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Ultraviolet, to memes in Almost a shitpost.

If Mexican food gives you the shits, you need to eat more fiber so your digestive system doesn’t immediately panic on contact with beans.

Ultraviolet, to memes in Saw a news story people about people getting arrested for at Wal-Mart for forgeting to scan one item

Wage theft is the biggest form of theft by far. The biggest perpetrator of wage theft is, unsurprisingly, Wal-Mart. They have the audacity to call anyone else a thief?

Ultraviolet, to mildlyinteresting in "Do you live in the Midwest?" by self-report

It’s because the US started on the east coast and expanded westward, it was named back when it actually was the middle of the west and just never changed it. Same way we still refer to the art movement that began in the late 1800s as “modern art”.

Ultraviolet, to lemmyshitpost in this AI thing

The danger of AI isn’t that it’s “too smart”. It’s that it’s able to be stupid faster. If you offload real decisions to a machine without any human oversight, it can make more mistakes in a second than even the most efficient human idiot can make in a week.

Ultraviolet, (edited ) to asklemmy in People who work in food service or customer service: What’s the dumbest thing a customer ever insisted was “the law” or “illegal”?

My guess is it was part of a two-pronged election strategy. First, make COVID denial part of the GOP’s political platform, so that they’re more likely to be performatively reckless, including waiting on line in crowded polling places where no one is masked (which goes further to scare people away that were actually taking COVID seriously), while people taking precautions like voting by mail or by voting early when it’s less crowded would be disproportionately likely to vote Democratic.

Then, pass unreasonable regulations like “mail-in and early votes can’t be counted until all votes cast on Election Day are counted”, while pressuring election workers to post results as early as possible, skewing votes in their favor, or, failing that, point to the fact that the votes against them were counted later as evidence of fraud.

Ultraviolet, to maliciouscompliance in Trans men enter Miss Italy contest to protest anti-trans ‘women from birth’ rule

“It’s worse somewhere else so the problem doesn’t exist” has always been a shit argument and you know it.

Ultraviolet, to lemmyshitpost in All in the Memery

Right wingers making memes of characters that they had absolutely no idea were making fun of them is one of my least favorite meme genres.

Ultraviolet, to memes in Is this what people think about Tor browser?

It’s open source, if there was a back door it would have been found years ago.

Ultraviolet, to comicstrips in "Outdoor Cat vs Indoor Cat" by Sarah Andersen

The danger isn’t to the cats, it’s to everything else. Ecologically speaking, cats are an invasive apex predator. They absolutely wreak havoc on local bird populations.

Ultraviolet, to lemmyshitpost in What the hell! Let's all just go crazy!

No, but you do pronounce it in salmonella. English is not a language governed by logic.

Ultraviolet, to privacy in Google Researchers’ Attack Prompts ChatGPT to Reveal Its Training Data

Model collapse is likely to kill them in the medium term future. We’re rapidly reaching the point where an increasingly large majority of text on the internet, i.e. the training data of future LLMs, is itself generated by LLMs for content farms. For complicated reasons that I don’t fully understand, this kind of training data poisons the model.

Ultraviolet, to mildlyinteresting in "Do you live in the Midwest?" by self-report

It would probably be 3%, as per the Lizardman Constant.

Ultraviolet, to comicstrips in "Outdoor Cat vs Indoor Cat" by Sarah Andersen

Not in the wild, but in a suburban neighborhood they are. Apex is relative to what else is out there.

Ultraviolet, to science_memes in Listen, Susan. It's a valid theory, just look at the damn thing.

The line between creative worldbuilding and batshit insanity is surprisingly thin.

Ultraviolet, to asklemmy in What are some useful or just cool stuff to memorize?

The Doomsday rule.

Not necessarily the part for calculating the day of the week for any arbitrary day centuries ago, that’s just a useless party trick, but for the current year so you don’t need to pull out your phone to check. Knowing that 1/3 (or 1/4 on a leap year), the last day of February, 3/14, 4/4, 5/9, 6/6, 7/11, 8/8, 9/5, 10/10, 11/7, and 12/12 are all the same day of the week, that this year they’re all Tuesdays, and next year they’re all Thursdays, is mostly easy to remember and very frequently useful.

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