Remember those click wheels those really old iPods had?
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    E-readers with physical buttons still exist, but the companies price gouge for the privilege, since they're only on the top end models. I'd take the old style with only buttons if they still made them. E-Ink shows fingerprints worse than LCD's so it's kinda dumb to have a touch screens.

    3
  • Hows it going? Anything cool going on this week?
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    Going apple picking this week. It's gotten so expensive, though. It costs significantly more than buying them in the store. I guess it's because it's more of a tourist activity than a way to buy apples. Still, I like having some hot cider and seeing the fall sights with my partner

    2
  • If anyone asks you what "treat brain" is and why it is a terminal condition show them this photo
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    Does Israel really not have a Target equivalent?

    Target is basically just Walmart for people who think Walmart is for poor people. It's basically the same low and middle quality mass market goods at a slightly higher price

    36
  • the cia don’t want you to know this but you can drink piss
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    Big Pharma wants us to think piss is full of waste products so they can mine our sewers to make cancer drugs

    6
  • Sports is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people.
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    You are the one being hostile. You're going way overboard reading into what I wrote and getting defensive.

    My point was that people are sometimes fans of the team more than the players. People will love a particular quarterback until the second they leave the team, then they hate them. It's literally loyalty to the team over the player.

    Relax

    6
  • Sports is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people.
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    How am I being hostile? I was just making a point about people being a fan of teams vs players. Your comment is assuming a ton of things I didn't say

    5
  • US man, 81, sentenced to six months for creating giant hybrid sheep for hunting
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    Did they really breed them to fight? I thought it was part of the Nazis "Aryan" heritage bullshit.

    16
  • Sports is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people.
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    My favorite part about professional sports is how people are assigned a corporation at birth to be fans of. You're born in Kansas, you are expected root for Kansas City Chiefs incorporated.

    Enjoy what you want, I don't care. I just think being a long term fan of a team is weird loyalty to a corporate entity.

    12
  • Qhat should i put on a costco hotdog
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    Yellow mustard and onion. Anything else is revisionism

    3
  • Saladin's Conquest of Jerusalem (1187 CE) - New General Megathread for the 2nd-3rd of October 2024
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    My partner heard this squirrel screeching and then it spent the day hanging around my porch. It didn't seem injured, but it did seem scared. It spent most of the time pressed really flat on the step like it was hiding. I tossed a couple peanuts out the window and it ate them and left at some point.

    Hope it's ok.

    17
  • Whose idea was prior authorization, and what is their home address?
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    Propublica had an article about insurance company denials. Cigna denied 300,000 claims in 2 month, with doctors spending an average of 1.2 seconds on each case.

    https://www.propublica.org/article/cigna-pxdx-medical-health-insurance-rejection-claims

    They try to say this system is about preventing waste, but it's purpose is making it too hard to get health care, so you'll give up or die before they have to pay.

    6
  • How many of you with student loans are actually repaying them?
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    I got the disability discharge since they made it easier to do. Now I'm just hoping the US bureaucracy is inept enough to not figure out they're about to kick me off disability and reverse it.

    I'm not going to pay it anyway, though

    4
  • This fucking guy
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    I wore a T-shirt in middle school that said "Big Richard" and at the bottom it said, "but my friends call me Dick".

    I cringe every time I think about it. This man is 50 and proudly posting this shit

    18
  • How many extra pronouns are now in the game?
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 96%

    but what they're actually angry about is the idea that someone has a say over how others are to refer to them.

    I think they're just mad trans people exist, and pronoun selection reminds them of that.

    It fits with their bullshit about wanting non-political games. Their politics are fueled by hatred, and it infects their escapist treats to be reminded of the mere existence of minorities and trans people.

    24
  • Trail of Tears - New General Megathread for the 30th of sep-1st of October 2024
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    PSA: Don't ever buy a 3rd party car warranty. They're straight up scams.

    First, they don't cover the cost of diagnostics, and frequently require more diagnostic work than normally necessary before considering claims. Second, repairs take much longer because of approval delays and third party assessments. Third, they will haggle over everything, including the cost of parts and can force you to accept low quality and even used parts. Lastly, they will find any excuse to deny claims and your only recourse is to sue.

    The only car warranty that actually does what it says is a manufacturers warranty from the manufacturer of your car(dealers will try to scam you by selling you a warranty from the finance arm of a different manufacturer). Even then it rarely makes financial sense to buy the warranty extension, but at least they will pay out if you need repairs.

    Home warranties are basically the same deal, but are even worse in some ways because you must use the contractors they have agreements with.

