grym [she/her, comrade/them]

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Joined 4 年前
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Cake day: 2020年7月26日

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  • Realistically speaking, who fucking cares?

    A whole lot of people spilling ink about astrology, “pseudoscience” and “mysticism” in here that don’t seem to know anything about it or its relation to the patriarchal, racial and class contradictions. And a whole lot of people that don’t seem directly concerned with most of those things themselves but feel it’s important to share their opinions on something they’re not informed about and not concerned about.

    For the record i don’t care for astrology at all, I don’t like the (extremely, extremely rare) people who take it 100% seriously, but it’s still one of those things that’s kinda fun sometimes. But i don’t care, and i have no trust in people who are worried about “feminists hurting their own movement by doing things wrong” when they’re not a part of that movement.


  • It’s simply not your call or place to say something is “harmful to the movement” when you’re not a part of it, you can’t speak or know about it from experience. Saying stuff like that is a very easy way of getting dismissed entirely by basically every member of “the movement”, as I am doing now, i truly do not care about the topic of astrology.

    Maybe go talk to feminists that like astrology and calmly ask questions, and maybe ask yourself why you care so much about something of such little consequence for a movement that is, materially speaking, probably in contradiction with your own position and benefits in the current system and will naturally tend to be seen as uncomfortable to you.


  • yea, it’s data transformation but there is zero intelligence, context or anything “new”.

    The tool itself is fine when used clearly and purposefully, and those kinds of tools have been used for a long time in various fields, the problem I have with the current hype trends of ““AI”” is that literally nothing fundamentally new was made. People aren’t being informed on how these things really work and what they do, there’s a lot of dangerous practices and psychological manipulation, and above all these new large models are enormous labor-obfuscating machines. I don’t give a shit about private property, IP laws, etc (because I know that’s a common response), the problem is that these things are another layer of illusions, an enormous curtain hiding entire industries of data-scraping and theft, of countless people and hours of manual tagging, filtering, training, moderating and mechanical turks, in purely profit-seeking and reckless ways. And not only is all this labor not valued, people aren’t even aware it exists, people never have to interact directly with anyone along that production chain. Entire industries becoming ghosts, non-existent, and even more unable to organize and struggle for what they create.

    Beyond that, class consciousness is ever harder to teach and agitate for in these domains, because shit like this is purposefully built to hide and disguise exploited labor (often from the labour force of the colonized and victims of imperialism) and privatization.

    It’s not the stealing that’s the problem it’s the sneaky, rapid disruption and destruction of existing productions and jobs that it entails, and the privatization of colossal amounts of public data and user-generated data that nobody ever intended to be privatized and extracted for profits. It was always happening in the background of course, but i don’t think people realize the impact this will have, to me it’s like a closure of the internet-commons. Colossal explotation of Free Labour, the expansion of exploitation in every sphere of “content production” that was previously unreachable.

    Drives me fucking insane.





  • That’s not at all why people are talking about it what the fuck? It has nothing to do with seeing the clean-up of the river as “wasteful spending”, it’s because everyone fucking hates Macron lmao.

    The “clean-up of the Seine” is a recurring joke, multiple presidents and mayors of Paris have promised it over the decades and it never ends up happening, and this time as well everyone laughed and said “if we actually see him swim in it, I’ll eat my hat”.

    It’s because we hate macron, and it’s because people really dislike the Olympics as well. The olympics are wasteful spending, very badly organized, and they’re going to a complete shit show to the delight of everyone outside Paris, myself included.



  • Huh i thought that was genuinely very interesting, and adds a little bit of nuance to a few points of Marx in capital where “charactermaske” was translated into something else.

    Hard to say which specific branch the author belongs to, most of this looks to be a pretty good analysis and explanation of the concept and its usage and evolution, doea a good job at providing different interpretations, responses and critiques while still defending the original concept in some ways.

    Where it gets dodgy is towards the end, the inclusion of modern or post “Marxists” that apply it to the USSR in (what looks to to me like) unproductive ways, and fucking zizek at the end, but that might have been a more recent edit






  • BIG RAMBLING THOUGHTS AHEAD. Thanks for starting this convo, I felt like writing my thoughts on this.

