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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 8th, 2023

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  • You don’t necessarily have to tell all prospective employers about all experience. If you think your resume is getting bounced from some kinds of openings because they think it is odd they you have this degree, don’t list the degree when you apply to those sorts of positions. Don’t talk about having the degree. If asked point blank if you have a degree, say something about your personal philosophy on why degrees aren’t important, or how your life’s goal would be to get a Ph.D. in art history or some other discrete and personable non-answer.


  • I mean, fundamentally you’re not supposed to obtain income. The system that distributes money is not actually designed to give people money to live, and nobody is really steering it to make it do that. It just happens to sometimes do that. I’m not sure anyone has actually “designed” it to do anything, but it seems at least much better at concentrating money and power than it is at creating plausible jobs or job-housing-food combinations for humans.

    I hope you find some good advice as to how you can get income to survive. I don’t really have any, other than shake all your friends down for jobs (since hiring is usually done by knowing somebody rather than by weighing the merits of an unbiased stream of varyingly qualified applicants) and be prepared to search for employment for many months (a thing you might have had to have started doing before now for best results). But it’s not hard because you are somehow not doing it “right” or the way you are “supposed to”, it’s hard because the problem you are facing it isn’t actually constrained to be solvable. You can do it all right and still not succeed.






  • Honestly? Stargate SG1. One of my favorite shows.

    The whole theme of the first seven or so seasons was teching up and gathering allies to say “you’re not my real dad/god” to the evil sufficiently advanced aliens.

    But then having reached the end of that arc and wanting to keep the show going, they introduced some even more godly evil aliens who weren’t just sufficiently advanced but were actual magic. I felt it deflated the point made in the whole first arc, that there ain’t nobody better then you, to then trot out some evil canonically supernatural entities.



  • Check to make sure that the HOA actually has the power to do this. As a land owner you are bound to follow the covenants that run with the land, but you are only actually bound to follow those covenants. You don’t have to do random stuff just because the HOA board or even a majority of the HOA voters say so, you only actually have to do what’s in the covenants.

    Unless the covenants say that you agree to follow a bunch of dog-related rules to be defined later, you almost certainly are allowed to park your dog in your own front yard or in that of any consenting neighbor.


  • It’s not that uncommon to give a landlord a cupcake or something, especially if they live with/near you.

    Also, landlords are often terrible so nobody wants to do nice things for them. And they are likely to be better off, not worse off, then their customers.

    Tips aren’t just percentages; people tip hotel cleaners, for example. And a percentage tip on a rent amount would be both unworkably huge and also offensively tiny.



  • I think it is achievable. But someone has to start doing the economic planning to make it happen in each local area.

    One approach is to take political control of each city and resolve the problem by applying sufficient government. Either you make enough housing for the people who are there, or you seize enough stuff for the project that people start leaving. But that can be hard to muster the political will to do.

    Alternatively, “housing” per se is not unaffordable: at whatever reasonable fraction of a normal wage, there is somewhere on Earth that you could pay to live. Plenty of empty space in small towns scattered across the US, for example. The problem is that you can’t actually live there, because you also need to have a job to pay for the housing, which isn’t where the housing/empty land is. Also many of these places are so under-served by municipal services as to be practically uninhabitable: you can afford an RV and you can afford an acre of desert with no electric, water, or sewer service, but you cannot combine the two to create acceptable housing.

    If the people who control the cities where the work and services are are unwilling to accommodate residents, then work and services need to be organized in places not under the control of these malicious actors. Ideally with new mechanisms in place to prevent the same failure modes from reoccurring.