Trump has already bee confirmed as a rapist by the legal system.
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Did any of us really believe this list would ever be released?
Zephorah@discuss.onlinetoMicroblog Memes@lemmy.world•The $5mil ring cost him 0.0000021% of his current networthEnglish321·12 hours agoEarned on the backs of working class.
Did Amazon ever acknowledge or deign to negotiate with the unions formed by their workers?
Zephorah@discuss.onlineto Tech@programming.dev•'It's obvious that users are frustrated': consumer rights group accuses Microsoft of not providing a 'viable solution' for Windows 10 users who can't upgrade to Windows 1183·2 days agoLinux.
That said, it’s not for everyone. I don’t want to be tech support for relatives who can’t figure out how to use AirPods or how not download more bloatware during the course of general home computer use.
Needing one patch for one thing would mean a new computer because “nothing works” for at least one relative.
Zephorah@discuss.onlinetoPolitical Memes@lemmy.world•Wait a Minute. Strike That. Reverse It.1·2 days agoFor the love of god, I’m not denying the occurrence. I’m pointing out the number of posts on it and that is all. People are still dying daily, and I read that news daily. But the daily posts on it are a mere sliver of what they were in October of 2024. That is the salient point.
I’m not a democrat. Nor do I think the present party has any strength beyond that of a wet spaghetti noodle. Nor do I have anything to do with the army of dipshits in MAGA gear. Bernie winning 2016 would’ve been the right timeline. This one sucks. Do I turn out and vote like an adult anyway, to avoid abject errors like Trump? Yes. But I’m not a democrat.
AI is ruining us already. The gross dependency on it for the most basic of tasks, like writing a sentence, is a malignancy that’s destroying both critical thinking and art. So yea, you’re probably right that I’m a bit over focused on that problem. But maybe not. Either way, there’s no need to draw nasty assumptions that reach far beyond the AI problem simply because you don’t like my focus on the AI problem.
Zephorah@discuss.onlineto Health - Resources and discussion for everything health-related@lemmy.world•Nurse on new CDC vaccine panel said to have been ‘anti-vax longer than RFK’English4·2 days agoA board of nursing can revoke a license for unethical behavior even if, technically, no law is broken.
Zephorah@discuss.onlineto A Boring Dystopia@lemmy.world•In 6 hours it will be illegal to say "I support Palestine Action" in the UK, with a sentence of up to 14 years in prison.141·2 days agoAt risk of sounding like that dipshit Vance, you guys don’t have free speech, not really. The uk seems to exist in a “yes, but no” realm. The press can’t report on trials such that it might influence outcome. 1988 law iirc. That’s smart, but it’s still a guardrail on speech. Some of the arrests and even sentences over there, for speech and sometimes even ideology related infractions, are a bit wild. I remember reading something about a woman being fined for calling her ex a leprechaun on social media.
That said, I feel a need to reiterate how crazy this defense of war and slaughter is. I’ve been a casual observer at best but I do not understand why either government cares if a people across an ocean (who are not and never will be boots on the ground for either side of this war) say they don’t like a war. So what? The war will rage on regardless of wether or not college students in Michigan walk around outside on a nice day holding signs. Or if some guy in London posts an objection on social media. That’s not even a speed bump to this war or either government if either government even sees or hears any of it. So why does either government even care? Why even spend energy on that? For them, it’s like a volume setting that maybe can’t be turned to zero, but in the end it’s just a bit of noise to them. So why bother? The war will continue. As such, their reaction makes no sense whatsoever.
Zephorah@discuss.onlineto Health - Resources and discussion for everything health-related@lemmy.world•Nurse on new CDC vaccine panel said to have been ‘anti-vax longer than RFK’English21·3 days agoHow does she manage to keep her nursing license while being anti-vax? We truly are on the worst timeline.
What you’re saying isn’t in doubt, but it doesn’t fit the pattern of what I’m describing. Ofc there are people who oppose the Israel/Palestine war. I never said no one opposed it. I also never said I was for it.