    16
  • anti iraq war pro israel guy
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    They don't like that we get to vote for one of two representatives of the ruling class

    9
  • What do hexbears think about pumped hydropower storage?
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    There's also a version of this where you divert water at a regular hydro plant into a storage canal. It still uses pumps, but it doesn't need a separate turbine and a mountain.

    8
  • Have you ever wanted to normalize the militarization of the police to your kid? Look no further than your local library!
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    My hometown did city wide budget cuts, including a comparatively smaller cut to the police budget. In response the police threatened to cut their K9 unit. They started posting pics on their Facebook from all the copaganda events of kids posing with the dogs, with messages like, "Say goodbye to Hunter, were going to miss this good boy!".

    18
  • mask off I guess
  • LanyrdSkynrd LanyrdSkynrd Now 100%

    The NH libertarian party was taken over by a group of straight up facists. Libertarians suck for a lot of reasons, but this group is much worse. They had a "slavery was good for black people" post a while back.

    44
  • web.archive.org

    It's a long article, so I put the most relevant excerpts below, but the whole article is interesting and infuriating. There is a lot more details about the case and lack of evidence. >Richardson and Claiborne's plight is as unique as it is complex. Since they were accused in April 1998 of shooting and killing Officer Allen Gibson, they've faced charges in both the state and federal court systems, and seen their cases go up and down on appeal while seeming to skirt some of the judicial system's most basic rules regarding double jeopardy and the disclosure of exculpatory evidence. >Despite state prosecutors initially charging them with capital murder, the charges were drastically reduced thanks to what court records say was a lack of physical evidence. The two men ultimately pled guilty in 1999 to manslaughter and accessory after the fact, and served little to no time in prison. >Federal prosecutors, however, went on to try them again for the same killing under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act in 2001. In the federal trial, jurors found Richardson and Claiborne not guilty of the murder, but did convict them on drug possession and distribution charges. >Even though they were cleared of the murder, the federal judge overseeing the case sentenced both men to life in prison under U.S. Supreme Court precedent that allows judges to consider conduct for which a defendant has been acquitted to impose a longer sentence. And in making the call to put both men behind bars for life, the judge pointed to their guilty pleas in state court. >"The court is just leaning on the guilty plea instead of trying to find out what happened that day," Adams said. "And the reason, I believe, is they are not looking to find out what happened, because they already know. And what they know is that it ain't Terence and Ferrone." >The Guilty Plea >Nearly a year after the killing, prosecutors reduced the charges against the two defendants from capital murder to involuntary manslaughter in exchange for their guilty pleas. According to the report that attorney general Herring prepared years later in response to Richardson's innocence petition, a state prosecutor had admitted to the press that the case was weak and that "the risks in going to trial with a jury were just astronomical." >"My family ran out of money," Claiborne said. "They were talking about giving us the death penalty. When our attorney came to us and said that this was the best deal, what else was I supposed to do in order to stay alive?" >Richardson said his lawyer told him that, "even though they know that it may not have been y'all that did it, they're going to make somebody wear this case. And it's going to be y'all. You're going to get the death penalty." >"I said, 'Man that's crazy. You're trying to tell me I got to go to prison for something I didn't do?" Richardson said. >The Federal Case >Richardson and Claiborne took the plea deal in December 1999, with Richardson admitting to involuntary manslaughter and Claiborne agreeing he had served as an accessory after the fact. >Richardson was sentenced to 10 years with five suspended based on good behavior, while Claiborne was sentenced to time served. >Adams said there was public outrage at the outcome. >"If you're in D.C. and you're reading that, out of Waverly, Virginia, a cop was killed by two Black guys and they plead guilty, but [one is] given time served, you're going to be like, 'What the hell man?'" Adams said. "You've never seen such concessions made for Black men accused of killing a white guy. It just doesn't happen." >So in December 2000, amid pressure from Gibson's family and others, federal prosecutors indicted Richardson and Claiborne under the RICO Act for one count of conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine, one count of use of a firearm to commit murder during drug trafficking, and one count of murder of a law enforcement officer during drug trafficking. >"These drug charges came out of nowhere. It was a loophole," Adams said. "They couldn't just say, 'We're trying to get to the murder of this officer.' There would have been some sovereignty issues with that. But this way they could do it and say, 'I'm charging you with a RICO case where your drug dealing resulted in the death of an officer.'" >As with the state case, the federal case included no physical evidence in support of the charges.

