Babs

joined 2 years ago
[–] Babs@hexbear.net 7 points 9 months ago

You can kill a man, but you can't kill an idea slammer

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 14 points 9 months ago

Masking was a lot easier when there was hope that some day we wouldn't have to do it anymore. Now the ask has become "wear a mask in public situations forever" and that's a much harder sell.

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 16 points 9 months ago

We literally had a burning zionist flag representation already just without the star of david.

We had an imaginary flag of an organization that hasn't existed for 80 years.

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 21 points 9 months ago

choosing to reference the crematoria

A burning flag isn't a reference to death camps jfc

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 11 points 9 months ago (1 children)

It should be an ordinary size flag but the flames should be upside down.

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 23 points 9 months ago

Free the Z and burn the flag. Or don't burn the flag, but don't try to give me some substitute ( isntrael , idf-cool ) and say it's just as good.

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 33 points 9 months ago

This is just another made up flag like isntrael .

100% on the not associating cool Hawaiian singer man with genocide though. Props to whoever did that.

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 6 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Another weekend playing Blue Prince.

It's really fun not knowing how deep this game goes. Every time I solve a mystery I end up with two more, and my handwritten journal is turning into some mad scrawling necronomicon shit. I spend time away thinking about these puzzles. I bring my journal to work so I can overanalyze the in-game books I've copied down, illustrations and all. I think some of these puzzles I've created solutions for, might not actually exist.

Game is hard (the fuck you mean I gotta use math?), but also hits that rare itch I've had since beating Outer Wilds, where I figure out a puzzle or two and it ends up completely recontextualizing the game and making me want to go back and look everything over again.

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 3 points 9 months ago (1 children)

That fucking boiler room - lab connection! The hardest part of this game is when you think you figured out a puzzle but just need things to line up just right so you can test your theory.

As for tips, start a physical journal if you haven't yet. Take tons of notes. Draw pictures. Copy whole books if you need to. The lore matters so learn it. Don't be afraid of time limits in reaching the end, just keep making progress and taking good notes to review later.

Magnifying glass is one of the coolest items.

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 9 points 9 months ago (2 children)

Yeah, if someone's pronouns are gated behind a link, it just becomes easier to play the Pronoun Game (avoiding using someone's pronouns at all) than it is to learn how to actually refer to someone respectfully.

I never look at bios and don't think doing so should become a necessary part of having a conversation.

As an extra option in addition to visible pronouns? Hell yeah why not.

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 5 points 9 months ago

This has definitely been my experience yeah.

[–] Babs@hexbear.net 12 points 9 months ago (3 children)

I started playing Blue Prince. It's a puzzle game where you have inherited your uncle's 45-room mansion, but only if you can find the 46th room in it. And every day, the layout changes.

At the start it's kinda like a map building roguelike where you pick which room is behind each door from a few choices, and try to gather resources and explore further, but that's barely scratching the surface.

This puzzle goes so deep. I have a journal full of clues, in-game books that I have copied in hopes that there are more clues, pages with in-depth descriptions of every room, family trees, weird interactions that I haven't fully figured out yet... There's all sorts of lore about this fictional world that I have been writing down just in case. I don't even know how deep this mystery goes, but I hope to be well-armed when I finally do.

It's the first game that's scratched the same itch that Outer Wilds does, where you occasionally discover something that forces you to reevaluate everything you saw before, but it's much harder. Also the in-game notekeeping is incredibly limited so you really need to keep your own journal to play.

 

Are you a leftist who is sick of working long hours just so that your boss can buy a second house?

Do you struggle finding employment because you don't have a degree (classist bullshit), or have a degree in a field you didn't end up liking?

Do you have any personal experience with homelessness, drug addiction, mental illness, or just struggling to fit in with capitalist society? This is like, the one job where that helps a lot.

Do you have an understanding of the structural issues that cause people to become unemployed or homeless (it's capitalism. capitalism is the answer)? Live in a medium-to-large city where social services exist in parallel with the for-profit job market?

Why not try a new career working in Homeless Services?


I've been a shelter worker for most of the last decade, and lemme tell you, it's pretty great. I've done everything from working on-call night shifts, to managing entire shelters hosting 100+ people. I didn't go to school for this, and I had no social work experience prior. I was just some trans girl in her 20s with a little bit of lived experience (living in my car) who answered a craigslist ad, but I stuck with the work cause it's like, hella rewarding and stuff.