The point of the description is there was a deluge. Daily multiples across forums, subs, endless. The deluge abruptly stopped on Nov 5. The genocide didn’t stop on Nov 5, but the endless fury of posts across social media did.
I understand that no one likes to face or feel manipulation, but there it is.
Zephorah@discuss.onlinetoUnited States | News & Politics@midwest.social•MAGA mad husband says he loves Trump as ICE leads his wife away from home21·3 days agoBecause 3 year olds are often members of sleeper cells.
Your attempt to make dislike of AI slop and churn sound like a bad thing has failed.
I would dearly love to never see another popup random name Tshirt company with themed “humor” that falls flat or reads as slightly weird because it’s just shy of hitting the mark or has the feel of trying too hard. (Great trainer though, you’ll know what “hits” by buys.)
Or, to never experience another pre election run like Nov24 where an endless deluge of Israel/Pakistan horror flooded the Lemmy and Reddit feeds only to abruptly shut off on Nov5.
I’ve always just blocked Pinterest in my browser, the eyeroll that it is, but my understanding is it’s dominated by AI imagery now.
Zephorah@discuss.onlineto Canada@lemmy.ca•This Fourth of July, the world declares its independence from America161·3 days agoYeah. We’re pretty much over as a country.
AI is meming now.
AI is probably doing Tshirts too. All those many many T-shirt sites with churned out “humor” that falls flat or feels slightly off.
Zephorah@discuss.onlinetoPolitical Memes@lemmy.world•Wait a Minute. Strike That. Reverse It.22·2 days agoMaybe take a moment to watch Jon Oliver’s “AI Slop” show from 2? weeks ago.
I strongly suspect the endless spam of Palestine/Israel horror posts across Lemmy and Reddit last year that abruptly cut off on Nov 5 was more of the same.
Zephorah@discuss.onlineto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Is anyone else not feeling that patriotic for July 4?3·3 days agoIt’s a free show. With the right people it’s good, but I understand your feeling.
During the pandemic, a large swath of hospital systems, both psych and medical, contracted with nurses to travel to work for them on 13 wk contracts. There were some significantly high contracts in the midst of the pandemic, mainly through a company called Krucial. However, the Krucial contracts were not normal work weeks but five 12hr shifts every week, with significant overtime. Overtime in travel contracts was typically above the standard 1.5x hourly rate most hourly workers are accustomed to. The weekly rates on these contracts made news. I say this so we can move past it to the standard contracts where we can talk about lack of burnout.
The normal travel contract was typically 36hrs a week, a standard work week for the hourly nurse, with elevated OT. Rates were stronger than precovid, which was a strong lure, but the industry at large had not increased staff nurse pay with cost of living, most of the industry not seeing much in hourly rate increases past the years 2000-2008 which was some significantly bad wage stagnation. California was and is, as always, the exception in this practice. Post COVID, many states now pay nurses in keeping with the normal contract rates they originally left their staff jobs for. OT on staff is 1.5x but extra shifts beyond an FTE will often contain an extra $20-30/hr after OT is factored in, or a flat $200-500 per extra 12h shift. As such, many nurses who left for travel are back on staff and not traveling.
Even so, there were nurses who would not leave travel even though hospitals were offering better deals on the financial side, to be staff. More money, less movement sounds good, right?
Not for some. Burnout due to scheduling and lack of time off remains a problem for nursing staff. Meanwhile, travel contracts work like this: 13wks on, with roughly two weeks off in between. If a nurse opts to sign on for another 13wks at the same location, 1-2 weeks off is typically offered in between the old contract and the new. In addition, they can take Christmas off.
Less pay than staff, now, but a swath of nurses stick with travel regardless because they aren’t burning out. Travel nurses don’t typically burn out. Think about why. What would your own hourly work feel like on a 13wks on, 2wks off rotation?
Many people are going to and have to follow money, but this real life experiment has demonstrated how much less money people will take when they can to just not have to work every single week of their lives. There’s a lesson here that corporate America will likely never heed.