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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • You only get called a wumao if you parrot the official CCP line

    Anything that isn’t reactionary propaganda against China is “the official CCP line”. You can say the most inane shit about their high speed rail network or post pretty pictures from the fucking Panda Sanctuary and it’s CCP propaganda.

    Also trying to paint China and it’s government as flawless or deflecting any criticism

    You’re just proving my point. How can you engage in any kind of serious discussion when the rebuttal is “You think China is perfect!” and “Stop talking about non-China countries for comparison!”

    How do you have a serious discussion when even the most minor concession is met by “So you admit China Bad! I win!” Nevermind when there’s actual criticism rather than paranoid bullshit, and its just ignored because it doesn’t sound critical enough.





  • No. He died because he got shot in the neck with a bullet at a Utah far-right pep rally.

    His friend Candice Owens has been pumping out a bunch of conspiracy theories that Kirk was secretly anti-Semitic. His other friend Ben Shapiro keeps insisting Kirk was always an AIPAC loyalist. And that’s created a ton of friction at the latest CPAC convention.

    But there’s no reason to believe Kirk had a dog in the fight one way or another. Charlie’s primary goal was raising money for Republican candidates and organizing college Republicans to do free labor in exchange for invitations to the various keggers and orgies TPUSA became known for. He wasn’t outspoken on Israel either way before his death. That made him a great blank slate for the various sycophants in his orbit to project their own reactionary ideology onto.



  • This is what most of China’s rapid construction projects end up being.

    Well, I think I found the logic behind the boot. Wildly different to say construction standards are a problem than to conclude the majority of buildings are defective and dangerously prone to collapse.

    Might also be noted that this isn’t something that’s gone unaddressed. Police in China arrest 9 people linked to Changsha building collapse that left dozens missing

    At the same time, you’ll have western media insisting the draconian Chinese police state is cruelly persecuting businessmen in the country.

    Guo Wengui is a great example - a man who turned “Exiled Persecuted Chinese Businessman” into a cottage industry, bouncing from cable news show to right-wing radio program to complain about the villainous evil far-left authoritarian communist police state that was harassing him illegally for fake crimes he’s falsely accused of. And then he gets caught running scams in the US using the same modus operandi Chinese prosecutors sought him out over.

    Worker and civilian safety is not a priority in China

    This is flatly untrue, particularly since the Xi administration began cracking down on corruption at the municipal level nationwide. But it is routinely asserted that instances where corruption and malfeasance occur are “normal”. Meanwhile, instances where the police investigate and arrest corrupt and incompetent administrators are “persecution”.

    It’s “heads-China-bad” / “tails-China-bad”.

    What we are dealing with is a nonfalsifiable orthodoxy, so assiduously marketed by the ruling interests that it affected people across the entire political spectrum.”

    -Michael Parenti, Blackshirts and the Reds




  • Bezos isn’t a bootlicker. WaPo is a commodity and he’s more than happy to shove it into the woodchipper if the pellets that come out are worth more than what he put in. He’s been profitably trading on his WaPo investment in exactly this way since he bought it.

    Bezos has outsourced the bootlicking to a third party. If WaPo exists to do anything, its to lick his boots while others watch. And, occasionally, he farms them out for a handsome ROI to lick the boots of others desperate for the attention.

    Flinging an investigative journalist under the bus is just one more way to trade on WaPo’s credibility for his personal gain.




  • Gmail has started injecting a fat “Suggestions for responding to emails” feature into my composition space. Really fucking annoying when you’re trying to type something out on a phone. No idea how to begin disabling it, I couldn’t find configurations anywhere in the settings.

    I’ve had this email address for over 20 years. Not looking forward to changing it. But enshitification won’t stop.




  • Government policy is married to outdated expectations of how we live

    Government policy? You sure its not another thing?

    Here’s what happens when private equity buys homes in your neighborhood

    So Erb and his cousin raised money from investors, bought homes in places like the Chatham-Arch neighborhood in Indianapolis (which was affordable, had a growing population and was benefiting from redevelopment), and rented them out — presumably to people who wanted a house with a yard but couldn’t afford to buy one. Erb says it was a profitable business.

    He was not the first New York finance person to profit from single-family rentals across the United States. The private equity firm Blackstone (commonly confused with BlackRock) more or less invented this buy-to-rent strategy in 2012, under the moniker Invitation Homes. It’s now a public company valued at more than $18 billion.

    The response to this development — of Wall Street buying Main Street, or at least some of its cul-de-sacs — has been bipartisan, populist and patriotic condemnation. Both JD Vance and Kamala Harris called for bans on these corporate landlords. Since houses tend to rise in value over time, homeownership has been a primary way that middle-class families build wealth. But now private equity was outbidding aspiring homeowners, making it more expensive to buy a home and pocketing the appreciation in home values.

    Even some of Erb’s friends told him they thought he was making homes unaffordable. “Nothing that has stuck with me or made me second-guess what I’m doing,” he says. He wasn’t responsible for the decade of underinvestment; he felt they were giving young couples the option to live in a house without breaking their bank account. “But, yeah, very emotional conversations.”

    Now that these institutional investors have been buying and renting out houses for more than a decade, researchers have had time to study their impact.

    These investors can and do make homeownership harder to attain, just as their critics claim.