No fucking negotiations. Lay criminal charges on the executive suite and let them experience the American judicial system.
No fucking negotiations. Lay criminal charges on the executive suite and let them experience the American judicial system.
But also the ability to turn it off at will. Otherwise life will become incredibly tedious.
100%
“We are already providing all the answers you will ever need.” -religion
Remarkably cogent response
The new Outlook is fucking awful.
How did they fuck up email? Just put them all on the left and let me read and move them in the fewest clicks possible.
Nah, we should be hauling insurance and healthcare executives out into the streets for creating this dystopian situation so they could make their quarterly bonuses for a couple decades.
Does SIG make a Legion version of soup too?
Trebuchet my bloated corpse into Dick Cheney’s living room
This feels like trying to explain forests to someone who only wants to tell me about their favorite tree.
I get how the technology has changed. As an elder millennial, my entire life has been a constant shift of technology. From analog to digital, and back again- from betamax to DVDs, from 8 tracks to tapes to pocket rockers to mini discs to ipods. And including resurgences as people “discovered” the benefits of vinyl.
My point is that this new paradigm has shifted ownership of what we pay for away from consumers, to give gatekeeping power to corporate entities that can shut down, or shut off access, on a whim. And what’s the ROI? Increasing access costs without ownership is just a more expensive lease.
I am simply arguing that physical media puts consumers in a greater position of control over the property they have paid for than streaming. And I am intimating that it’s by design that technology “leaders” have moved away from allowing people to OWN what they buy.
I ain’t the fuckface whisperer.
They may be, but you’re missing the larger perspective by harping about the processor.
When the technology was ubiquitous, it didn’t require specialized equipment ie USB disc drives, because the necessary gear was already built in. Which means more people had access and more sharing was happening.
Of course there’s nothing stopping ME, I already know about CDs. But ask the average teenager where they get their music. Ask them how they would share an album. Do any amount of critical thinking about this, and my original premise holds true. But nah, you’ll probably revert back to internally screaming that some guy on the internet insulted your processor speed, because THAT is the point.
lol, ok. You do realize that if you OWN your media you can just hand over a thumbdrive or send the files directly to a friend? CDs are also cheap to burn. You can build an entire library for the cost of a couple months’ streaming access.
You are parroting marketing and those words are hollow.
Of course, but it’s worth pointing out that PCs phased out the addition of ROM drives, which allowed the layperson to rip their content. Naturally, this allowed Apple and ilk to introduce streaming access, as though it was a fucking boon. No CD/DVD-Rom, no ports, just an enshittified processor, display, and a cloud. Because THAT’S WHAT WE ARE TELLING YOU YOU WANT.
This is why 20 years ago we had CDs and ripped them to hard drives. Streaming is a sham when you pay continually for access.
What about all the white women who voted for Trump? Benefitting from structural racism is a helluva drug
“Our tradition is subjugation!”
Your core argument is essentially just a rationalization of your own behavior.
So my original analysis holds true: a remarkably bad hot take.
lol, your counterpoint is hold to hold up Gandhi as the paragon of “Good?”
People are the aggregate of their choices. Behavior dictates the outward expression of inner motives. Sure, there are vast gulfs of grey within the theoretical discussion of black and white, but ultimately each person’s legacy is simply a accumulation of the paths they have chosen, given the available options. To assume that everyone would make the same choices, when presented with the same opportunities, is simply not congruent to the patterns of human behavior that we see in reality, regardless of era or culture.
That is a remarkably bad hot take
“Starring Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart”