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Joined 12 days ago
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Cake day: March 8th, 2026

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  • This feels like the poison scene from the princess bride, so I’ll approach it with that level of intellectual derangement.

    Which means the obvious first step is to recognize that the house is a cheater who wants you to stay poor so your choice doesn’t matter. There is poison in both cups and I will lose either way. Money no longer influences my decision.

    Next, I flip a coin ten times and note my reaction to the choices. That’s my gut instinct and obviously what the model predicted unless it’s either not smart enough to know my gut or smart enough to predict my double bluff, therefore useless.

    Next, I decide which variables are most likely to influence the prediction (gender, age, education level, big 5 personality score) and realize this is the adult marshmallow test. I obviously think I’m smart and want the model to know that, so it obviously predicted that I would take one box because I’m a good little goodie two shoes who delays instant gratification for the potential bigger payoff. Therefore I choose two boxes because the model would never expect someone as smart as I to make such a dumb greedy move. Surely, I have outsmarted the supercomputer with my quadruple bluff and have won.

    And then I remember I am dumb and the model knows that, because in my excitement, I forgot that the house is a cheater who always wins (and there was likely never any money in the mystery box because researchers never get that kind of funding). I am forced to believe that the model accurately perceived me to be a greedy idiot who took two boxes against my better judgement, shattering my ego.

    But hey, I at least got $1k out of it.


  • I did it slowly over time. Every time reddit made a site wide change that worsened the user experience (which has been a lot since I joined a decade ago), I’d take one step to distance myself. First it was unsubscribing from major subreddits and engaging less, then staying logged out, then deleting the app but browsing on the web, and finally reddit pissed me off enough to try an alternative. So far I’ve already spent much less time doomscrolling online since this place isn’t filled with rage-baiting bot content.



  • searabbit@piefed.socialtoAutism@lemmy.worldYep...
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    6 days ago

    It’s weird because terminally online people forget that profound autism exists but most irl people I talk to have no concept of autism besides profound autism.

    Otoh, I think most people irl and online think of ADHD as quirky distracted ball of energy meanwhile severe ADHD is not actually seen as a disability but a personal failing or mistaken for the classic depression+anxiety combo.


  • A 2023 state law prohibited drivers from parking within the 20 feet of curb space approaching an intersection, a practice known in traffic safety circles as “daylighting” the corners.

    But the law didn’t come with any funding to mark those spaces off-limits, leaving it up to cities and other local governments to pay for the work out of their own budgets. As a result, many haven’t — Oakland officials said last fall that they don’t have the staff or funding to implement the law, with just two employees responsible for street-painting work throughout the city.

    Berkeley has become one of the first cities in California to finish painting its curbs to comply with the law, City Manager Paul Buddenhagen wrote in a memo this week, after public works staff and a contractor applied the treatment at nearly 1,700 intersections.

    So California passed this law and Berkeley is patting themselves on the back for actually following through 3 years later when the law actually became enforceable. A lot of CA cities (definitely parts of LA) already had this law in place like decades ago, so Berkeley is just trying to take credit for the party they showed up late to.


  • Unseen, which helps victims of modern slavery, called for more training for professionals. Lauren Saunders, the charity’s deputy director of frontline services, said: “The awareness of domestic servitude is really really low because it happens in private homes. I think there is a real lack of training for professionals on how to identify the signs of exploitation.”

    The charity provided the Guardian with new figures suggesting a steep increase in the number of victims of modern slavery. Its helpline received reports of more than 6,600 victims in 2025, a 37% rise on 2024.

    I remember when I was in school a lady representing the same or similar organization came to raise awareness about this kind of domestic modern slavery she herself had been a victim of. It’s so heartbreaking that this kind of slavery often falls through the cracks because it’s not what you think of when you imagine slavery. If you saw your average affluent American/European family (I’m not talking anywhere close to the Epstein class) with their live in maid/nanny, your first thought wouldn’t be that the “help” is literally a slave.



  • As expected, poorer people with no insurance and chronic illnesses are most affected, but even in their highest earning group of $240k+, 25% of people said they delayed a major life event to pay for healthcare. It underscores this as an issue that affects the bottom 99% of Americans as we all pretty much could guess.

    I do think further studies should expand the survey questions because I go to the doctor way too much for chronic illness and I’ve never considered cutting back on utilities or literally skipping meals to pay for healthcare since where I live those savings are not enough to cover the costs on their own. In my experience, it’s more common to travel for medical procedures/diagnoses, get medications shipped from other countries, and to literally just stop paying any medical bills that they don’t make you pay upfront because fuck them.







  • Action is usually less appealing and scarier than procrastinating through analysis. But since no one ever calls out what actions to take, I’ll give my 2 cents:

    • If you see something, say something. At a minimum, record any ICE/state interactions you come across and post it online. Don’t be a useless bystander.

    • Build a community if you don’t have one. Talk to your neighbors, local businesses, nonprofits, and politicians. This is actually how grassroots organization begins.

    • Do not concede in advance. Stop posting doomer content that demoralizes your own side. Don’t make compromises to appease the enemy in advance. Do not believe you have lost before you have tried.

    • Obstruct. Most of us work for corporations that are directly working with or benefiting from the current regime. If you are in this situation, don’t go above and beyond in your work. At a minimum. Be curious about how many “mistakes” or “laziness” you can get away with. I used to work in what is basically employee surveillance and employees have so much more power than they think especially when your boss has no idea what you do, the loopholes you’ve found in their system, or the access that you probably don’t need. Have fun with that knowledge.

    • Engage in activism. This is the one everyone jumps to when talking about “taking action,” but it is obviously too much to ask of most people as their first step. Assuming you already have a plan to vote at a minimum, this would encompass everything from canvassing, to protesting, to running for office.

    This is definitely not a comprehensive list. If anyone has book recommendations on the topic, I’d love to hear it.