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Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: October 7th, 2020

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  • “Would you like to round up your purchase, we promise that we’ll give it to somebody who needs it.”

    Large, well known companies that just advertise that they still exist. Like, yeah, I know McDonaldsBurgerTacoBellWendySonic’s exist. I pass them on every street corner. Show me an advertisement for something I don’t know exists.

    Resetting/moving the products on the store’s shelves en masse, not because there’s holes from discontinued products but because “people will stop paying attention to the shelves if everything stays the same.” I’m old and in a hurry and I was here to give you my fucking money. Don’t make it hard for me to give you my fucking money.

    Pricing to the 9’s.

    Filling the shelves with a bunch of things that don’t seem to sell all that well, taking up space that could have been used to keep more of the fast moving products on the retail floor, just to have the appearance of diversity on the shelves.








  • Depends on what you get to vote on, who gets to vote, if their votes count, etc.

    A more democratic system could have done something like, we’ll test run Brexit for a few years, make an assessment, and then allow everybody to vote again to continue Brexiting or roll it back. But that’s not going to happen because … well… representative democracy is authoritarian by design. Nobody is going to put a “Roll Back Brexit” question on a ballot who championed a pro-Brexit stance and will fight any attempt to give the people a chance to vote again (heck, they’ll probably fight tooth and nail to keep any useful assessments of the effects of Brexit from being pushed into the public sphere to help voters make informed decisions as well).


  • Representative Democracies are, by definition, authoritarian. A small number of people are elected, democratically, to make the decisions for the majority.

    Is the decision to end slavery a majority decision? Then it’s democratic.

    With the contradiction being that the people who were pro slavery could just decide, “Nah, we’re not going to end slavery”, and continue to do slavery. Which I’m pretty sure is generally how that went in the USA.


  • Yes.

    But slavery was also authoritarian.

    Any situation where there is a power imbalance that can be enforced through physical or psychological means that somebody doesn’t agree with is authoritarian. Employer/employee? Authoritarian. Parent/infant? Authoritarian. Bank/bank customer? Authoritarian. Doctor/patient? Authoritarian.

    Probably the only reasonable definition of authoritarian would be something like, “To be ruled/governed by an authority.” I’ve decided that Bill over there gets to be in charge of things, they’re the authority. I don’t always agree with the decisions they make but they’re in charge. Which seems like it would overlap a bit with the idea of democratic centralism.




  • Pretty sure nobody has any real idea how to send text correspondence anymore.

    Like, I work in a building 10+ miles away from my boss and often communication is done through text, email, occasionally by voice, but almost never in person.

    Every time I send a work email to my boss/coworkers, I find myself staring at the screen wondering…“Wait, is there any particular way to start these things? ‘Dear So-n-So’ is really weird. ‘First/Last Name’ seems fine unless I’m sending the email to multiple people, which happens pretty regularly. Would just jump straight into the body of the text, but that seems… wrong somehow… and potentially confusing if an email address is not something that is human readable or mixed in with a list of email addresses.”

    Eventually I just bang something out and figure, whatever, its not like 90% of my emails seem to get read by anybody anyways.




  • (experiences from small scale agriculture)

    Things will always cost more than you think.

    Learn about book keeping, even if you don’t start out doing your own book keeping, and do your best to maintain good book keeping practices… the easier you make it for an accountant to look for tax credits, profits, losses, depreciation, and potential write-offs the easier it will be to spend money paying an accounted to make sure the stuff is done correctly. And if/when you start doing your own book keeping and working on summaries if definitely helps to mentally make sense of what’s going on in your business.

    If you only have one source for some vital supplies or service, its a very good idea to be on the look out for alternative sources and be ready to find substitutes for those supplies/services.

    You get to say “no”. If you only want a small shop that does business with a “X” amount of clients/customer, you are under no obligation to try to provide goods/services to “X + N” amount of clients/customers. So long as you can work sustainably, its not your job or purpose to supply the entire “market”. If there’s more demand than supply, its okay for some other person to start their own thing and serve some of that ample demand. So when people start to complain that you aren’t “big enough” or that “you could have a bigger business” when you aren’t interested, tell them “no.”