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ghostisventing Ā· 2 months
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a practical appraisal of palestinian violence, steve salaita
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ghostisventing Ā· 2 months
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"The IOF released a video showing it was a stampede" if Palestinians online are documenting that they were shot at and there are photos of tank trampled bodies (Ahmed Kouta medical worker in Gaza has posted a horrible photo on his ig account @princekouta) then I'm believing the Palestinians who have no reason starving to fucking lie over a partial video released by an army that has been filming themselves torturing prisoners and playing with palestinian womens clothing. Get your head our the "over exaggerated over emotional crisis actor" Palestinian trope that isr*elis made up. They believe Bisan is a Hamas plant. Do you genuinely think there's intelligence among them that hasn't been rotted by zionism
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ghostisventing Ā· 2 months
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sometimes i browse zionist blogs just to see what the current talking points are and it always feels like an incredible game of dancing around the point. "jewish people have lived there for centuries" yes true. why are we funding the bombing of civilians. "living under hamas sucks and people in gaza hate them too." yeah i imagine many people in gaza have varying thoughts on the situation. why are we funding the bombing of civllians. "i saw some random twitter account say something antisemetic." im sorry that you were exposed to that. why are we funding the bombing of civilians.
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ghostisventing Ā· 2 months
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So a free tool called GLAZE has been developed that allows artists to cloak their artwork so it can't be mimicked by AI art tools.
AI art bros are big mad about it.
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ghostisventing Ā· 2 months
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Me w adhd and my sister with misophonia
its so unfortunate when different peoples neurodivergent traits clash horribly. like yes i totally understand that the man at the other table cant control his stimming and loud vocal tics and i think he deserves to have a nice day out at a restaraunt without judgement. however if i dont remove myself from the audible vicinity in the next 20 seconds i will explode.
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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Wait do they actually not know how to use a computer šŸ˜¦I find it so hard to believe when a lot of schools use them
So this was originally a response to this post:
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Which is about people wanting an AO3 app, but then it became large and way off topic, so here you go.
Nobody under the age of 20 knows how to use a computer or the internet. At all. They only know how to use apps. Their whole lives are in their phones or *maybe* a tablet/iPad if they're an artist. This is becoming a huge concern.
I'm a private tutor for middle- and high-school students, and since 2020 my business has been 100% virtual. Either the student's on a tablet, which comes with its own series of problems for screen-sharing and file access, or they're on mom's or dad's computer, and they have zero understanding of it.
They also don't know what the internet is, or even the absolute basics of how it works. You might not think that's an important thing to know, but stick with me.
Last week I accepted a new student. The first session is always about the tech -- I tell them this in advance, that they'll have to set up a few things, but once we're set up, we'll be good to go. They all say the same thing -- it won't be a problem because they're so "online" that they get technology easily.
I never laugh in their faces, but it's always a close thing. Because they are expecting an app. They are not expecting to be shown how little they actually know about tech.
I must say up front: this story is not an outlier. This is *every* student during their first session with me. Every single one. I go through this with each of them because most of them learn more, and more solidly, via discussion and discovery rather than direct instruction.
Once she logged in, I asked her to click on the icon for screen-sharing. I described the icon, then started with "Okay, move your mouse to the bottom right corner of the screen." She did the thing that those of us who are old enough to remember the beginnings of widespread home computers remember - picked up the mouse and moved it and then put it down. I explained she had to pull the mouse along the surface, and then click on the icon. She found this cumbersome. I asked if she was on a laptop or desktop computer. She didn't know what I meant. I asked if the computer screen was connected to the keyboard as one piece of machinery that you can open and close, or if there was a monitor - like a TV - and the keyboard was connected to another machine either by cord or by Bluetooth. Once we figured it out was a laptop, I asked her if she could use the touchpad, because it's similar (though not equivalent) to a phone screen in terms of touching clicking and dragging.
Once we got her using the touchpad, we tried screen-sharing again. We got it working, to an extent, but she was having trouble with... lots of things. I asked if she could email me a download or a photo of her homework instead, and we could both have a copy, and talk through it rather than put it on the screen, and we'd worry about learning more tech another day. She said she tried, but her email blocked her from sending anything to me.
This is because the only email address she has is for school, and she never uses email for any other purpose. I asked if her mom or dad could email it to me. They weren't home.
(Re: school email that blocks any emails not whitelisted by the school: that's great for kids as are all parental controls for young ones, but 16-year-olds really should be getting used to using an email that belongs to them, not an institution.)
I asked if the homework was on a paper handout, or in a book, or on the computer. She said it was on the computer. Great! I asked her where it was saved. She didn't know. I asked her to search for the name of the file. She said she already did that and now it was on her screen. Then, she said to me: "You can just search for it yourself - it's Chapter 5, page 11."
