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anarchism 

I wonder how much further anarchists would get in conversations if we responded to the question "So you want chaos then, huh?" with "Yes" instead of "Anarchy means no rulers, it doesn't necessarily mean no rules"

Embrace the chaos, fuck it.

@matrix That shape... Two balls, thin at the base, bulge in the middle, then a triangular point. Hmm...

@ned @dave It's a fan edit of a page from one of the comics, it isn't actually canon.

@dave what the fuck? wonder women canonically has a penis, this is trans erasure.

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/statement-press-secretary-regarding-implementation-president-trumps-executive-order-preventing-online-censorship/

Whether you like or dislike Trump is not relevant to this story - the point is that online resources like twitter and facebook can not be both platforms and publishers at the same time - they have to treat content fairly and equally or lose their 230 protection.

I no longer use facebook, twitter, or youtube for any publishing of my own (having since switched to smuglo.li, bitchute, gab/dissenter, and my own site) but I'd like for people to have a wide variety of options to choose from when it comes to exercising their right to free speech without fear of being shadowbanned, restricted, etc.
It's funny that lots of strangers on here know more about me than I'd ever let on in person around them. I haven't been able to filter myself very well.

alcohol's pretty nice because it lets me disassociate with my body but like in a good way
where it's like "yeah fuck this body whens the last time it did anything good for me, I'm feeling good tonight!"
instead of "yeah fuck this body, I want to die and finally escape this eternal suffering"

Hate is underrated. Hate is a powerful emotion. It's one of the most powerful feelings a person can feel. Why is it so despised, and seen as so evil and wrong? Hatred is passion, one of the purest forms of passion - the only one rivaling it, or perhaps even surpassing it, is love. Both are passion in its purest and most powerful forms, and passion is such a powerful and all consuming feeling. Why is one so cherished by society, and the other so scorned?

I believe in balance. How can one truly understand the extent of their passions, and how powerful passion can be, if they choose to stifle half of it, and only accept its "positive" qualities? Love is one half of true passion, and hate is the other. Can one truly understand and control true passion, without experiencing both of its extremes? I choose to embrace both hatred and love, so that I can feel true passion, in both of its extremes, and develop a deeper understanding of each. Either one is so immensely powerful that they can consume and devour a person entirely - through balance, and understanding of both extremes, perhaps we become better able to avoid being consumed. Or perhaps not. Regardless, I control these passions, rather than be consumed by them. Passion is pure power, regardless of how it manifests - learn to control this power and harness it, whether it manifests as hatred or love, and you shall reap its benefits.

@sim Why can't women have sex robots too? What about gay men, who have male sex robots? Does anyone promoting this idea, that sexbots somehow dehumanize women, actually believe straight women and gay men won't be interested in them too?

sexual assault, self defense laws, canada is a shithole country run by awful people 

friendly reminder that if you think self defense should be legal, you're a misogynistic pig who hates women
women being raped should just politely inform their rapist that rape is morally wrong, murder is never okay even if the murder victim is in the middle of raping someone. what if the rapist steals the woman's weapon? then the regular rape becomes an armed rape, which is even worse! this is why women should never be allowed to defend themselves from rapists

@shebang Yeah, "The Thing: The Game" is the best way I could describe it. Have you ever read "Who Goes There?", the story The Thing was based on? It's similar, in a sense - it's extremely immersive, and it's all from the monster's perspective, rather than the perspective of the survivors. Really lets you get into the monster's head. But, it's also almost the exact opposite, in another sense, because the monster's perspective feels like it's basically the exact opposite of how the monster in "Who Goes There?" felt. Reading Who Goes There, I felt the monster's confusion, its fear, how alien and out of place it felt in our world, and understood why it acted the way it did. Playing Carrion, I understood its raw power, how destructive it was, how it could slaughter dozens of people and feel absolutely nothing, not a shred of remorse or guilt, just because it can.

@tuxcrafting look all I'm saying is that murdering a few hundred innocent people and devouring their flesh could be pretty fun (but like consensually)

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Mainly gaming/nerd instance for people who value free speech. Everyone is welcome.