    44
    1
    pixeldrain.com

    I found someone had uploaded them all to YT, so I ripped them and uploaded a zip file with mp3s. If you have trouble with the link, let me know and I can upload them somewhere else. Obviously, support them if you can afford it.

    33
    1
    https://youtu.be/DJH4fDHUUcM

    Guy unloads a truly impressive string of verbal abuse on a cop. Predictably cops don't let that go unpunished

    2
    1
    https://youtu.be/eRPeU1DYOWA

    Excellent video about the real reason ADHD drugs are in short supply. Spoiler: it's about profits

    15
    1
    www.independent.co.uk

    >The National Federation of Republican Assemblies (NFRA) has cited the infamous 1857 Dred Scott Supreme Court decision, which stated that enslaved people weren’t citizens, to argue that Vice President Kamala Harris is ineligible to run for president according to the Constitution. >The group also challenged the right of Vivek Ramaswamy and Nikki Haley to appear on Republican primary ballots. >The Republican group’s platform and policy document noted that “The Constitutional qualifications of Presidential eligibility” states that “No person except a natural born Citizen, shall be eligible, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President >“An originalist and strict constructionist understanding of the Constitution in the Scalia and Thomas tradition, as well as precedent-setting U.S. Supreme Court cases ... have found that a ‘Natural Born Citizen’ is defined as a person born on American soil of parents who are both citizens of the United States at the time of the child’s birth,” the document states. >The group then cites six cases including Dred Scott v Sandford. The 1857 ruling came a few years before the 1861 outbreak of the US Civil War over the issue of slavery, stating that enslaved people could not be citizens, meaning that they couldn’t expect to receive any protection from the courts or the federal government. The ruling also said that Congress did not have the power to ban slavery from a federal territory. I thought this was some kind of op, like someone making a fake Republican org and putting out an unhinged policy paper. Citing Dred Scott is crazy, especially since it doesn't seem to have anything to do with the argument that she's not a citizen. Archive link: https://web.archive.org/save/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.independent.co.uk%2Fnews%2Fworld%2Famericas%2Fus-politics%2Fkamala-harris-president-supreme-court-b2601364.html

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    32

    My cat Pepper has been on a diet for about 9 months. He was definitely overweight and has lost about 2 pounds, but I'm starting to worry he's being underfed now. He just seems more stressed when he goes to check his food bowl and it's empty and will wait for the machine to dispense for hours before his feeding times. He's a bombay, and I found some info online that says they should be under 15 pounds and some that says under 12. He's 12.6 now, and he still looks kinda chubby, but it's hard to tell because he has a big primordial pouch(loose skin in the belly area). I know I should ask a vet, but I can't afford a vet visit.

    23
    9

    New Hampshire's school funding system is the worst that exists in the US. This image is pretty self-explanatory, but I want to add that this is not a cherry-picked example. There are other communities that could be compared that would show significantly larger disparities, but this example was chosen because they are 30 miles apart. ![](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/a24cf24f-67ad-4b95-9909-dbb01d54872e.png) This disparity exists because most of the school funding comes from local property taxes. Property rich towns have plenty to spend on schools, while property poor communities must raise their tax rates. This causes businesses to leave, which lowers tax revenues, which forces them to raise tax rates even more. This also eliminates local jobs, which causes people to leave, which drives down property values, which drives down tax revenue. It's a vicious cycle that destroys communities. One of the aspects of this that enrages me the most is that the NH constitution requires the state to fully fund an adequate education. There was a series of lawsuits starting in 1998, where the NH Supreme Court ruled that the state must fund a study to determine the costs and fund that amount. As a result, the state legislature created SWEPT, a statewide education property tax. The funds would be passed to the state, and the state would be required to divide it out based on an equalization formula. This satisfied the court, despite the fact that the amount would not satisfy the cost of an adequate education established at trial. Just 2 years later, the legislature passed a law allowing communities to retain the SWEPT funds, as long as they spent them on education. Property rich towns reduced their local property taxes to 0% and tried to spend as much as possible even though their schools were already well funded. Despite their best efforts, equalization funds still flowed to the poor communities, they just couldn't spend it all. Then the rich towns discovered they could set a negative local property tax rate. Most of the richest towns did it, bringing their contributions to the SWEPT fund to 0. Over the years since there have been other lawsuits, most targeted at aid for students with disabilities. Some of those resulted in some targeted funding and adequacy aid, but today the funding looks like this(SWEPT in this chart is the amount kept locally, so it's a local tax as well): ![](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/63b5b001-4228-4542-9c99-e1cca10151be.png) This whole situation also makes the entire NH tax system regressive, meaning poor folks a larger share of their income in taxes than the rich. There's no personal income or sales tax and the interest and dividend tax was recently eliminated: ![](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/0cb89872-ffe9-467f-b781-49e25791d51d.png) This is a system designed to keep poor people poor. Give them a terrible education, eliminate any chance of jobs in their communities, and tax them more than everyone that has a higher income. There is currently another lawsuit going that the state has lost, but judgement is delayed until after the next legislative cycle. Despite the fact that the state lost, and didn't even contest that they aren't properly funding an adequate education, I'm not hopeful. The current chief justice is a big proponent of private education and represented the state in a previous school funding lawsuit. They also have the roadmap of how to allow the state to continue to violate the constitution. Let them delay, pass small reforms and then undo them, forcing another 5 years of funding studies and litigation.

