slrpnk.net

psvrh , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.
@psvrh@lemmy.ca avatar

Boy, it’s amazing how responsive they are in when it's a bunch of students protesting war crimes, as opposed to a bunch of students cowering in classrooms trying to avoid getting shot.

chknbwl ,
@chknbwl@lemmy.world avatar

How else are the kids going to play dress-up with military surplus? Besides, e v e r y o n e knows a ceramic plate carrier is a prerequisite for dealing with any college student. Their words cut so deep.

Fedizen ,

You have to protect Ben Netanyahu from criticism. Nothing is more important.

InternetCitizen2 ,

There were two company of soldiers at Uvalde. Just a reminder.

Maggoty ,

What are you on about?

InternetCitizen2 ,

Cops like to play soldier. There were four hundred of them at Uvalde; two company worth.

Maggoty ,

Ah okay.

Lucidlethargy ,
@Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works avatar

The thin yellow line is certainly well documented at this point.

TropicalDingdong , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.

Fascists.

FatTony ,
@FatTony@lemmy.world avatar

I'm out of the loop on this one. What exactly is happening over there at University of Texas?

DoucheBagMcSwag ,

Pro Palestinian protests are getting quashed with a complete violation of freedom of assembly

MonkderDritte , (edited )

Uncle sam says nothing? You still have amendments and so on, right?

jkrtn ,

The Amendment still exists but someone gave Clarence Thomas an RV so it isn't in force at the moment.

MonkderDritte , (edited )

RV?

Sorry for duplicates, server had a stroke.

klemptor ,

He would be quick to clarify that it's a motorcoach, not an RV.

Andrenikous ,

Bribed with a vehicle meant for traveling.

tocopherol ,
@tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Those amendments are very selectively applied when it comes to any grassroots action that isn't fully right-wing. There is essentially no protection to speak against the state if they want to target you.

Kalysta ,

May the first amendment lawsuits be plentiful and crush the fascists.

Captain_Buddha ,

People protesting another war, and they feel more aggression is the right answer.

Sarsaparilla , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.
@Sarsaparilla@kbin.social avatar

I appreciate the juxtaposition with the sign. Great image.

agissilver ,

This looks like it's right next to the student activity center so I'm guessing the sign is real. But good meme fodder.

RizzRustbolt ,

"Protesting to end a genocide? That's a paddlin'."

hactar42 , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.

Whenever I see things like this I think back to something Lewis Black once said back during the Occupy Wall Street protests. They had him on ABC or one of the major news stations and asked him what he thought about it. His answer was along the lines of, "When were the college kids ever wrong?"

ZK686 ,

Um, now? I mean, these "protestors" aren't even remotely interested in what's REALLY going on with the Israel/Palestine situation...they just want to protest from the comforts of their home here in the United States.

Kalysta ,

The united states is the reason israel even can afford a military. Protesting putting their war on our credit card should be done at home.

Though they could also all pile into DC and shut the city down. Would you rather that happen? You know what, that’d likely work better!

mlg ,
@mlg@lemmy.world avatar

Lol you want them to make an insurgency group and get labeled enemies of the state?

This exact same stuff happened during Vietnam, including stupid comments like yours.

JasonDJ ,

Ahh those were the good ol' days of Lemmy...back in 'nam.

JoMiran , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.
@JoMiran@lemmy.ml avatar

Texas cops at an elementary school shooting: "Someone is armed and shooting! Imma stay hidden."

Texas cops at a peaceful, unarmed protest against genocide: "These boots were made for stomping, and that's just what they'll do."

Chefdano3 ,
@Chefdano3@lemm.ee avatar

Sound like the solution is the arm the protesters.

Rentlar ,

It makes sense, the protestors were clear and honest about their non-violent intentions, which is perfect as a target of oppression. They don't get any warning for real crimes like school shootings so there's nothing they can do, too bad.

psvrh ,
@psvrh@lemmy.ca avatar

The problem is that all this does is encourage protesters to come armed the next time.

PM_Your_Nudes_Please ,

Reposting this because it’s relevant here too: A scenario like this is what led to the formation of the Black Panthers during the civil rights era, and subsequently led to gun control laws being started by republicans. During the civil rights protests, people quickly realized that peaceful protests were violently broken. But heavily armed peaceful protests had police nervously watching from across the street.