    It’s interesting to me how often materialism and idealism seem to be misunderstood. I think it’s because people’s thinking, and the bourgeois sciences, are so inherently idealistic in their framework that people end up interpreting materialism vs idealism in an idealistic way.

    To me, both materialism and idealism have the same start and context, they see the world and what happens inside it, they try to understand and describe things. Neither denies the real world, or the immaterial, they are different frameworks of how you abstract things, how you organize your understanding, which leads to different insights and conclusions.

    Idealism accepts the material reality of things, but it is fundamentally Dualist and categorizing in a linear, hierarchical and context-less way.

    Things are or are not, A is defined in this way, B is defined in another, there is a clear distinction between A and B.

    A can be described with this finite and timeless list of attributes. etc etc. It tries to apply a framework that abstracts everything into discrete and distinct “things”, separate from each other. If you were to try and draw it or visualize this abstraction (not the real world of idealists, but how they abstract. They are superficially aware that their abstractions aren’t the real world), you would see separate things floating in a void, sometimes interacting or touching each other.

    It tends to be context-less, blindingly linear, and binary.

    A “thing” can be defined without including its history or future trajectory, the essence of a thing is timeless.

    A thing happens, then another: Even when things are complicated, this method of abstraction leads to very linear understanding of causes and effects, everything needs to have a primary cause and primary effect, there is an almost constant work to reframe things in a hierarchy of cause and effect. If an idealist sees two things interacting with each other equally, they will abstract 2 little drawings, process 1 which goes from A to B, process 2 which goes from B to A.

    I could go on but i’m getting a little lost. Basically, idealism to me is a limited framework of abstraction that sees things too linearly, discrete and distinct, context-less, hierarchical and ultimately essentializing. Their abstractions become traps, they can’t help but apply them to the real world beyond simply abstracting. Their method of abstraction becomes a lens through which everything is reframed, and they become blind.

    Going more into the mind (which idealism separates from the body/material), this framework can give you the impression that YOU are this discrete, distinct, context-less, linear thing. You are an individual, floating in the void, interacting with other separate things. In this view, you can easily imagine how someone could decide to just change things. A big void with floating things, doesn’t seem very hard to just decide to push one or another, and you can do your interacting without being affected directly. This is obviously nonsense.

    In contract, materialism in a very basic way would reject this and focus on observation from the real world, empiricism at least. But if you still function within the broader idealistic framework of abstraction, this is useless. You will keep the idealistic basis but simply “reverse” things. The “material” is now at the top of hierarchy, everything is still linear, so everything simply derives from it in this grand mechanical way. You still have things floating in the void, you simply put the “material” ones at the top as the largest things with the most gravity, and the “individual” and their “ideas” at the bottom, as illusions, fake. How could they be anything else when nothing they do can change anything? This becomes a very crude and mechanistic (sometimes called metaphysical) materialism, which sees everything as machine. Life is a mechanical process, living beings are basically robots, we are all automaton slaves to the material reality driving everything we do and think. Also nonsense.

    Dialectical thinking is the important part, combined with materialism. The philosophy of Internal Relations is the key part. Things aren’t distinct and discrete, defining a thing always includes it’s context, history, trajectory and ALL relations. Everything is very messy, there are no clear borders, everything is always changing, and every interaction between 2 parts goes both ways. There is no hierarchy of cause/effect in the real world, everything interacts both ways. This is very difficult to get right as a system of abstraction, it’s part of the reason Marx can be difficult to understand because he seems to constantly shift the way he uses or defines certain words or concepts, but it’s always consistent.

    The advantage of it is that it is a much better way of abstracting that doesn’t become blind, doesn’t distort how you view the world too much. And it doesn’t separate “material” from" ideas", “real” from “unreal”. Everything that is and that we do and think is “material”, whether it’s corporeal or incorporeal. What that means is that you can change things, because you refuse the illusory hierarchy of the idealistic framework. You understand how everything affects everything else, in different ways, changing over time. You can change things in a multitude of ways, including through ideas. A great change of ideas and thinking for a sufficient number of people is a huge material change, it will drive physical changes as well.

