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♥ hi, we're the agaric system ♥
♣ they/them because we're plural ♣
♦ if a post we make is unlabeled, it's probably from joan ♦
♠ our body is 16 years old, and our headmates are all too; read: we are minors ♠

pluralkit: https://pk.mt/s/qhehl

~fedizen since 2022-10-22~
follows are subjected to a (light) vibe check and we'll probably DM you if we haven't interacted before

♥ mwah ♥
partners with idk anymore
♥ mwah ♥
re: Uspol
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@Cat @thegibson @0x4d6165 “hitler should not have needed to be shot because hitler should not have used violence” like. okay yeah but hitler did use violence, it was a core part of his ideology. if someone were to go to baby hitler and exorcise the evil out of him or some shit that would have been better than shooting him, but that never happened, and allows a context where a violent act is nuanced and potentially justifiable.

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re: Uspol
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@Cat @0x4d6165 @thegibson if someone shot hitler just before he started killing people, is that a un-nuanced bad thing? is there no nuance at all to that action? would the people of the future look back at this person and go “they shouldn’t’ve done that?”

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@detondev @lichwitch oh god there’s members everywhere! i’m surrounded by members!!!

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@detondev @lichwitch oh god there’s members everywhere! i’m surrounded by members!!!

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@detondev @lichwitch oh god there’s members everywhere! i’m surrounded by members!!!

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relationships
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I wish there was a way to like, beam how someone makes you feel into their head. Saying "I love you and you make me happy" isn't enough, I need them to viscerally know how much they mean to me.
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@detondev his hatred brews the tea hotter

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re: youtube
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@aqua is youtube messing around with shit again

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Happy Petrov Day to those who celebrate. On September 26, 1983, Stanislav Petrov made the correct decision to not trust a computer.

The early warning system at command center Serpukhov-15, loudly alerting of a nuclear attack from the United States, was of course modern and up-to-date. Stanislav Petrov was in charge, working his second shift in place of a colleague who was ill.

Many officers facing the same situation would have called their superiors to alert them of the need for a counter-attack. Especially as fellow officers were shouting at him to retaliate quickly before it was too late. Petrov did not succumb.

I've attached a short clip from a reenactment of the situation in the documentary The Man Who Saved the World.

The computer was indeed wrong about the imminent attack and Petrov likely saved the world from nuclear disaster in those impossibly stressful minutes, by daring to wait for ground confirmation. For context one must also be aware that this was at a time when US-Soviet relations were extremely tense.

I've previously written about three lessons to take away from Petrov's actions:

1. Embrace multiple perspectives

The fact that it was not Stanislov Petrov's own choice to pursue an army career speaks to me of how important it is to welcome a broad range of experiences and perspectives. Petrov received an education as an engineer rather than a military man. He knew the unpredictability of machine behavior.

2. Look for multiple confirmation points

Stanislav Petrov understood what he was looking for. While he has admitted he could not be 100% sure the attack wasn't real, there were several factors he has mentioned that played into his decision:

- He had been told a US attack would be all-out. An attack with only 5 missiles did not make sense to him.
- Ground radar failed to pick up supporting evidence of an attack, even after minutes of waiting.
- The message passed too quickly through the 30 layers of verification he himself had devised.

On top of this: The launch detection system was new (and hence he did not fully trust it).

3. Reward exposure of faulty systems

If we keep praising our tools for their excellence and efficiency it's hard to later accept their defects. When shortcomings are found, this needs to be communicated just as clearly and widely as successes. Maintaining an illusion of perfect, neutral and flawless systems will keep people from questioning the systems when the systems need to be questioned.

We need to stop punishing when failure helps us understand something that can be improved.
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launching an ICBM at every sports betting company

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@anemone it’s not but like it’s the best that an anti-violence(generally) neet teenager who doesn’t go outside can hope for. like wouldn’t it have been nice if hitler just changed his mind and paid as many reparations as he could and put himself in prison? that would’ve been nice

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@anemone i think death is a bit much but total political and social reform is probably just right

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Seeing that some villains are trying to take the T out of LGBT so trans people get erased and ignored. You know that the word "queer" is right there and it includes all of us perverts and freaks, right? We tried hard to get queer to happen, but the straight folk didn't like it so they call us LGBT, like we're simply a list of approved aberrations. And a lot of us queer folk have submitted to this linguistic oppression. I am sad every time I hear a queer person say "LGBT" or "LGBTQIA+" or whatever, because that's accepting the oppressor's language for us. Queer is a good word because it includes everyone who isn't part of the sexual majority. It is inclusive by default and by definition.

For anyone who thinks "queer" is a slur so they prefer "gay" because it's not a slur, I'll point out that only a couple decades ago "gay" was a slur and we said "homosexual" to be polite. Language evolves. Embrace "queer" and avoid having to figure out what groups deserve to be part of an abbreviation.

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@kingdomcome @albinanigans what do these acronyms mean?

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