Most of the job is just maintaining a safe environment for the guests - cleaning the facility, preparing meals if your shelter does its own food, signing people up for services (showers, laundry, beds, depending on program), with a little bit of case management on the side - and they'll teach you that part. Depending on the shelter, you might be busy buzzing around chatting with people (like 90% just being friendly, not even "work talk"), or you might just be chilling, ready to pop up if anything exciting happens. If you work night shift, you might even get to spend the night on your phone while everyone is asleep (depends heavily on the shelter).

There are some substantial downsides, not gonna sugar coat it.

  • It can be stressful dealing with people going through what is likely the most difficult period of their life. They aren't normally assholes, life is making them that way.

  • Sometimes said stressed-out people will have emotional outbursts, that can be very disruptive and sometimes scary or even dangerous. You learn a lot about deescalating angry people (which is actually a really good skill for a leftist to have, if you do any protesting!).

  • Sometimes people fucking die, and you'll be the first responder. You will get good at using narcan and doing CPR. I have a graveyard in my head and have known so many people who died either in shelter, or on the streets some time after I met them through work. I've had people die while I was trying to save them. Sometimes you do EMT stuff. It does weigh on you a bit.

But the rewards are so much more!

  • When you tell people what you do, they'll think very highly of you. Our stereotypes are sick as hell and people will talk about how caring and wonderful you are. Try it out on dating apps!

  • It's peaceful at work today so I spent all day posting. I expect tomorrow to also be mostly chill, so I will be posting more.

  • I'm in good with a lot of houseless people in my city, and this has been helpful more than once. It's cool having people.

  • Actually doesn't pay too bad. I make about 50k in a large coastal city, enough to pay rent and have a modest living. With my shelter worker bf making around the same, we get by alright in this expensive city.

Any other shelter workers here? Anyone in homeless services in general? What got you into this work?

Also, does anyone have any questions about what the job is like or how to get into it?

 

Not writing a big essay about things means you can't write cringe liberalism.

I just wanted to be late to the party after the CPUSA and PSL statements got posted.

 

So as we all know, it is impossible for man to soar through the heavens as a bird does. Any attempt will lead one to be struck down from the skies for their hubris. It can't be done, Boeing is proof of this. So what if I wanted to do the next best thing?

I've heard the words "Learn to hack, learn to drone" echoed around these parts a few times. I've tried learning programming again and again, but it seems I'm just not that Type of trans woman. Instead I got really into CAD and 3d printing and remote control vehicles, so the "learn to drone" part really appeals to me. Problem is, I don't know where to start. Do I just buy a $300 DJI drone before they get banned? Do I learn how simulators work and practice a bunch first? Do fpv and bigger camera drones share a skillset? How do I not fuck up when I'm living in a big city? If I already have a transmitter, is that a cost I can save or do drones generally come with their own?

I'm also interested in reading about the ways people use drones for revolutionary purposes, for lack of a better term. I know local orgs have a need for good protest footage, but flying a drone downtown is probably super duper illegal and the new Remote ID rules would make me copbait if I were to say, sit in the bed of a leading truck and follow a march from above. Drones are super cool, but less so if a cop just shoots it down with his scifi radio gun and then tracks me down and arrests me.

By the way, has anyone ever built a drone? I already have a 3d printer and a transmitter I use for robot combat. And I'm pretty familiar with drone parts - motors made to spin propellers can also spin blades, and tiny receivers and batteries made for weight-limited flying vehicles are great for weight-limited fighting vehicles. I just don't understand flight controllers or cameras or propellers or how to pick parts or anything. It would also (with dubious legality) avoid the Remote ID issue and my homebrew drones wouldn't be banned for being Chinese spies.

So hey sickos, how do I learn to drone?

 

still posting in dunk tank cause it's reddit-logo but I was really surprised to see this thread get out of zionist control and have people actually talking about israeli war crimes. maybe this refugee camp bombing is a turning point???

 

I most often play Pathfinder, with a mostly-canon Golarion setting. I almost always play a woman - sometimes I make her trans, and sometimes I don't. Her trans status is usually based on the rest of their characteristics, and whether I feel it "makes sense" for my character to realize she's trans.

When I played a brash, independent sorceror, or a young noblewoman with resources and connections and a supportive family, it made sense to make my characters trans because they were in a position to figure that out and had the ability to do something about it. In my current Pathfinder game, my character was raised in a militaristic cult that isn't a good environment for deep introspection, so I made her cis.

When I made my character for Baldur's Gate 3, she was a self-insert alongside my BF's self-insert, so she was transfemme and it was an easy decision. I'll generally prefer to make trans characters, but only if I can make up a good justification to do so.

I recently spoke to a friend who primarily makes cis woman characters as part of the whole "power fantasy" that comes with roleplaying, and her experience was a little different than mine, so I thought I'd ask here. Trans Hexbears, are your RPG characters trans?

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