    A great change of physical conditions that affects many people will also be a huge material change in the incorporeal, it will drive psychological and philosophical changes in everyone it affects. The world changes people as much as people change the world. But for every situation and thing you attempt to abstract, it has its specific context, it has its own contradictions and processes, and some are stronger or more “important” than others, but always within your lens of abstraction, always depending on how you decide to look at it, always with biases and dependent on what you are trying to understand and change.

    A person is their body and mind, there is no reason to separate them except in the context of abstractions, but those abstractions should be self-aware and controlled so as not to distort how you view reality. A person is also all of their context, their environment, their social relations, their past, their trajectory towards the future. Gender as a concept is very useful in the way it has been redefined and explored in the past decades, because it acknowledges that your “gender”, which is as much a part of who you are, is both inside and outside of you. It exists as relation, relation to your system, your country, your culture, your language, social norms, your relationship to society, family, friends. Gender defines the two-way process within which you perform a certain set of social behaviors and signifiers.

    Gender is itself the two-way process of performing gender. It includes the actor, audience and stage in that performance. And Gender can be changed like everything else, in both ways. Gender changes when your relations change, when your environment sees you or treats you differently, where the physical conditions of the world, or your body, are changed. Gender also changes when your thinking changes, when your relation with yourself, how you see yourself, how you perform and present yourself to the world.

    Anyone who claims to be marxist or dialectician and cannot reconcile gender with their framework is an idiot or a liar. They’re revealing how idealistic their abstractions are.


  • Why did we say that? They’re a circle of people who broke away from a very small group which you may know, called the RCG. This circle wrote a blog called ‘Red Fightback’, and the bottom line is, their position is that there’s no such thing as gender.

    Rather, gender, they claim, is some kind of medical conspiracy where, at birth, the doctors go away and huddle together and they ‘assign a gender role’ to you. So, pregnant mothers: when you have your 20-week ultrasound scan, you’re not having a scan to see whether your baby is a boy or a girl (say ‘Red Fightback’). No; that’s all medical conspiracy! And when the baby is born, they inspect the baby to say it’s a boy or a girl – well that’s all medical conspiracy, too! These things (boys and girls, men and women) aren’t real – don’t you see??

    Absolute clowns. Of course you’re going to be able to say completely braindead and ignorant things like this strawman, when you refused to address the topic on its own terms and refused the distinction of sex vs gender.

    Not enough working women are involved in our movement. Why is it that all of our YouTube videos have 80 to 90 percent hits from men? Young women don’t think politics has got anything to say to them. They’ve been pushed into this blind dead-end of bourgeois feminism.

    lmao. i WONDER WHY.

    Also way to show how utterly useless and small you are, that you are nothing more than a little larping committee. Stats about members, specific struggles you’re involved with? Nope, Your Youtube videos are not having good numbers, wow, great revolutionary work.



  • Musicbee with wine! I have never been able to find something that does it all as well as musicbee, and I’ve tried almost every single linux music player. I have a huge music library, I add a ton of music regularly. I need auto-tagging, i need to be able to sort, filter and search, a very customizable interface, all of the mp3 tags including obscure ones, gapless playback, configurable fade-in/fade-out, etc etc. With the exception of a few little nitpicks like not integrating well with the KDE media widget, and some occasional annoyances with pipewire, everything works great.



  • Absolutely. But then again there’s a reason a lot of the “core races” of stuff like DnD are very weird and problematic if they’re just considered monsters.

    I think we can do both. You can have a large variety of cultures, ancestries (I really like how PF2e does it), species, etc… that are generally relatable (they don’t have to be humanoid or very normal, just something you could play as and not entirely alien), which avoids the problems of treating what are often archetypes/parodies/exaggerations of existing cultures as essentialized groups with tied good/evil attributes in a very awkward moral system, and ALSO have tons of weird and alien monsters, species, creatures, etc.

    I think the current tendency of revisiting the DnD canon and “races” in a very critical way is good, but I also don’t like the tendency to flatten everything into sexy humanoids.

    I think most of the TTRPG writing needs a lot of work tbh. A ton of stuff to critique and reimagine, and a serious lack of quality and serious worldbuilding.