This is because homework is on the school's website, in her math class's homework section, which is where she searched. For her, that was "searching the internet."
Her concepts of "on my computer" "on the internet" or "on my school's website" are all the same thing. If something is displayed on the monitor, it's "on the internet" and "on my phone/tablet/computer" and "on the school's website."
She doesn't understand "upload" or "download," because she does her homework on the school's website and hits a "submit" button when she's done. I asked her how she shares photos and stuff with friends; she said she posts to Snapchat or TikTok, or she AirDrops. (She said she sometimes uses Insta, though she said Insta is more "for old people"). So in her world, there's a button for "post" or "share," and that's how you put things on "the internet".
She doesn't know how it works. None of it. And she doesn't know how to use it, either.
Also, none of them can type. Not a one. They don't want to learn how, because "everything is on my phone."
And you know, maybe that's where we're headed. Maybe one day, everything will be on "my phone" and computers as we know them will be a thing of the past. But for the time being, they're not. Students need to learn how to use computers. They need to learn how to type. No one is telling them this, because people think teenagers are "digital natives." And to an extent, they are, but the definition of that has changed radically in the last 20-30 years. Today it means "everything is on my phone."
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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ITā€™S CONFIRMED! NICOOOOOOOO
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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I saw someone say that they donā€™t want Israel to be ā€œgoneā€ because it was the only safe place for their family in the Middle Eastā€¦
My family is from the Middle East. They came to the US. In a way, they were saved by coming here.
But the idea of dismantling the US doesnā€™t bother me. This country was built on genocide and continues to oppress indigenous people. Did the US ā€œsaveā€ my family? Sure
But my familyā€™s safety shouldnā€™t come at the expense of indigenous people
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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I'm never forgetting the Palestinian babies that were left to starve to death then rot in their beds by the IOF.
I'm never forgetting the Palestinian doctors surrounded by bodies of dead children begging the world to stop the slaughter.
I'm never forgetting the Palestinian children who held a press conference in English to beg the world to stop murdering them because they want to live.
I'm never forgetting the Palestinian Priest who said "We will not accept your apology after the genocide" to the world.
I'm never forgetting the Palestinian Imam who used the speakers of the Mosque, not to call people to prayer but to call out to God while the world around them was burning from American supplied Israeli bombs.
I'm never forgetting the grandfather who held his dead grandchild in his arms. Or the father carrying the remains of his two children in plastic shopping bags. Or the mother holding her dead child in a shroud. Or the father sitting among the rubble after he lost his whole family. Or the girl trapped under a broken building begging for people to save her family first. Or the boy who cried when he saw his brother alive. Or the girl who asked if she was still alive after being pulled from the rubble. Or the boy who carried the remains of his brother in his backpack. Or the old man the IOF used for a photoshoot before they shot him dead after getting pictures. Or the little boy wearing plastic gloves to pick up the remains of his family. Or the graves desecrated. Or the body of that small baby girl left alone in a tent because no one knew who she was or if her family was alive, small and alone and not one person who knew her name to bury her. Or the young boy who was shot in the street while his sister watched from the window. Or the men and boys who were stripped naked in winter. Or those tortured. Or those made to stand in open graves. Or the people who were raped by IOF soldiers. Or Palestinian workers kidnapped by the IOF and then labeled with wristbands, each one reduced to a number, then made to walk back to Gaza to be killed in the world's largest open air concentration camp. Or the people of Gaza starving because Israeli Zionists are blocking aid trucks. Or the Israelis dancing and celebrating the death of Palestinians. Or the lies spread by Zionists and their supporters. Or the people profiting off the oppression and deaths of Palestinians. Or the people of the West Bank being killed or kidnapped by the IOF. Or old woman who was older than the creation of the terror state of "Israel" who was shot by snipers for saying that. Or the Israelis dressed up as Palestinians to enter a hospital and kill three Palestinians in their beds. Or every single Palestinian currently kept in an Israeli prison. Or the journalists, doctors, poets, men, women, children, and the unborn all massacred. Or the fact that WCNSF exists now. Or the woman who refused to wash the blood from her hands. Or the dead, unburied and unmourned.
I'm never forgetting those who chose silence in the face of a genocide.
I may not know all their names but I will not forget the over 30,000 Palestinians dead. Or the over 60, 000 people hurt. Or the unknown number of people missing, still lost under the rubble. Or the 12,000 children slaughtered. An entire generation crippled or murdered.
I will never forget these things when Palestine is free.
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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Btw everytime someone says "This can't be a genocide, there are still women giving birth / there's water pump in this neighbourhood / there's a school here / there's a hospital there" the only thing this person is saying is "I'm not yet satisfied with the level of destruction. I'm not yet satisfied with the amount of death."
