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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • I’m not familiar with Worm, but… We’re doing a great job of mashing up the bad parts of a lot of sci-fi lore and backstory.

    Twelve Monkeys? Yeah, we had a poorly managed pandemic.

    Star Trek? We’re struggling with income inequality and experiencing difficult political times right around when the Bell Riots would have started for similar (but worse) reasons.

    40k? AI was great, right up until it wasn’t. They crammed that shit into everything before the Men of Iron rebelled, and that was real AI. We might actually speed-run that bit, since we’re doing such a good job of messing things up with LLMs.

    On the one hand, I know that the world resembles those things because they were inspired by real life - epidemics, economic strife, and an increasing reliance on systems that the average person doesn’t understand. On the other hand, I wouldn’t be surprised if we end up with a privately-funded Mars colony that ultimately replaces one of Mars’ moons with a gaping hellmouth.












  • Some (but not very much) of the bullshit they ramble on about is in there, but it’s not in the important part.

    All of the fire and brimstone, Sodom & Gomorrah, “I am a vengeful god” shit is in the Old Testament. Sure, the Old Testament is important (it’s like half of the book, after all), but it’s important as backstory. It’s literally just the Torah in a different order, included because Christianity started as a breakaway sect of Judaism.

    The part that actually pertains directly to Christianity starts with a list of “begats,” some very confused shepherds, and a barn baby getting presents. The New Testament is mostly about helping others and being tolerant; and the star of the show, Jesus, literally goes around telling people that they can get into heaven just by being nice and helping the needy. He gets angry exactly once, and goes on a table-flipping rampage because someone else was taking advantage of poor pilgrims. It’s the kind of thing that a lot of the Christian Right would call “hippie bullshit,” but it’s also the entire point of their religion.



  • Sorry if I was unclear - he moved to not hold a vote on whether we should become Open & Affirming for ten years, and the vote on that passed.

    By tabling it for ten years, they avoided having to put “ALSO, STILL NOT OFFICIALLY COOL WITH GAY PEOPLE” in the annual report every year. No matter how nice and supportive folks actually were, having to reiterate that we weren’t Open & Affirming made us seem… Well, Closed & Disparaging, like the Catholics down the street.

    I actually asked the guy about it a few years later, when I was old enough to actually pay attention to the annual meetings - he said he was pretty sure that the old lady didn’t have ten more years left, and he wanted to make sure that it passed the next time that it was voted on.


  • I mean… He’s not wrong. I grew up in a fairly relaxed Christian church, where the emphasis was on the part of the Bible where Jesus says “don’t be a douchebag,” and “wait for them to die” was something they actually did.

    For context, it wasn’t about anything bad. When I was a kid, the church kept voting on if they wanted to be Open & Affirming (basically just taking an official positive stance on lgbtq folks). The church was already lower case open and affirming - the minister’s son was gay, as was the organist, and everyone was cool with it - but they needed a majority vote to become upper case Open & Affirming. Every year, one bigoted old lady who only came to church on Christmas and Easter would get all of her friends to vote against it, and every year it would get voted down.

    The organist got tired of it, and he left. The next year, the minister went too. The year after that, when it got voted down, an old man near the front stood up and called out that he wanted to move to vote on tabling the issue for ten years. His wife quickly seconded, and the council held the vote… Overwhelming yes.

    For the next decade, the lgbtq crowd in the congregation actually slowly grew: the church’s official stance was always quietly avoided, and the old lady was never there to make them feel unwelcome… Speaking of whom, her poorly-attended funeral was held about eight years later, and her friends stopped coming to the annual meetings.

    When the issue of becoming Open & Affirming was raised again, it passed by a wide margin.



  • You mentioned that the house is a century old - I’m assuming it was built as a single dwelling, and subdivided later.

    If that’s the case, my best guess is that the basement had a problem with flooding during bad weather, so they busted holes in existing drainage pipes to allow water to drain from the basement. The leaky walls were most likely sealed when it was converted to an apartment, but… Well, drains drains are great until they back up - I would be concerned about water coming up through them in particularly bad weather.


  • So, uh… We have the same thermostat at my job. It’s not great. You can’t just tell it what temperature you want the room to be, you actually have to tell it if you want it to heat or cool to that temperature.

    Yours is set set to 65, but if you look to the left of the current temp, it says “heat.” Someone likely forgot to change that when the weather warmed up. IIRC, one of the three unlabeled middle buttons will fix that.