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@coriander looks a lot like the library of congress’s version but who knows i guess when there were additional pressings loc.gov/resource/gdcmassbookdi

@me no wealthy person enacts change on their own; having money just makes it easier to get other people on their side, but that influence travels both ways

re: idea for a pokémon challenge run 

@aescling @alyssa fucking your meowscarada is a grind?

re: idea for a pokémon challenge run 

@aescling @alyssa kimty i saw you posting every day about touching grass

re: idea for a pokémon challenge run 

@aescling @alyssa i play pokémon as an RPG not an esport

re: idea for a pokémon challenge run 

@alyssa @aescling no i just like dunsparce

re: idea for a pokémon challenge run 

@alyssa @aescling yeah i think “here is a somewhat limited selection of available pokémon and you have to make them work together” is interesting, but would PREFER a system that occasionally gave you “whoops, the only pokémon from dark cave you can use is the 1% encounter rate dunsparce”

re: idea for a pokémon challenge run 

@aescling why does anyone do any challenge run

idea for a pokémon challenge run 

for each route, order the pokémon available to catch in that route by pokédex number. let the number of pokémon in the route be m. let n be {your trainer ID} mod m. you can only catch the {n+1}th pokémon species available in the route

@packetcat you can learn a fair bit of linguistics just from wikipedia, legitimately

philosophy is a lot harder; i don't trust the internet for that

my general philosophy of language 

my general philosophy of language 

@packetcat gendered nouns are problematic but the more general form—“noun classes”—can be kind of cool

indo-european languages settled on two classes, tied to natural gender—boring

but some languages have as many as 12, and some distinctions are a lot more meaningful—animate versus inanimate, for example (English has this in “it” versus singular “they”)

compare measure words—i’m glad we say “a drop of water”, not “a piece of water”, even tho there’s no reason for it—noun classes are just a further level of grammaticalization on top of this concept

but tying it to natural gender is silly; they should have not done that (there is evidence that the original distinction was “concrete” VS “abstract”)

my general philosophy of language & toki pona 

@packetcat i agree; i think people like it because of (1) low barrier to entry, and (2) it gets you thinking intentionally about language and word choice in a way which seems “solvable” (as opposed to natural languages where you have miscommunications arising from differences in dialect and vocabulary, and these cannot be predicted in advance)

but you know, ultimately i think dialect is a good thing, even if it does produce miscommunications sometimes, and i don’t want to be a part of a language community which is too tightly-controlled to allow for that kind of linguistic diversity

Christian take re: trying to figure out why Christians in tech annoy me 

@akjcv@types.pl if you Glorify God you should be spending time in His Creation not sitting around all day in a numbers land of your own invention trying to teach rocks how to think

what aspect of God are you glorifying there, exactly?

trying to figure out why Christians in tech annoy me 

@akjcv@types.pl there is absolutely nothing less Christian than computers so for me i think it’s just cognitive dissonance

levels of support for queerness in the united states in 2017, after 1–2 years of Trump 

« §2 A Shift From Allies to Detached Supporters

There has been a significant decline in overall comfort and acceptance of LGBTQ people, as reflected in a meaningful shift from “Allies” to “Detached Supporters.”

To better understand how support for the LGBTQ community differs across society, GLAAD has split non-LGBTQ Americans into three segments based on respondents’ comfort levels across the seven specific LGBTQ-related interaction scenarios. GLAAD's segmentation is defined by the following categories:

Allies: Non-LGBTQ respondents who were either “very” or “somewhat” comfortable in all situations.

Detached Supporters: Non-LGBTQ respondents whose comfort level varied across situations.

Resisters: Non-LGBTQ respondents who were either “very” or “somewhat” uncomfortable in all situations.

Segmentation definition has been consistent each year, but this year the
proportion of non-LGBTQ Americans who are either “very” or “somewhat” comfortable in all situations has abruptly declined, sliding backwards four percentage points. »

assets.glaad.org/m/303a760e7d2

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📟🐱 GlitchCat

A small, community‐oriented Mastodon‐compatible Fediverse (GlitchSoc) instance managed as a joint venture between the cat and KIBI families.