth in one bound.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago

Yeah, that's the family history of inbreeding that I was talking about - if you continuously have children within the family for multiple generations then the risk continues to rise so long as the trend continues. It's generally only the risk of getting 2 copies of some familial recessive condition or other issues that arise from getting identical copies of genetic information from both parents, though, so breaking the chain and having a kid with someone outside of the family removes that risk; even if someone has a family history of inbreeding, it doesn't put their potential children at risk so long as their partner isn't related to them.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (2 children)

Inbreeding generally stops being a notable factor around 4th degree relation between parents. Even first cousins, 3rd degree relatives, only have about a 6% risk of an anomaly at birth when having a child together, compared to the 3% normal rate for all pregnancies. There's likely been a LOT of inbreeding in any one person's family history.

The nice thing is that once a new non-relative is added to the mix, the risks associated with past inbreeding largely go away; you only pass on 1 copy of your genes to your kid, so even if you're personally affected by a family history of inbreeding giving you a bunch of identical copies, if your kid's other parent isn't related to you, their copies should be different from yours, and the kid will have 2 different copies just like anyone else, helping protect them from recessive familial conditions and the like.

view more: ‹ prev next ›