    26
    1

    People talk about social media algorithms as if they're something disconnected from the decisions of the companies that make and control them. "The Algorithm" is not making YT push shitty content on your home page, YouTube is making that happen. It's a combination of ignoring certain trends and actively promoting others. For starters, these companies made the algorithms, they tweak them constantly. When Elsagate happened, YT made changes the reduced the amount of that very specific type of garbage that was shown. When advertisers stop advertising, they suddenly have great influence over the recommendations. That to me proves they have to ability to control with pretty fine detail what is recommended by their sites. It's been revealed that TikTok has a manual "[heater](https://www.forbes.com/sites/emilybaker-white/2023/01/20/tiktoks-secret-heating-button-can-make-anyone-go-viral/)" function that allows them to force certain videos to appear in recommendations. They use this to set the tone of the site, lure influencers, and make brand deals. That exposure causes heated channels to gain subscribers, further amplifying the effects. YT trending is manually chosen as well, 10 main videos, 10 gaming videos and 10 shorts, updated every 15 minutes. When videos end up on the trending page, they get more views, which makes them get recommended even more. This gives them a constant source of influence over the recommendations. One mistake I see people make is to assume that recommendation algorithms are simply a reflection of the audience; "The algorithm is bad because we are bad". My counterpoint to that is that when the recommendations hurt the bottom line of the business, these companies change them. At the very least it's social media companies choosing not to fix bad recommendations and at worst intentional manipulation. Sure, people choose to watch a lot of gross stuff, but let's not act like YouTube couldn't get rid of, for example, misogyny for children content(Andrew Tate etc) quickly if they wanted to. The other is to treat it as a sentient creation that nobody has control over, "We're just chasing what the algorithm wants". It's one of the things tech bros dream of with regard to AI. They want to be able to put an algorithm in charge of the orphan crushing machine and say, "Sorry, I don't know why the algorithm keeps choosing to crush the orphans". Tldr: The purpose of a system is what it does.

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    28

    I'm doing my part ![im-doing-my-part](https://www.hexbear.net/pictrs/image/015ea021-9f07-4ab8-9782-4fa1b4ba8830.png "emoji im-doing-my-part")

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    19
    www.podbean.com

    A collection of Parenti speeches in podcast format. The audio is cleaned up, but some are still a little rough.

    52
    8
    www.aljazeera.com

    >Joshua Bowles, 29, repeatedly stabbed the unnamed woman, who was working at British intelligence agency Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), in March near its base at Cheltenham, England. >Following his arrest, Bowles told the police, “The target was selected for employment at the NSA.” >“Due to the size and resourcing, American intelligence represents the largest contributor within the intelligence community, so made sense as the symbolic target. I consider GCHQ just as guilty.” >Judge Bobbie Cheema-Grubb said on Monday that Bowles had carried out a “politically motivated attack” that was driven by “anger and resentment” towards GCHQ and women. >He had researched the attack online beforehand, including studying the American “Unabomber” Ted Kaczynski, who mounted an anonymous bombing campaign from 1978 to 1995. >Bowles also looked up attacks on women and white supremacy. >In one of his police interviews, Bowles said: “The system is rigged. I believe the intelligence community helps ensure this rigging, this view has been reinforced by my time working at GCHQ.” >Penny also said Bowles described himself as a “terrorist” after the attack, saying to one witness: “I make a pretty s*** terrorist, don’t I?”

    32
    3
    youtu.be

    Al-Jazeera documentary about Israel's illegal lobbying efforts in the US. It was never released, due to US pressure, but was later leaked on YouTube by Electronic Infatada.

    21
    3
    LanyrdSkynrd Now
    29 475

    LanyrdSkynrd [comrade/them, any]

    LanyrdSkynrd@ hexbear.net

    Fuck, I don't know anymore