• MellowYellow13@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    The best way to fight the system is to be jobless. Imagine if no one had a job? Bye bye capitalism. The end. Thanks for coming to my Ted Talk.

    • KingPorkChop@lemmy.ca
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      4 hours ago

      “I don’t want to work. I want to live in the woods and grow my own food and get back to nature.” - City Hippie

  • jsomae@lemmy.ml
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    5 hours ago

    i lost my job earlier this year, so i’m just vibin’. Not exactly ideal but I have some buffer time saved up.

  • frida@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    im so happy that i was blessed with parents who never struggled with money. nothing wrong with that. and yea, im hella vibing in life jobless <3

    • nofate@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      For sure, and props to you for being open about that—something this post is arguing for IRL (trustafarians tend to conceal their privilege)

    • x0x7@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Don’t you know you need self value from being a slave. Chase fake paper money like a good gerbil. Our slave morality tells us you are not a good person like us unless you do what we do.

  • vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    As someone who effectively lives in his grandmother’s attic and “vibes” I am insulted by the vague comparison. I have to budget with my job damnit, I work as a courier one day a week.

    The rest of the week is me doing autism and childhood PTSD things, so jacking off and playing Fallout NV. Also getting new scars via cats.

    I also have a far better sense of fashion, THE 1940 SWEDISH TANKER GREAT COAT STAYS ON DURING SEX!

  • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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    2 days ago

    It’s so weird seeing people making poor interpretations of another ethnicity’s culture their entire identity. I wonder if there are weirdos in India rocking lederhosen or milkmaid outfits at random music festivals and ranting to strangers about Calvinism?

    • bstix@feddit.dk
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      11 hours ago

      The Japanese Elvis culture springs to mind.

      Also, there are “cowboys” everywhere in the world.

      You mentioned lederhosen and of course those types exist outside of Germany too.

    • OneWomanCreamTeam@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      You should see some of the “American food” they sell in some parts of Europe and Asia. I feel like it’s pretty typical everywhere to misunderstand and exoticize other cultures.

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        America and Japan have this as a special cultural relationship. Are the yankii cringe, obviously, but my little yank heart is warmed by seeing people look at aspects of American culture and asking someone to hold their vending machine Asahi. I hope they feel the same about weebs. The thing is we all just see each other as kinda cool and exotic and so we riff on each other’s shit.

      • Wolf314159@startrek.website
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        1 day ago

        Not just typical. It should be celebrated. I for one throughly enjoy seeing cross cultural exchanges of any creative type. Exotic doesn’t need to be derogatory or dehumanizing. (it’s really unfortunate that it most often is.) Everybody is exotic somewhere.

      • yermaw@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        I want to visit America one time just for the food. I keep hearing from American TV about twinkies and red vines and all kinds of stuff, then I try them whenever I get a chance here in the UK and theyre so bad. I need to know for sure whether we’re getting a version that conforms to our food laws and they lose a lot in the process or if theyre really that terrible.

        • GhostedIC@sh.itjust.works
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          13 hours ago

          Everybody in America seems to remember liking Twinkies as a kid but they’re nasty now. Debate continues over whether the twinkies changed, or we did.

        • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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          13 hours ago

          They’re shitty junk food with nostalgia. As other’s have said, try our Chinese food. And our Mexican food. Also hit up an American restaurant here, especially a diner. Oh and wherever you go ask the locals about their local food and try it, (it’s not weird, we do it when we travel domestically) you’ve probably heard of stuff like Chicago deep dish and Philly cheeses teams, bur basically every city has something they cook good or unique and are super proud of, like Cincinnati has a style of chili they put on spaghetti.

          America’s best cuisine isn’t our mass produced mass market foods, its the stuff immigrants came up with to square their cuisine with the available foods and local tastes.

          • countrypunk@slrpnk.net
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            9 hours ago

            Southern food has entered the chat.

            In all seriousness, southern food is some of the best food the US has to offer IMO. There’s a shitton of diversity within the category and it has a lot of flavor and spice.

        • Wolf@lemmy.today
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          18 hours ago

          If you want good American food, when you get here go to a Chinese restaurant.

        • blarghly@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          I really doubt you’ll be impressed. Those foods are made for children, who have bland pallettes and like sugar. And adults who never advanced past this stage.

          You can get good food in America. But it won’t be a twinkie.

        • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          The store-bought junk food is pretty bad in America, to be fair. But foreigners also tend to overestimate their popularity, because American media is largely funded by product placement; The average American probably hasn’t eaten a Twinkie in months or even years.

          Restaurants are where you’ll truly experience American food. You’ll be amazed at how much flavor is packed into each dish, and at how large the portions are. But the latter is largely a cultural thing; Americans typically have leftovers that they take home. Europeans will see the feast-sized portions on the table and immediately go “no wonder Americans are so fat…” In reality, Americans would expect to take half of it home.

          • blarghly@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            You are extrapolating a lot from your own experience. I can confirm from my own upbringing that my family always had junk food or soda in the house - eating it was a daily occurance, and it was re-added to the grocery list each time we ran out with little thought given to the potential health impacts. And we only took home leftovers if it was, like, a really big meal.

