celeste

joined 1 year ago
[–] celeste@kbin.social 2 points 4 months ago

Potential buyers:

[–] celeste@kbin.social 10 points 4 months ago

https://activisthandbook.org/organising/protest If anyone wants to get started, here are some tips! I don't know where you're from, but there are probably local groups that would be interested in participating if you track them down. It doesn't have to be on a campus.

[–] celeste@kbin.social 12 points 5 months ago

Poor Laios. He misses a couple clothing details but does pretty well. And then...look at how they see him. Chilchuck does ok-ish on everyone other than Laios.

Senshi and Marcille, though...

[–] celeste@kbin.social 3 points 5 months ago

red + sword is usually war, i think?

[–] celeste@kbin.social 6 points 5 months ago

Occasionally I'll watch a playthrough of a game I'm interested in something about (the plot or aesthetic), but don't think I'd enjoy playing.

Mostly, though, I watch like the Drawfee stream where they do improv comedy and draw audience suggestions. I'd almost rather watch a vod of a game I'm curious about, but comedy streams with audience participation benefit from seeing them live.

I think a lot of streamers are basically amateur comedians doing bits with something like a videogame to give them material. mst3k-like.

Others will play a game early or right away and be able to review as you watch. They'll say like the controls feel sloppy or the theme is grating and you'll experience that with them. Not a big deal for most people, but for highly anticipated games people are excited about, it helps give a sense of whether a game is worth playing for them in a slightly different way than a written or recorded review.

Watching people play a dnd game live gives you the energy in the chat while watching, which can make more exciting or interesting the play (do people in chat who know dnd think what's happening was a good idea? is everyone freaking out at a roll? is there a person who explains things in there which helps you understand for your own game?) It also protects you from getting spoiled when something dramatic happens.

There are people who play music or paint or work on a skill on stream, and that comes with a touch of the fun of watching a live performance. There's some extra excitement when you see stuff in real time and they could fuck up or they could do something amazing.

250
They love each other (media.kbin.social)
 
[–] celeste@kbin.social 6 points 5 months ago

I don't know what I personally think, but my guess about the justification is that the state intervenes when it's in the best interests of the child. Its purpose is to protect and aid the minor when families can't.

It is considered a harm to deprive children permanently of access to their parents, without showing that it's more harmful for the kid to be around them. So crime doesn't automatically remove access. Is the theory.

The state isn't supposed to treat permanent removal of access to a child as another criminal punishment. One thing I do agree on, though, is that people who rape kids shouldn't have unsupervised visits with their minor children, since they've proven themselves harmful specifically to children. Not even supervised, honestly.

I guess I'd want to see studies about outcomes of kids who are allowed around convicted adult rapist parents, vs those allowed access to parents convicted of nonviolent crimes. Or a study designed by people who know how to design studies well. Instead of my rambling suggestion.

I worry that our vibe checks get warped around kids, and we ignore what's proven right vs what feels right. Like people who feel really strongly that kids need their parents specifically have warped the narrative on this issue, and I don't want to warp it in a different way.

[–] celeste@kbin.social 19 points 5 months ago (8 children)

I've always enjoyed reading about people's dwarf fortress games, but I could never decide if I'd like it. If you're a fan, what kind of other games are like it? Is it mostly fun, or 90% frustrating with great fun moments? How long did it take to start to have fun if the learning curve is high? If anyone is in the mood to sing its praises, I would love to hear them. If no one does, that's cool, too! Just been thinking about playing it for years but never committing.

[–] celeste@kbin.social 9 points 6 months ago

I typed a reply about how bad actors will use reasonable arguments to get their way, so we'd need genuine evidence

my comment didn't send properly tho and i got an error message, so if you see me commenting twice, sorry

[–] celeste@kbin.social 2 points 6 months ago

thank you! i think that gives me an idea what to expect.

 

kind of interested in this tumblr-like platform being made for the fediverse. i hope it works out.

 
 

every form of social media is terrible. you pick through the garbage for that glimmering diamond of necessary social interaction. you can find it, but your hands still reek.

 

It disgusts me that there are people who would be cool with what she did if the girl had actually been trans.

It's disgusting because 'let's speculate about this person's genitals' is a bullying game that's been played forever, against trans, cis, intersex, and perisex kids, to keep us all in line. In our boxes. How real are the lines if they have to be so strictly enforced? What if we just let kids experiment and learn without bullying them and teaching other kids to bully them? Some will be trans and need care, some won't. Some will never quite figure it out. It could be fine if we let it be!

Stop bullying kids! Stop posting their pictures to mock them!

And bullying girls who look slightly different has not been forced on you by these woke times. People like you were not accepting of normal differences in girls before. What a joke! No one ever called a cis girl mannish before now? Yeah, right.

 

If privacy is a right (which i believe, to some degree), what does that entail?

For me it means that even people who are incapable (the young, people with intellectual disabilities or dementia, etc) or unwilling to learn tech should still have a basic right to privacy online.

And people who do care and are capable should consider those people's privacy when working to create privacy protecting laws. It's also worth considering while building new privacy oriented technologies, but course it's more complicated asking for someone to do more when it's just them and maybe another person building an app as a personal project. Demanding more work for an unpaid hobby project is too much. It's more important larger organizations and government bodies get on board.

If it's a right, isn't it also for people who haven't earned it? But rights, to me, are ideals we've decided as a group deserve to be upheld for everyone and are worth working for. If we think freedom from violence within the family is a right, then I deserve it even if I don't participate in running a dv shelter or understand the complexity of social violence. Right? But who do we decide does the work for those who can't?

Is it complicated, or am I just making it complicated?

 

Is it useful for people with limited tech knowledge? Is the organization trustworthy? I don't know enough about any of this to vet it, but a basic primer would be useful for me and my even less tech savvy relatives.

1
Monster Pulse (www.monster-pulse.com)
 

"Four kids run afoul of a creepy secret organization's experiments, which turn their body parts into fighting monsters. Part sentimental coming-of-age story, part monster-training shonen manga, with just a bit of sci-fi body horror."

I read this while dealing with insomnia and it kept me invested the whole way through. It's intended for teens, but there is a lot of body horror in the content. The relationship between the main kid and her monster is understandably complicated, and you get to see the villain's entire arc. It's very cool. Since it's complete and was written over years, you get to see the cartoonist's skill improve. I always get a kick out of that.

 
 
 

Displacing and destroying peoples by colonisation is not just a historical Western evil but a global and contemporary one

 
view more: next ›