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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BT
baaaaaaaaaaah [comrade/them] @ baaaaaaaaaaah @hexbear.net
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3 wk. ago
  • Yeah I think this is the answer. 'White' and 'man' grants a default socioeconomic status, while 'mediocre' means they're less likely to cheat or otherwise cause trouble.

    You're just gonna have an easier, simpler time with a sitcom dad than with a hyper-ambitious hotty.

  • To be fair, being fictional means they're significantly less dimensional than real people and are incapable of holding secrets.

    I mean there are real people I feel absolutely safe around, but they're just normal people I know and have built trust with. There are no famous people I can say the same for because I don't know them personally, even if they seem good on the surface. And for fictional characters like these, we "know" Aragorn is safe because he's written to be benevolent, we've read his entire life, and the author's dead so there's no possibility for new material to change that perception.

  • As soon as you are on top, your behaviour might change.

    It might, it might not. America's behavior didn't change; from the start they've been aggressive and expansionist, the scope just grew as they became more powerful.

    China's been growing rapidly for decades while very seldomly acting militarily outside their borders. They don't seem to have expansionist goals outside those declared over 70 years ago (ie Taiwan) and have even negotiated down on border conflicts. It's not impossible but it'd be strange for China to make a complete about-turn on their stated policy of non-intervention.

  • The research, which involved three separate studies, found that TikTok users were exposed to significantly less content critical of China compared to users of other platforms like Instagram and YouTube.

    Does this really imply that TikTok is manipulated to be pro-China, or that Instagram and Youtube are manipulated to be anti-China?

    TikTok users tended to have more positive views of China’s human rights record and were more likely to consider China a desirable travel destination.

    Also based on this line in particular, it seems like they're marking travel content as "pro-CCP", which is just nonsense. Xinjiang and Tibet are objectively beautiful, desirable, and popular tourist locations, and Tiananmen is literally the country's second most famous tourist site after the Great Wall. That's fact, not 'the party line'.

  • They were an anti-Chiang faction that split during the late civil war and declared support for the CPC. They still exist on the mainland until this day.

    There was also the left-right split before the war with Japan; after Sun Yatsen's death there were rival KMT governments with the rightists led by Chiang in Nanjing and a leftist government in Wuhan led by Wang Jingwei, though the latter folded and the party reunited until Wang became a traitor during the war and sided with Japan.

  • My understanding is that even in 996 they get way longer lunches than us.

    I'd be really wary of trying to soften how bad 996 is. Everyone I've known who's worked it has described it as pretty hellish and the government really does need to work harder to stamp it out.

  • As of at least 2023, Chinese public attitudes towards the LGBTQI community continues to become increasingly favorable.

    Literally all that "article" says is that China has its issues but is making progress in the right direction.

    The important thing is that LGBTQ people in China can and do currently live free, safe, and open lives, and that the state is consistently moving towards providing queer people with further right and protections.