mouthporn.net
#capitalism – @burningcomputerpersona on Tumblr
Avatar

gonna grow you a place safer than this

@burningcomputerpersona

Currently obsessed with american pop punk band The Wonder Years. This blog is mostly just a collection of things that I'm interested in at the moment, whether it's music or a new fandom or just queer memes in general. I'll probably appear once in a while to reblog a bunch of posts about a new obsession that you didn't follow me for and then vanish off into the unknown again. Current interests include: the wonder years, spanish love songs, hot mulligan, against me, doctor who, etc.
Avatar

Like….when everyone has mental illness maybe the problem is with the systems 🤔

[ID: tweet by Eidi ‘Reeki @TuhRxxk:

As someone training to become a therapist, y’all recommend therapy for too many things tbh. I think the activity y’all are looking for is “revolution”.

Tweet by The People’s Oracle @PeoplesOracle:

I been wanting to tweet this for a few days now… If EVERYONE needs therapy, then the problems EVERYONE is dealing with are systemic, cultural… too big to be confronted alone between two people.  It’s actually a grave injustice to make individuals responsible for this.

Tweet by justine says join your union @kvetchings:

As someone who has been consistently going to therapy for years & working “on myself” ……. let me tell you there is only so much individual introspection and healing you can do when the structural forces and external events contributing to mental illness continue acting on you.

Individualized wellness culture gaslights people into thinking the problem and the solution lies within themselves.  The truth is we literally have a sick society and it needs to get better for us to be truly well.

Tweet by Jules . he/him . Yup’ik/Cup’ik @feraltakahayato:

I wish people realized that suicide prevention isn’t always posting the hotline.  It’s adequate housing.  It’s basic health care including dental and vision.  It’s affordable living.  Proper care in active addiction.  Proper care post addiction.  It’s everything we need to live.  /End ID.]

Avatar
Avatar
averagefairy

working full time is terrible why do we just accept that having 8 days off a month is normal and okay........ being alive could be cool but we waste it at our JOBS.... sorry i’m just heated about capitalism again i’ll be fine

not to be dramatic but the amount of people commenting on this post that I should stop whining and be grateful for having two days off a week when they only get one or none is...... literally proving my point that we’re all brainwashed ghfjhddjfk... thats like if someone cut off your arms and then only cut off one of mine, you focus on how much worse you have it instead of the fact that we’re still both fucking bleeding out 

Avatar
Avatar
rachandruin

A lot of people don't understand that the reason we agitate for political action to dismantle capitalism and replace it with something better is not because it won't collapse on its own, but because it will.

Capitalism is destined, doomed, to fail. Its own ethos of expansion at all costs, of prioritising profit over human life and Earth itself, means there will inevitably come a day when there is nothing left to make. Every drop of fuel, every scrap of biomass, every gram of ore will have been used up in its ceaseless quest to make Things, which no-one now has any money to buy. Capitalism is a death spiral and, left unchecked, will take down the entire planet.

Agitating for change now, and putting those changes into practice, is the equivalent of demolishing a dilapidated building; it'll be messy, and slow, and it'll take time to clear the rubble away, but the alternative is the building collapses and kills everyone.

Avatar

“wait, the calculator company makes bombs now?”

No, the bomb company made so many bomb microchips they were able to flood the calculator market and then drive prices up because they have a monopoly.

That graphing calculator you used in high school is made with about $2 of parts and the rest is monopoly markup

Avatar
Avatar
matrixdragon

God, even when they exist, I've lost track of how many times I've seen those services cut for lack of funding, turn out to be abuse schemes by some religious group, be in conflict with a law that means they can't actually help anyone...

Thinking about the food bank that gave out pallets of rotting grapes to families for Thanksgiving. And they actually were trying their best to get produce into the hands of people but they only could offer what they had been given and it was a shit ton of grapes that hadn't sold.

Thinking about Job training that actually turned out to be a sweatshop where you folded towels for 15 cents an hour.

This king about the mental health office that refused to send my prescription to my pharmacy, lied about it and then threatened to call "my parole officer" when I was upset because most of their patients were court mandated to go there but I was not one of them. They had simply forgotten that and decided to play the same games they did to those who had no choice. As soon as they realized I did not have a parole officer they stopped playing around and immediately sent the prescription.

Thinking about how Ebt pays out less money than the minimum amount the government says is needed to live by almost half. How there's so many tricks in the application to try to block you from getting aid you need.

Thinking about how many services are cut off from you if you have a criminal record and how being homeless is illegal in so many places.

Thinking about how the only job bank in my county shut down a decade ago in the middle of a recession.

Thinking about how rental assistance across the country have waiting lists years out.

Thinking about how employment resources is often getting someone to berate you while showing you the exact same Monster.com listing you could find online yourself and that's it.

Thinking about all the studies that showed giving people money outright with no strings attached was the most effective way to uplift people out of poverty...

Avatar
Avatar
psychotrenny

The contemporary corporate culture around mental health awareness/support is so fucking agonising. It's like this play-acting of social responsibility by forcing people to sit through empty platitudes and useless advice written by and for bougie fucks whose greatest mental health issue is feeling a little stressed before their monthly performance review. To add injury to insult, many of the institutions pushing this stuff the hardest are the ones most responsible for the material conditions that actually cause or exacerbate so many mental health problems. Like having decent working conditions or reliable access to housing is gonna improve mental health a lot more than breathing exercises and mindfulness.

