kozufox.bsky.social
Furries and deserts and creatures. 30. Sometimes, I write weird shit.
https://www.furaffinity.net/user/kozumelfox/
7,458 posts
597 followers
523 following
Regular Contributor
Active Commenter
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SeattleWA is like nextdoor except instead of your neighbors it's a bunch of hitlerites posting from their compounds in Idaho pretending to be your neighbors.
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Reading problems like reading the username "steviebaby" as "Stanley"?
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Who's Stanley?
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You think homeless people need to "fuck off"?
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Hey quick question, what views are the nazis discussing?
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The Taco thing might just be the worst political meme I've ever seen.
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The weird part is they already have some genuinely useful AI integration to begin with. The automated suggestions that pop up based on machine vision classification are very effective at making ballpark initial guesses!
I really have no clue how generative AI could further "improve" this in any way
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Their efforts were not successful, is the thing. They didn't manage to shape those protests at all, and none of the terroristic attacks they carried out on police or infrastructure resulted in anything.
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This No Kings protest isn't being organized by my union that I pay into, it's being organized by a bunch of randos and a bunch of randos are going to show up. I expect some of them will show up with spray paint, and I will cheer on their efforts to make my local park prettier.
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LA people are setting cars on fire and blocking highways until the cops drive them off with sustained volleys of rubber bullets, flash bangs, and chemical weapons.
They're non-violent maybe, but certainly not peaceful.
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Hey quick question, do you know what Sabo Tabby actually was?
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en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goatse.cx
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I made the mistake of searching their username and one of the first thing that pops up is a thread detailing a bunch of very disturbing comments they've made in a zoophilia forum, so uh, yikes.
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I just think we should be careful about not broadly assuming that anything subverting a capitalist system is truly an inversion of that system.
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I didn't mean the exploited laborers are being affected, to be clear. What I'm saying is, fighting over the spoils of that initial labor theft is not inherently anti-capitalist. Like, your average iPhone fencing outfit is itself organized as a capitalist business venture.
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Yeah, I agree. Like, I get the academic discussion about how the root causes of looting are themselves political in nature, but it's a very different type of "political" than the lay definition.
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I'll be straight with you, I don't think stealing material objects that have been made valuable from other people's labor in order to sell them at a profit is rejecting the premise of capitalism. That's more like the natural conclusion of it, when the facade of liberal civility is stripped away.
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I'm not arguing about the morality of it or anything, all I'm saying is that it's not an act of protest the way burning down a police Precinct is. It's primarily an act of personal enrichment. That's the main motivation at work.
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Nobody smart is stealing iphones for personal use, is the thing. You need to fence electronics like that to someone who knows how to crack them before they can even be used.
I just don't think making money illegally in a capitalist system is a rejection of capitalism.
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Sure, you can say that in like, an abstract, academic sense. Your average iPhone thief is not stealing iphones for overtly political purposes, though. They're primarily doing it to make money for themselves.
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Stealing iphones while the cops are preoccupied beating up protestors is not necessarily political. Aside from a single bit of anti-ICE graffiti, spray painted who knows when, everything in this clip looks like just a standard smash-and-grab.
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I think comparing the burning of the 3rd Precinct to generalized looting is obviously ridiculous.
Burning down a police station after picketing it so vigorously that the cops were forced to abandon it is an overtly political act. You might not like it, but it was 100% done in protest.
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As an action, it's sort of mutually exclusive. If you want to successfully loot a bunch of stuff, you need to go where the cops aren't, which is also where the protests aren't.
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I don't think anyone is stealing iphones to make a statement, I think they're doing it because iphones are expensive and easy to fence lol.
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The fuck ice graffiti is an indication, but not conclusive tbh.
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The real story here is that the cops couldn't stop this looting because they were too busy trying to stop free speech with violence. Every time the cops decide to riot, it's basically a free invitation for people to commit crimes while they're off gassing protestors.
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It's mostly the cops shooting people in the head with modified grenade launchers. People tend to get pretty violent when they see their friends get shot in the head with a grenade launcher.
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We gotta get Mark Hamil another Joker role so he has less time to post shit like this on here.
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They're just arbitrarily slapping ebikes with an additional hard cap that's even lower than your average pedal bike can go. Meanwhile, car drivers still get to murder people on bikes and have the NYPD cover it up for them.
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This is doubly stupid because there's already an effective speed limit for e-bikes due to the way they're regulated already. Class 1 and 2 bikes are soft-capped at a very reasonable 20mph. You can go faster, but you need to use 100% leg power to do it.
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Title should've been Hell Yes
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And when I say beef, I mean there are bird people poisoning the food the cat people are leaving out for the feral cat colonies.
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It's definitely a thing IRL, there's huge beef between, like, certain audubon chapters and local feral cat colony advocacy groups.
Feral cat colonies are genuinely a pretty large problem in a lot of places, and the uncomfortable truth is that TNR alone doesn't solve the problem.
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I think he means "outdoor cats that are also allowed in the house" with that Indoor / Outdoor cats bit?
Which is fair honestly, I'm not a fan of people letting their pets roam the neighborhood unsupervised, at least in North America.
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I love that this article starts out by listing "federal informant" among all his Nazi credentials.
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They also made the mistake of making their own software in-house and then collaborating with each other, instead of all quietly agreeing to use the same 3rd-party software. Like doing a classic Ponzi scheme instead of multi-level marketing.
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Airline companies tried the same thing with their ticket pricing software decades ago, but they made the mistake of doing it back when the feds still cared a little about price fixing schemes and got slapped for it.
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It's not really AI, but there's a handful of property management companies that sell rent pricing software. Behind the scenes, the software "works" by slowly ratcheting up rents in an area across the board. The companies effectively have a monopoly once a majority of landlords join their platform.