Because police had no qualms about firing into an unarmed crowd to get people to disperse. But when the entire crowd is armed to the teeth and can immediately return fire, the police are suddenly okay with watching from afar. This was the start of the Black Panthers; a group who organized heavily armed protests.

When conservative lawmakers saw a bunch of heavily armed black people (and allies) on their front steps, and saw the police unwilling to break the protests, those conservative lawmakers got really fucking sweaty. So instead, they gave the police tools to arrest individual protestors. The Mulford Act was drafted and quickly passed. At the time, it was the most restrictive gun control law the country had ever seen. It was written by Ronald Reagan (yes, the same Ronald Reagan that the right uplifts as a paragon of conservative values,) and was supported by the NRA, (yes, the same NRA that lobbies for looser gun control laws in the wakes of school shootings.)

This gave the police the power to arrest individual protestors after the fact. Instead of firing into the crowd to disperse the protest, they would wait for the protest to end, follow the protestors home, then kick in their front doors while they were having dinner with their families. (Remember all of the “don’t bring your cell phone to protests because police will arrest you a week or two later if your phone was pinged nearby” messaging during the pandemic protests? Yeah…)

This led to the Black Panthers diving underground. They realized what was happening after protests, so they took efforts to guard their members’ identities. They pulled tactics straight out of anti-espionage textbooks. Randomized meeting places, so police couldn’t set up stings ahead of time. Code names, so arrested members couldn’t rat even if they wanted to. Fragmented info, so no one person (even the leaders) could take down the entire operation if busted. Coded messages. Dead drops. Et cetera, et cetera…

We’re on a rocket trajectory straight down that same pipeline now.

NovaPrime ,
@NovaPrime@lemmy.ml avatar

As they should. Police have shown their hand time and time again. Peaceful marchers and protesters get beaten, sprayed, and generally abused without consequence. Armed protesters, even those who go full on violent, are left alone and watched from a distance.

cosmicrookie , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.
@cosmicrookie@lemmy.world avatar

University protests was how Greece got rid of the military Junta in the 70s

They may seem futile but can be very powerful!

RizzRustbolt ,

The fall of the Fifth Republic started on campuses as well.

FMT99 , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.

Change the world kids! No, not like that!

ZK686 ,

So, are you okay with these "kids" (adults really, but whatever) disrupting campuses all over the country for Palestine? I mean, WTF? Lol...

Kalysta ,

Yes.

Next question?

frostysauce ,

Yes.

Zehzin ,
@Zehzin@lemmy.world avatar

The only thing they did wrong is not disrupting streets also.

Glytch ,

Yep. Are you okay with cops pulling another Kent State?

pythonoob , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.

Cops don't belong on universities

uis ,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

What if they want to finally become literate?

pythonoob ,

Then they wouldn't be a cop?

UnderpantsWeevil ,
@UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world avatar

Eh. There are times when a person in a uniform with some degree of authority on campus would be legitimately helpful, but they're never around for those moments.

UT campus rape was an epidemic when I was in school, back in the mid-'00s, and the police were notorious for just looking the other way.

pythonoob ,

That's terrible. Yeah my comment sounds like an absolute. I concede your point

ZK686 ,

Neither does antisemitism...but, here we are..

TheLadyAugust ,

Isn't this a protest against genocide? Did you see somewhere that protest organizers were advocating for antisemitism? Could you link that for us? That would be very helpful context. Thanks

ZK686 ,

Genocide? Genocide is not happening in Palestine. The Hamas are doing exactly what they wanted, gain sympathy from gullible people to make them look like the victims. Hamas and Palestine are one, whether you want to hear it or not. they're in power because of the overwhelming majority of Palestinians support them. Israel is trying to only target Hamas and their military, but it's very difficult when Hamas uses the Palestine people as human shields and hides in their homes...

Natanael ,

Bootlicker

Olgratin_Magmatoe ,
abbotsbury ,
@abbotsbury@lemmy.world avatar

God, you zogbots are so uncreative.

ZK686 ,

What's a zogbot?