I'm doubly frustrated by this because corporate culture is stripping genuinely effective techniques from their context and using them to absolve their responsibility from material conditions. Which also causes people do dismiss anything that looks like 'breathing exercises and mindfulness' is settings where they actually serve a purpose.

I see this happen as an activist. I mention breathing and people immediately get annoyed and ho 'so you think mindfullness can fix police brutality? :/'. And I'm like, 'no, but I know a technique that'll reduce your pain very significantly while they cut you out of that lock-on, and a technique that'll help you hold your pee for much longer. Do you not want the benefits of that?'

Avatar
Avatar
nothorses

my hot take this morning is that the spread of misinformation and the push to get folks to fact-check everything they see is less about "people being stupid" and more about our very necessary reliance on community being ill-suited to modern capital-driven news dissemination at best, and exploited by bad actors at worst.

it is genuinely just completely impractical to expect everyone to start fact-checking everything they see, "especially if it reinforces their existing beliefs!". we encounter new information constantly, and not just online! humans are always, always learning, and that's even more true in community spaces & interactions with other people.

stopping to fact-check every single thing we learn is not just impractical because it's time consuming, it's impractical because we often don't even know we're learning something. for everything you notice you're learning, there are so many things you're absorbing without realizing it; often layers upon layers of meaning and connection that you don't realize you're making.

we form trusting relationships with people and learn through them- through our communities- because that's the most efficient and effective way to make sure we're getting the best information we can. it makes the process of learning new things much smoother and safer; this person is trustworthy, so I don't need to question everything they say, so I can focus my energy on learning without having to constantly worry about the quality of information I'm taking in.

and if I could dip my toe outside of my immediate lane for a moment, I'd wager this is why so many cultures have versions of elders, mentors, and members of a community entrusted with curating, safeguarding, and disseminating a community's knowledge (the examples that come to mind for me are indigenous elders of North American cultures I'm a little more familiar with, or Babaylans of indigenous Philipino cultures). I also would not be surprised if this is at least part of why lying is such a taboo in so many cultures.

so then we meet capital-driven news dissemination: headlines designed to get clicks and views, because that's where their revenue comes from. sensationalized news segments and stories to keep people watching through the commercial breaks, because that's where their revenue comes from. outright lies on social media designed to gain followers and subscribers and views, because that's where their revenue comes from.

capital is prioritized over quality of information, and all of these news outlets and social media personalities are incentivized to cultivate the same trusting relationships we'd seek out in the people we get out information from, because that's how they keep us there, because that's where their revenue comes from.

and, on the worse end: radicalization efforts focus on building trusting relationships to then teach people flawed and harmful information, once again taking advantage of the ways we as humans rely on community to learn. oftentimes these radicalizing figures are themselves seeking revenue moreso than their own ideological goals; plenty of right-wing figures plainly do not believe the shit they spout, but they make bank on protein powder sales, so they do it anyway.

the point I'm making is that this stuff may not be entirely new- bad actors, at least, have always been around in one way or another- but the root of the problem is not that people are "stupid", or that our critical thinking skills have been eroded. the problem is that we rely on community to learn, and that's being exploited.

and the solution is not going to be a pivot to highly individualistic ways of thinking, living, and learning. it's not going to be the expectation that every single individual person fact-checks every single thing they hear or learn, for themselves, without ever allowing themselves to trust anything or anyone else- and if they fail to do so, well, that's on them for being gullible, uneducated, and/or just a shitty person. neoliberalism is what got us into this mess, and it isn't going to get us out.

we need to build community-focused education practices, and community-oriented fact-checking and critical thinking efforts. education that is not profit-motivated, spaces where we strive to teach each other and learn together, and critical literacy that builds on and strengthens our connections, rather than ridiculing each other for failing to do as individuals what we are only capable of as communities.

Avatar
Avatar
excalibelle

me watching monsters inc as a kid: how did it take so long for anyone to figure out that human child laughter not only produced energy like screams, but was more effective, and that children aren’t actually dangerous at all?

me watching monsters inc now: monsters incorporated, a multi-billion dollar corporate giant, stood to make extra profits off a scream shortage because low supply with high demand makes it possible to charge a fortune for a necessary commodity and everyone has no choice but to pay the high prices because they can’t go without electricity. Therefore Monsters Inc, as well as any other major powers that may have existed at the start of the era of using scream energy, fabricated the idea that only screams could generate sustainable energy sources in order to create artificial scarcity, because laugh energy was far easier to obtain and far more efficient, and therefore stood to lower the value of energy due to surplus. They also fabricated the idea that human children were toxic, in order to a) make other monsters too afraid to go near them to do research and possibly discover the secret of laugh energy, and b) to make monsters so afraid of going near them that there is a shortage of scarers, making it harder for rival companies to rise up and create competition. Even in the monster world, capitalism is based on lies, greed and cruelty, and even monster companies have no qualms about using and abusing children to maximize profits.

yeah okay ill reblog that

This is related to why climate change action is so hard to motivate. All of the outcomes of climate change are opportunities for profit and therefore climate disasters are features not bugs. The longer they can sow doubt and discord the longer they can rake in the $$$.

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.
mouthporn.net