            Sure, not all Americans are like this. I’m not like this, and none of my friends are. But I am aware that I very much live in a bubble.

          • HoopyFrood@lemmy.zip
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            1 day ago

            Americans typically have leftovers that they take home

            Are you just not aware of how overweight Americans are on average? As i understand it we have been conditioned to believe these insane portions are “a meal”. I was simply unable to start losing weight until i traveled to Mexico to discover and internalize what a normal meal portion is. If you go to a restaurant in the US, you should expect to see most of the people around you finishing their plates

            • countrypunk@slrpnk.net
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              9 hours ago

              As someone from one of the most obese states in the union, the core of the issue is most definitely not portion sizes. Food quality is shit and most people will eat ultraprocessed foods on the daily because money is tight for most people and fresh/healthy food is hella expensive assuming there’s even access to it. If you have the same amount of calories in ultrprocessed food vs real food, your body will still gain more weight from the ultra processed one because it is less satiating because your body burns through it much faster.

              Small scale organic farming used to be the norm in my grandma’s time, but nowadays younger people don’t know what an okra plant looks like or cracked open a pecan. Additionally if you’re even able to access and afford fresh produce it’s mainly water and is not nutritionally dense. This is an issue with the entire food system that’s been built on shipping stuff from far away and profit incentives. Not to mention the targeted advertising of ultra processed foods to kids…

              Also, there’s virtually no public transit and the small amount of pedestrian and bike infrastructure is laughable and outright dangerous. You have to have a car to get to most places and most places require a lot of driving to get to depending. That means sitting down for most of the day. It’s hard for most people to get exercise in daily life without being super intentional about it, and a lot of people are overworked and underpaid on top of that, so they understandably just wanna relax. As with most things in life, the answer is always complicated.

            • OneWomanCreamTeam@sh.itjust.works
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              1 day ago

              The US’s obesity problem is more complicated than that. It’s not just that our portions are big. Americans have to work pretty long hours too. That means much of our lives we probably aren’t getting much exercise, and when we get home a lot of us don’t have a lot of energy to cook so we probably eat a lot more pre-packaged food. Stress also contributes a lot to weight gain.

              And once you have gained a lot of weight, all of those problems, plus the fact that healthcare is so expensive, make it even more difficult to lose.

        • Hackworth@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          The UK food laws may be partially to blame. But American junk food has also degraded over the decades. A twinkie from the 30’s-70’s didn’t taste the same as a modern twinkie, with some unknown portion of its sugar replaced by HFCS. But at least sugar is still the first ingredient in a twinkie. Plenty of other iconic junk food has been engineered into nonsense and just rides on the fumes of its former glory.

        • Übercomplicated@lemmy.ml
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          1 day ago

          I’ve traveled a lot for food, and, despite not living and never having lived in America, the US has the best “foreign” food I’ve ever had. The best Chinese food I ever had was in the US, for example. In fact, I think high (and high-ish) cuisine in the US is generally quite good (despite crazily sized portions WTF).

          I’ve had incredible Korean food in random towns (~20,000 pop.), incredible Indien in another (<50,000), etc.; I think the US is kinda special when it comes to foreign food like that.

          And, of course, there is some American-American food that is amazing. The greatest filet mignon I ever had was also in the US (and again, random small towns, not metropolitan cities). Also: donuts (not from chains) can be craaaaaazy good. Also cheesecake, though I actually prefer the German version of New York cheesecake (cheese cake is originally German, New York improved it, then Germany improved that).

          The problem is grocery store food. It all has 3x sugar and chemicals compared Europe. Literally everything, sometimes even organic stuff, tastes fake and disgustingly sweet. It drives me crazy, and is one of the top reasons I would never live in the US. I also dislike the espresso there: nearly all specialty coffee I’ve had in the US has either been extracted by untrained barista or has been a bad copy of faux-skandinavian roasts. I think that situation is better in larger cities though, which I’ve spent less time in.

          Ok, sorry for this very, very long ramble. Just some thoughts on American food from someone who didn’t grow up there but has tried a lot of it.

          • Badabinski@kbin.earth
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            1 day ago

            God fuck our coffee. I finally got an espresso machine somewhat recently just so I could have lattes like the ones I had in Europe. A good latte should not need sugar! Espresso should be yummy!

        • Almacca@aussie.zone
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          1 day ago

          A lot of the stuff in those foods are banned outside of America, and for good reason. You’re getting the better version, such as it is.

    • blarghly@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Iirc, there is a vibe in India that Hitler was a great leader who should be emulated. Kind of like how someone might look to Alexander the Great for leadership tips or something.

    • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 day ago

      You really shouldn’t. But if you do, you should consider doing something that would make your death meaningful.

      Not going to say anything further.

    • Asswardbackaddict@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I survived death. 85-95% chance of dying - nobody’s fault but my own. Let me tell ya: when I go down (probably being dragged to a concentration camp, since I am now an illegal person), it won’t be quiet and bureaucratic.

        • HoopyFrood@lemmy.zip
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          1 day ago

          World has always been fucked (see Billy Joel’s “we didn’t start the fire” for simple reference). Life is what you make of it

          • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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            19 hours ago

            I’m still waiting for somebody to make a mashup of Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” and The Prodigy’s “Firestarter”.

