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Satanic Capitalist

@sataniccapitalist / sataniccapitalist.tumblr.com

“So many evils by Satan's prince will be committed that almost the entire world will find itself undone and desolated. Before these events, many rare birds will cry in the air, 'Now! Now!" and sometime later will vanish” -Nostradamus
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Everything about this world is messed up, but we are used to this kind of messed up, ain't we?

Blinded by Familiarity: How We've Normalized a Broken World

We live in a world plagued by inequality, injustice, and suffering. Yet, we've grown accustomed to the chaos, accepting it as the norm. Our desensitization has become a coping mechanism, masking the flaws.

Explore with me:

- The dangers of familiarity and normalization

- How our lack of perspective distorts reality

- The consequences of settling for a flawed status quo

- The importance of critical thinking and self-reflection

- The potential for transformative change through awareness

Consider:

- We've never known a world without war, poverty, or oppression

- We've grown up with social media manipulating our perceptions

- We've learned to tolerate corruption and systemic injustices

- We've become complacent, trading freedom for convenience

Join me as we challenge our assumptions and confront the uncomfortable truth: our world is messed up, but we've become too comfortable to notice.

#NormalizingDysfunction #BlindedByFamiliarity #CriticalThinking #TransformativeChange #Awakening #SocialCommentary"

This description encourages viewers to question their assumptions and spark meaningful conversations.

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it’s horrific and i fear to see how this will impact russian people (or, let’s be more real, slavic people in general), but it’s also patheticomic how orgs are desperate to have a stance on the conflict so they’ll do dumb shit like remove/change even tangentially russian things

“Just Dance Has Removed Ra Ra Rasputin From Their Roster”

Like, this is so…

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cowboy-queer

And it’s such a good point to include all Slavic people in this. I honestly believe that most Americans, if presented parts of Ukrainian culture and art, would not be able to distinguish it from Russian without being told.

My point isn’t “all Slavic cultures are the same,” but rather, “if you discriminate against one Slavic culture, how do you think ignorant people are going to separate them?” If you’re trying to monger anti-Russian sentiments by banning/disavowing Russian culture, what do you think someone’s reaction to seeing something in Ukrainian writing (which shares a script with Russian) will be out of context? Do you think people so intent to hate Russia will take the time to learn the difference between Russian and Bulgarian names, or will they reject consuming any art by someone with a surname like Petrova or Velichkov because it “sounds Russian”?

But even putting other cultures aside, banning pieces of Russian culture that have no ties to the current political situation is just a clear sign of prejudice. It isn’t pro Ukraine, it’s just anti Russia, and it’s basically saying that the Russian people deserve to suffer even more because of the actions of their government, which are out of their control.

And the reply? It is so ignorant to believe that Tchaikovsky of all things is really the focal point of this argument. As great as Tchaikovsky is, I’m going to say that a decrease in Russian classical music isn’t going to be noticed, and it’s not going to change the way people think about Russia. But modern Russian novels? Movies made by Russians about Russian? Especially ones exposing hardships of Russian citizens? Banning things like that lets Americans be even more willfully ignorant about foreign affairs.

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laliberty
In April 1990, a guidance counselor at a Searsport, Maine, elementary school summoned a fifth-grader to her office. The counselor asked the 11-year-old, Crystal Grendell, whether her parents used drugs. After the counselor reassured her that “nothing would happen,” Crystal eventually admitted that her parents occasionally smoked pot. At school a few days later, Crystal was greeted by three D.A.R.E. police officers, who interrogated her about her parents’ drug use. The officers threatened Crystal, saying her parents would be arrested if she didn’t tell them everything she knew about her mother and father’s recreational drug habits. The officers then warned her against telling her parents about their encounter, claiming that “often parents beat their children after the children talk to police.”
Scared, the girl agreed to carry out a spy mission on her family. The D.A.R.E. officers instructed Crystal to count her parents’ marijuana plants and to provide details about their schedules and the layout of their home. When Crystal reported back to the cops, they informed her that her house would be raided and that she would not be able to stay there that night.
After the police raided the house and found several marijuana plants, Crystal’s parents were arrested and her mother was fired from her jobs as a teacher’s assistant and a bus driver. The D.A.R.E. officers had failed to make arrangements for where Crystal and her younger sister would stay while their parents were in police custody, and when the police couldn’t find any nearby family members, they had to take the girls to the house of a distant relative.
Feeling that the police and school officials had manipulated her, Crystal—who was once outgoing and gregarious—became socially withdrawn and suffered from psychological distress. Reflecting on how the incident had turned her life upside down, Crystal later told The Wall Street Journal: “I would never tell again.…Never. Never.” When a federal judge awarded Crystal a civil judgment against the D.A.R.E. officers, he issued a strong condemnation of how they had turned the fifth-grader into an informant against her own family: “This type of coercive extraction of indicting information from an 11-year-old girl about her parents is reprehensible behavior unworthy of constitutional protection.”
This reprehensible behavior, unfortunately, is all too characteristic of a program that has long been criticized for using children to gather information about their families and communities. The only unique thing about this story is that the D.A.R.E. officers coerced the girl in an especially callous way. Most D.A.R.E. programs involve coloring books and special certificates, not threats.
But whether they use coercion or persuasion, D.A.R.E. and similar programs have much to teach us about American snitch culture. By conditioning children and teens to scrutinize and regulate their parents’ and peers’ conduct, these programs encourage kids to act like cops. And that makes them part of a long tradition. …
While some students might see a friendly D.A.R.E. officer at their schools, many urban kids… grow up watching cops bully, harass, and even assault their friends. When youth/police programs attempt to finesse a competing structure of loyalty among these children, their efforts often fall on deaf ears. D.A.R.E. programs will continue to convince some students to snitch on their peers, friends, and families, but the police will never be able to couple their monopoly on socially legitimized violence with a monopoly on youth culture.
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Myths of Neoliberalism

Published on 16 Sep 2015

In this talk at Imperial College London, Economics Professor Robin Hahnel explains the origins of the financial crisis of 2007, and exposes the popular myths behind the free-market and laissez-faire capitalism. The talk is based on a new version of his book: The ABCs of Political Economy - a modern approach A lively introduction to modern political economy, providing the essential tools needed to understand economic issues today. This revised and expanded edition covers the origins of the financial crisis, the ensuing recession, and why governments have failed to improve matters for the majority of their citizens. "Lucidly written, comprehensive in coverage" - Noam Chomsky Order online from Pluto Press: http://www.plutobooks.com/display.asp... This event was hosted by Participatory Economics UK: http://www.participatoryeconomics.org.uk Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Parecon For an alternative economic system, find out more: http://www.participatoryeconomics.info

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