DAMunzy ,

Show us the anti-jew rhetoric and we'll denounce it.

BTW, Palestinians are semitic.

ZK686 ,
MyEdgyAlt ,
DAMunzy ,

First, he was wrong for saying that. Second, he apologized. Was it because he was caught. No idea, good chance of that but 🤷.

More importantly, Zionist =/= Jews. There are plenty of Jews that are anti-Zionist. Some well known Jews including Noam Chomsky who has used the phrase "Judeo-Nazi tendencies" of the Israeli state. There is nothing wrong with being anti-Zionist.

BrianTheeBiscuiteer ,

Wait? Which side are we calling snowflakes? Can't keep track.

Natanael ,

Are you saying jews for peace are also antisemitic?

MacDangus ,

Are you saying Black Voices for Trump are not racist?

Thrashy ,
@Thrashy@lemmy.world avatar

Ah, yes, because that one ex-cultist that showed up in the background of every Trump Rally is totally the same thing as Jewish people who don't like it when they're told they are obligated by their genetics to support an apartheid state that thinks it's OK to bomb 100 innocent bystanders to kill one militant.

Natanael , (edited )
Glytch ,

Israel doesn't represent all Jewish people, bigot.

ZK686 ,

Oh brother....

Linkerbaan , (edited ) to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.
@Linkerbaan@lemmy.world avatar

Fun fact: 91 of these DPS riot cops stood outside the Uvalde Texas elementary school shooting.

DPS was one of various local and state law enforcement agencies that responded to the Robb Elementary shooting on May 24, 2022. Ninety-one DPS personnel were at the school when law enforcement waited over an hour before breaching the classroom where the gunman was.

Video: University of Texas protestors chant Who Failed Uvalde? DPS!

Delusional ,

Ah so if anyone with a gun showed up, they'd all run away.

melpomenesclevage ,

You could just tell them there's someone with a gun on the next property over, and they should probably run away.

phoenixz ,

Bingo

myusernameis ,

But they look so strong and brave standing there waiting to beat up unarmed people protesting genocide!!

FenrirIII , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.
@FenrirIII@lemmy.world avatar

ACAB. Remember that when things get worse.

melpomenesclevage ,

Prisoners are for exchange. If exchange is refused, they have outlived their usefulness-blue lives do not matter.

TWeaK , to Work Reform in How in the hell

It’s less of a pain when the work you do is fun and interesting, but ironically when that’s the case you’re usually making even more money for someone else.

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

Nothing wrong in making money for someone else, IF you get yourself decent salary and have interesting work.

TWeaK ,

I dunno, working in construction contracting has taught me that time in man hours is the ultimate pricing value point, that everything can be boiled down to. Someone who gives up their time should reap the most benefits. Someone who owns a business and pays others to work should be heavily taxed.

Earning a bit more does help make it more palatable, but it still isn’t fair.

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

What is fair? How to define fair?

TWeaK ,

A common saying is that a fair deal is one that neither party feels happy with, because neither one is taking advantage of the other.

unfreeradical ,
@unfreeradical@lemmy.world avatar

How would you apply the general principle to the employment relationship?

TWeaK ,

I think employees generally get such a raw deal that a fair deal would be refreshing and positive. However when you look at massively overpriced roles, eg consultants, they’d probably say it wasn’t fair to give them a fair deal.

unfreeradical , (edited )
@unfreeradical@lemmy.world avatar

I generally agree. However, I was curious whether you had any thoughts related more directly to one of the earlier comments, concerning how fairness, within the context of employment, might be evaluated.

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

But how do you know that “raw deal” is not fair?

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

Which is what happens when a person is hired? Both parties are happy with the agreement, otherwise they wouldn’t accept, right?

Dkarma ,

Nope. Both parties benefit. Neither is happy.

unfreeradical ,
@unfreeradical@lemmy.world avatar

I suppose feelings about a deal, after it is reached, are generally determined in some part by the original motive for seeking it.

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

That’s your definition of fairness?

Dkarma ,

Did I say that?

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

No, but that’s what I asked. So, just checking.

ProdigalFrog OP ,
@ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net avatar

Most people do not have the luxury of turning down a job offer, as the alternative is hunger and homelessness, which the employer uses as leverage to underpay their employee.