          • salacious_coaster@infosec.pub
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            1 day ago

            We’ve had a habitable wilderness for all of human existence until now. Dystopian society is now The only option for living in most of the planet. World has not always been this fucked.

            Edit: if you’re not convinced, actuaries are predicting 2 billion climate deaths at +2C warming (we’re at 1.7C now) and 4 billion deaths at 3C, which is the absolute minimum we’re in for assuming we stopped all emissions tomorrow. Obviously that’s not happening, so it’s going to be way worse than that. Our existing billions of people also depend on a complex web of logistics systems which are currently falling apart or being dismantled. Google “complexity collapse.”

            One of you can have my ration. I’m not gonna fight you for it.

            • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              The Antarctic used to have a giant ozone hole. In the late 1960’s, Lake Erie was dead from pollution. The Cuyahoga River in Ohio was so polluted it caught fire. Rain was so acidic that statues in cities were dissolving.

              Read history instead of following social media hype. Despite Trump turning back the clock a few years, the environment has improved dramatically over the past 50 years.

              • breecher@sh.itjust.works
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                18 hours ago

                Those examples you mention are pretty insignificant compared to the global warming crisis we are experiencing now. Reading history won’t really help, because we have never faced what we have faced now in human history: manmade global warming in an industrialised, highly specialised society.

                • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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                  16 hours ago

                  50 years ago most waterways in the US were so polluted as to be dead to wildlife. Cities buildings were black with pollution.

                  Global warming is actually minor compared to the immediate death people were facing decades ago. For example unchecked ozone depletion could have resulted in the destruction of all rice crops on Earth. An analogy that comes to mind is the Black Plague vs Covid. It’s not that Covid wasn’t (isn’t) a problem. And like Covid we are deploying modern technology to fix the problems. Solar is being installed everywhere. The US is going backwards temporarily. But the US isn’t the world. Europe and China are getting things done.

                  People who see the problems are the absolutely not the ones who should be killing themselves. They’re the only ones that can contribute to the future.

              • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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                19 hours ago

                I grew up next to the Cuyahoga in the '70s and I don’t think people today could even begin to understand how nasty it really was. Old tires everywhere, rusting steel barrels full of god knows what, and a thick oily scum over any part of it that wasn’t moving. Factories along the edge had big drainage pipes that just emptied directly into the river (one of these factories made Oasis foam, that green shit florists stick flowers into). The real shocker was not that the river caught fire from time to time, but that it wasn’t on fire all the time.

                • supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz
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                  16 hours ago

                  This is a local observance and an expression of your privilege. That trashed environment didn’t disappear or get rectified, the pollution and heavily polluting industries necessary to support our lifestyles were offshored and exported to poor countries.

                  What makes now a million times worse than the 70s is the immense global destruction of habitat that had only started gaining serious momentum in the 70s.

                • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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                  1 day ago

                  Your premise is that it’s going to get a lot worse. But the past 50 years has been improving. It’s therefore reasonable to believe we will keep improving.

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    There are people vibing on fiends couches going from person to person. They they don’t look like that.

  • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    Tbh, that’s not true. If your standards are low enough, you can get by with very little money.

    When I was at university (10 years ago) I could get by with 5-10h of work per week. I had a single-room flat and no car, a 10yo laptop, a cheapo second-hand phone and ate cheap food. The total amount of assistance that I received from my parents were birthday and christmas presents with a total worth of €700 over 5 years.

    Now I have a larger flat, a wife, two kids and a car. Now I need much more money.

    Of course, neither the cost nor the lifestyle are comparable.

    • burgerpocalyse@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      i sincerely doubt you could afford to live on barely part time work 10 years ago, which would be 2015, unless you were massively subsidized by unemployment, an angel investor, or you were a squatter

      • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        Neither nor.

        I paid €350 for my flat and made €25/h doing maths tutoring. I had a monthly budget of €800 in 2015 and that was enough.

        I never received unemployment benefits and why on earth would someone invest in a random student?

        • pseudo@jlai.lu
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          15 hours ago

          When I compare to my own experience ajusted to inflation, that seems alright. Totally doable.

          • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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            16 hours ago

            I don’t think that surviving on €800/month is extremely lucky. I know quite a few other people who also did that. I also know quite a few other people who just stayed with their parents during university so they didn’t have to work at all.

  • VegasVator@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    That chick is annoying. I think I’ve blocked five or six video different clone accounts to stop getting her videos on the reels feed.

    • Wolf@lemmy.today
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      18 hours ago

      As cringe as this gal is (I don’t watch her videos either) I can stomach her easier than the 77 Million people who voted for Trump. I’d much rather focus on fixing whatever is wrong with them over this neo-hippie.

      • VegasVator@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Shanin Blake. She has crappy rap about shrooms and acid. She gets worse and worse as time goes by. She will have blasted face tats and be washed up in no time.

      • VitoRobles@lemmy.today
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        1 day ago

        I’m curious too!

        Literally thought this was a meme about the travel influencers and those people who attend every concert without ever holding down a job.