in4aPenny
@in4aPenny@lemmy.world
- Comment on May 13, 1985 1 week ago:
How do you police the police?
- Comment on Is Boeing in big trouble? World's largest aerospace firm faces 10 more whistleblowers after sudden death of two 1 week ago:
Hot Fuzz
- Comment on youth risky 2 weeks ago:
wubby7
- Comment on chemistussy 3 weeks ago:
That’s some fine dihydrogen monoxussy
- Comment on How to open a textbook 5 weeks ago:
Yeah he played his most popular hit “Move” and people went nuts as usual.
- Comment on How does employing a rapist not constitute an unsafe work environment for female employees? 2 months ago:
You could win this argument if only you could link a reference to your sources. It’s not up to us to look up evidence for your claims, it’s up to you to provide evidence for your argument.
- Comment on It was in self-defence 🙃 3 months ago:
Doesn’t have to be the whole planet, just the top 400 richest people would do wonders though. Most of us are just trying to get by, put the blame on the one misusing “human resources”.
- Comment on Poignant post on the state of things 3 months ago:
Not just their land, but their ideas of “freedom”, “equality”, and “democracy”. Europeans didn’t even know those words until the French Missionaries in the late 1600’s were met with the Indigenous Critique, and how Indigenous Americans had equal rights for men and women, were free to disobey arbitrary authority, had a conglomerate of states that conveined in a “federal” central committee, and could impeach their rulers. Of course, so-called “Enlightenment” philosophers who were just rich trust-fund babies stole that idea to create America and call themselves “Enlightened Thinkers” as if they came up with it themselves, while simultaneously degrading the Indigenous Critique by calling them “savages” who were “less advanced” than Europeans based on evidence they dreamed up while staring at a fireplace, stealing Indigenous politics as their own, and thanking them with ethnic cleansing.
Fuck Europeans.
- Comment on Poignant post on the state of things 3 months ago:
European nobility predates writing?
Also if you were actually aware of human history before writing, you’d know we had classless urban environments inhabiting hundreds of thousands without any evidence of hierarchy or top -down management, through systems of credit in the absence of money. You’d be more accurate to say that, since before the invention of writing (whatever that means), we were able to construct societies without a ruling class. Question is, what happened? How did we lose touch with that? How did the abstract concept of ‘wealth’ be able to be converted into power over people? My own opinion is it started around 600BCE when coin was used to pay armies for violent conquests, making money synonymous with violence and dominion.
It’s hard being married to an archaeologist that’s confronted with evidence that, for most of human history and societies, there wasn’t a ruling class. Why then do we agree to a rolling class, knowing full well the violence and instability it causes?
- Comment on Poignant post on the state of things 3 months ago:
How do we tax the rich?