If housing and basic food staples were a human right (free) only then would you see fair wages in the open market, as people would have the option to turn down unfair jobs, forcing the employer to make them fair or hire no one.

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

Therefore, we come back to question: what is fair?

unfreeradical , (edited )
@unfreeradical@lemmy.world avatar

Based on your own thinking, what would you understand as the attributes of a relationship or agreement that may be considered fair?

MxM111 , (edited )
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

I think the standard way of salary negotiations (labour supply and demand) is the only way to define fair salary. If this salary is not sufficient to make decent living, and if we want to correct for that, then it should be corrected by other means, such as UBI, out of compassion or other reasons, but not for fairness reasons.

unfreeradical ,
@unfreeradical@lemmy.world avatar

How do you understand fairness, in the greatest generality, respecting agreements and relationships?

In other words, for agreements or relationships to be fair, in any context, what conditions must be met or features must it have?

ProdigalFrog OP ,
@ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net avatar

Well, for one; Wages keeping up with inflation and productivity would go a long way to being more fair.

But I’m curious why you’re asking me what is fair, I already laid that out in my second paragraph in my previous comment. As I said, if the absolute basics to living were freely available, people would be free to reject unfair offers, and thus, in a theoretical ‘free market’ wages and benefits would increase to a truly fair and equal level.

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

So, your statement is that it is fair to guarantee the basic of living regardless of the person works or not. How do you respond to criticism that it is not fair to forcefully take money via taxes and spend them setting up standard of living for someone else?

ProdigalFrog OP , (edited )
@ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net avatar

How do you respond to criticism that it is not fair to forcefully take money via taxes and spend them setting up standard of living for someone else?

It wouldn’t be for someone else, it would be for everyone. Most people are okay with the idea of Universal Basic Income, because everyone gets it, even the rich, it’s fair.

Imagine applying that universal concept, but to food and shelter. It would not only help the most destitute, but also the innovators. Research has shown that people are more willing to risk becoming entrepreneurs in Canada due to healthcare not being tied to employment. Imagine if we took away the risk of homelessness and malnutrition from not working for someone else? Hundreds of thousands would now be in a beautiful position to start their own business with far less risk to their, or their families, well being.

I would also place emphasis on the Basic part of Basic Necessities. It would only be feasible to provide just the most economical basics, which would mean a small square footage dwelling (think large apartment blocks, cheap to build, but efficient to heat and maintain), running water, electricity (with a kwh power-limit per month, anything over that would cost money), internet since it’s a required utility in the modern age, and core/cheap but nutritious staple foods. We’re not talking luxury apartments and food here.

(Personally, I would argue Universal Basic Income is not viable within our current system, as that extra money would be quickly siphoned out of everyone’s pocket by increased rent and artificial price increases all around to capture this extra capital that would be floating around. It could only work if there were limits on rent and other basic necessities).

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

Being OK and being fair are different things. And I think significant amount of people, at least in US are against this, so, for them it would not be OK or fair. The reason I was bringing this up is to point on difficulty to define what fair is if it relies on things that are not fair to be implemented.

ProdigalFrog OP ,
@ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net avatar

I mean, some people are against social security, welfare, and medicaid despite how significant of a difference they have made to reduce starvation, poverty, and medical induced bankruptcy for the disadvantaged. And no matter how much evidence is shown of those societal benefits, they would reject it because it does not align with their world view or is not in their immediate interest.

As complete 100% consensus is generally impossible to achieve, I would argue the thing that helps the most people is generally the most ethical choice, but that’s just my 2 cents.

Out of curiosity, how do you think those sorts of programs being implemented would be a net-negative for society as a whole?

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

I do not know if they will be net positive, it depends on metric the comparison is made with. I think on pure economic side it is not beneficial for GDP growth. Just take EU and compare it with US. I think the system in US is more fair and closer to true, fair value of labor.

But I think the fair world is a world without compassion and with huge separation between rich and poor. I think on ethical grounds we should make the world less fair, more equalized, despite of the fact that it reduces GDP growth, because there are other metrics possible, like human happiness and well being.