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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The funniest thing about Son of Neptune is not Nico gaslighting Percy. It's Hazel calling Nico a Scrawny White boy.
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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they planned this
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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i love that canon nico's appearance is described as unnerving. percy says he has a glint in his eyes that makes you think he's either a genius or a madman. people comment about how his presence is eerie and how he just seems to show up, like a specter. his smile is said to be more unsettling than his scowl. pretty privilege nico is a fun hc but i just love the idea that he looks like some eldritch being at his worst and a sopping run-over black cat at his best.
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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Letā€™s talk more about accents in the Riordanverse!
ā€¢ Percy with rounded New York vowels and that quick run-together way of saying his sentences. Percy with an accent you canā€™t quite place until he orders some coffee or water.
ā€¢ Annabeth with a Virginia drawl and long vowels that donā€™t quite go away, even after years on Long Island Sound. Annabeth, who will randomly spit out phrases like ā€œnervous as a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairsā€, whose cup always fills with sweet tea in the mess hall/
ā€¢ Carter with a fairly standard American accent until he pronounces a word so bizarrely itā€™s clear he must have learned it halfway across the globe. Carter, who gets slightly antsy in the same place for too long and goes to language classes at night just for an excuse to practice.
ā€¢ Sadie with a London accent thatā€™s begun to fade after years in Brooklyn House, who accidentally says ā€œcheersā€ when people hold the door for her. Sadie, who skips over her tā€™s and who drops consonants and, like Carter, isnā€™t exactly sure where her home is.
ā€¢ Magnus and Alex with strong Boston accents and nasally aā€™s that Hearth is glad he canā€™t hear. Magnus, whose accent gets stronger in battle, who intentionally leans into it when heā€™s on the West Coast. Alex, who makes people guess where sheā€™s from and tells them something different every time, who argues with Magnus over whose accent is stronger.
ā€¢ Jason Grace with languid California vowels, who drops the end of every word when heā€™s relaxed and over-enunciates when heā€™s in charge. Jason, whose accent is only present when heā€™s comfortable.
ā€¢ Leo Valdez with a Texan accent to boot and quick clipping consonants, whose accent sounds nearly the same as Annabethā€™s to the untrained ear, but insists that theyā€™re completely different every time someone brings it up.
ā€¢ Hazel Levesque with a thick New Orleans accent, whose vocabulary is peppered with French and old-fashioned phrases and the occasional Southern saying. Hazel, who sticks to Deep South manners (and passive-aggression, when necessary), who orders in French when she goes to a bakery and watched old black-and-white movies when she feels homesick.
ā€¢ Frank, who sounds American except for when he says ā€œsorryā€, who speaks a bit of Canadian French (which Hazel hates, because she canā€™t understand it), and gets teased every time he says ā€œaboutā€.
ā€¢ Piper with a slight valley-girl sound that sheā€™s worked hard to get rid of, but tends to slip into when sheā€™s tired or angry. Piper, whose voice becomes sweet and soothing in charmspeak, who understands every fluctuation and intonation and how to use them to her advantage.
ā€¢ Nico di Angelo with a seemingly standard American accent, until you pick up on the odd transatlantic pronunciation or Italian rolled ā€œrā€. Nico with an arsenal of phrases so jumbled and eclectic that people do a double take when he talks.
Just. Yeah. Riordanverse accents.
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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One of the reasons I adore Percy Jackson is because I had an undiagnosed learning disability and ADHD growing up and I was used to both adults and kids talking down on me and thinking I was stupid. Younger me internalized that so much. In the PJO series, I think Percy does the same thing. He knows heā€™s not stupid, but he still felt insecure.
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"Impertinent isn't a 12 year old word" TO YOU. It's not a typical word in a 12 year old's vocabulary.
But Percy isn't an average 12 years old. He's smart. He's beyond average smart. The only reason why he sucks at school is because they don't accommodate his dyslexia and ADHD, and even then he managed to get good enough grades to be accepted into a university after missing most of his 11th grade.
And to really nail down this point, please look at this quote:
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Percy has a superior vocabulary, one that includes big words like impertinent. And it's all thanks to one Sally Jackson, who nutured her son's education when the system failed him.
The main reason why a huge part of the fandom thinks Percy is stupid is because some characters (cleary not our queen Sally Jackson) talk down to him, call him stupid, encourage others to make jokes about him being stupid etc. We should recognize that those dialogues are not a reflection of Percy, but of what those characters think about Percy and Percy's non-existant self esteem.
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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more stories where falling in love is a horrifying fate worse than death rather than a source of comfort and hope. more stories where love is understood as a terminal affliction.
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ghostisventing Ā· 3 months
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This is so cute
I'm just gonna leave this here for everyone
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Edit - Artist is Kanga3egle on Instagram
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