Our conversation started from me noticing that people in this discussion expecting that fair value for labor is higher than what is typically paid. And I think the reverse is true because there are things that artificially increase wages, like minimum wage in many states. So, “be careful what you wish for” kind of thing.

ProdigalFrog OP ,
@ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net avatar

But I think the fair world is a world without compassion and with huge separation between rich and poor. I think on ethical grounds we should make the world less fair, more equalized, despite of the fact that it reduces GDP growth, because there are other metrics possible, like human happiness and well being.

I’m a bit confused by your definition of fair, to the point where I think that we hold the same precepts, but we may using different words for them. I would make the case that increasing ‘fairness’ is equivalent to making things more equalized. I would use both terms interchangeably.

In any deal, if one party has more leverage than the other, in principle it’s not a ‘fair’ deal, even if the disadvantaged party rationalizes that it could’ve been worse, or that the other party didn’t fully exploit the power of their advantage. In the context of labor, reducing the leverage that employers have over workers is evening out the playing field, which I would say is more fair.

To be clear, in an ideal world, neither party would have leverage over the other, and people would work for someone else or with each other only due to it being mutually beneficial in equal measure. In reality, things will never be that ‘perfect’, but I think it’s absolutely possible to remove the more egregious points of leverage.

The people using existing leverages will try to prevent that by removal kicking and screaming because they don’t want their advantages to be reduced, however they should try to be content with an equal power dynamic if they consider themselves at all moral. In all other areas of life humans have decried unjust imbalances of power, and I don’t see how labor relations would be subject to different rules than, say, competitive sports. We don’t stack the deck against one team or the other, we try to make it fair.

So when you say a fair world would is a world without compassion and even more division between rich and poor, I must ask, how are you defining the word fair?

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

Fair: without favoritism, cheating, impartial. A fair fight is when two people fighting without any help from anybody. Giving one guy extra boost (say, special gloves) because he is weaker is unfair, but more equal.

I think equality in freedom is fair. Equality in means is comparison and not fair, since you have to be partial and take money from the rich and give to the poor. It would be fair only if the rich actually stole from the poor against the law of the land, but if the rich earned himself (say, he is a successful lawyer) then equalization of means is not fair.

Cruxifux ,

Yes, everyone loves their job and is happy with their pay for their job. You solved it bud, great work.

MyNameIsIgglePiggle ,

You make money for someone else in exchange for the safety of a consistent paycheck. Its like the old feudal system, in theory you are being protected in exchange for your labour.

Of course in practise you are at the mercy of the company, and in the feudal system the protection you were afforded meant you needed to pay for your own armour and fight to the death to protect your owner.

ProdigalFrog OP ,
@ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net avatar

Eh, I’d argue that can make it more palatable, but honestly I do think, at least in most cases (I can think of outliers), it’s generally pretty exploitative to profit off of someone else’s labor that they themselves are not actually wanting to do themselves, especially if the threat of homelessness and hunger is the prime motivator for the person doing the work. Like, it’s not really fair in the grand scheme of things.

A simple way to fix that I guess would be if every company was a co-op. Since then everyone is profiting equally, and no one’s labor is being exploited for the exclusive benefit of another.

Scrof ,

If you’re one of the lucky few sure. But then you’re kinda part of the problem. The vast, overwhelming majority of people on the planet work jobs they don’t really like just to keep a roof above their heads.

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

That’s the issue, not if someone else makes profit or not. If nobody makes profit from your work, but you still work job you really do not like just to keep roof above your head, then what’s the difference?

unfreeradical ,
@unfreeradical@lemmy.world avatar

Why would someone need to work a degrading job simply to remain housed, other than because such impositions support the profit motive for landlords, lenders, and employers?

MxM111 ,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

Why do you think it is because of that? Do you think the temp agriculture jobs, for example, would suddenly become having huge payments if farmers, who hires temp workers, have no profit? Please consider that farming is subsidized in US, because it is difficult to make profits there. Or do you think that cleaners who work in non-profit organizations have huge salaries and interesting job?

unfreeradical , (edited )
@unfreeradical@lemmy.world avatar

I doubt there could be much meaning found in the possibility that corporate farms “suddenly” would have no profits.

Corporate farms are structured around the profit motive, which is supported by the claim they assert for exclusive control over certain plots of the land, and for exclusive ownership of the products from using such land. For farm workers not to be exploited, they must stop upholding respect for such claims. Plainly, their lives would be vastly better in consequence, as the full value of their products would be distributed among themselves, with no share being taken from them by anyone else simply from a claim to private ownership.

unfreeradical ,
@unfreeradical@lemmy.world avatar

Walking barefoot on gravel is less painful than walking barefoot on nails.

The greater difference is in being free.

funkless_eck , (edited )

yes but a factotum is a person who does general, menial jobs, and Bukowski was writing about his (assumed true) experience finding work after being rejected for thrww1 the WW2 draft. (EDIT: typo)

12345678 ,

It was WWII, and I don’t know if he actually got rejected, the end of Ham on Rye implies he just didn’t register.

funkless_eck ,

typo, I meant 2.

helenslunch ,

Quite the opposite. Work that’s “fun and interesting” tends to pay less because there’s a surplus of demand and limited supply (artists, cooks, etc).

unfreeradical , (edited )
@unfreeradical@lemmy.world avatar

Are you sure? Whenever I feel gloomy, I seek company with corporate lawyers. I always feel uplifted by their distinctive mirth and cheer.

_lilith , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.
@_lilith@lemmy.world avatar

Should we beat and arrest the students or maybe sever ties with a nation committing war crimes? Better get those students and arrest record, looks good on job interviews.

tocopherol ,
@tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Vast majority of protesters arrested don't end up with any charges or a record, the police know this, but they still get their mugshot taken which gets posted online by right-wingers, doxxing them to potential political violence.

Masterblaster420 ,

which is why we should do the same thing to conservatives. don't get bullied. bully back.

tocopherol ,
@tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Last I was on Twitter a couple years ago there were antifascist pages that did that, the ones I followed were banned while the fascist 'antifa watch' pages I've seen are promoted. But I agree, Twitter won't work for it anymore but we should have some kind of fascist watchlist.

I've thought about the deck of cards of terror suspects the US had, with higher members of Al Qaeda or whatever, we should have that for the top fascist politicians and war mongers. It should be well known the names and faces of the people pushing us off the cliff.

RizzRustbolt ,

Ooo... a Tarot deck of conservative facists.

melpomenesclevage ,

I mean, fuck social media, just do it somewhere?

Masterblaster420 ,

it's a war. you get it.

melpomenesclevage ,

Honestly, I think cops just need to be reminded they bleed too, and there are no way they can win if we actually fight back.

Masterblaster420 ,

damn right

uis ,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

"Revenge cannot be used to return to norm, it normalizes violence." - Ekaterina Shulman

Masterblaster420 ,

you can ride a high horse all the way into oblivion" - Masterblaster420

it's about self defense and preserving humanity for future generations.

melpomenesclevage ,

So the police are violent. Hope somebody starts taking pot shots when they line up all convenient like this.

C'mon, be the mirror universe cool Texas we know you can be.

mojorizer , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.

Land of the free.

Nobody ,

Whoever told you that is your enemy

ZMonster ,
@ZMonster@lemmy.world avatar

Now, something must be done

Ultragigagigantic ,
@Ultragigagigantic@lemmy.world avatar
ZK686 ,

Oh brother...let us know when you're leaving...

gamermanh ,
@gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Cowards flee.

People with backbones stay and make things less shit.

Of course you'd immediately go to the former, conservatives always do.

Retrograde ,
@Retrograde@lemmy.world avatar

That song slaps

uis ,
@uis@lemm.ee avatar

It is not France

ZK686 ,

Well, I mean...we're not PALESTINE...but hey, we're trying to be more like them! Emma right? Emma right? Lol...

MedicPigBabySaver , to Texas in Riot cops line up next to a sign at University of Texas at Austin.
@MedicPigBabySaver@lemmy.world avatar

ACAB

ndsvw , to Work Reform in How in the hell
@ndsvw@feddit.de avatar

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  • speaker_hat ,

    Upvoted during the act

    onceandfuturealice ,

    Boss makes a dollar, I make a dime

    That’s why I poop on company time

    Rolive , (edited )

    [Thread, post or comment was deleted by the author]

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  • jaackf ,

    – Rage Against The Machine

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