webdoodle

joined 2 years ago
[–] webdoodle@lemmy.ml 10 points 1 year ago (1 children)

76 days to notice an expired cert!

[–] webdoodle@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Agreed. My reply follows similar thinking as you.

[–] webdoodle@lemmy.ml -1 points 1 year ago

I disagree with your assessment. The Guidestones weren't there to help society rebuild after an apocalypse. It was built to scare you into thinking an unavoidable, likely human caused, cataclysm was coming. The builders clearly infused "bad human" into it's message when they say to keep the population under 500 Million. It's all part of the narrative to keep people chasing the cheese at all expenses. This creates ample opportunities for someone else to get rich off your fear. It's similar to the gold rush. Who got rich in the gold rush? The merchants.

 

Many years ago, I wrote a post on Reddits /r/Collapse using a failing barn as a metaphor to explain collapse. It was a very popular post, especially for a pre-covid collapse/prepper forum post, back before being a prepper was the norm.

I live in Montana, and old barns are everywhere. What's amazing though is how old some of them are. For instance one old hay barn I recently helped demolish, was nearly 100 years old. It was amazing it was still standing....Or was it.

It took us the better part of a day to tear down that old hay barn. It was hard work ripping out planks, pulling nails, dragging 100 year old posts to the dump trailer. But towards the end, as we slowly ripped out the walls and supports, we expected the hay barn to just come crashing down. It didn't though. It resisted gravity with a tenacity that bordered on the divine.

After all the walls but one was gone, we figured a slight breeze would knock it over. When it didn't we tried pushing it over, but it would just slump a little, then bounce back. We tried knocking out the last few posts by throwing an 8 lbs hammer at it. This didn't do anything other than make us feel like Thor.

The last post actually took several hits before it was dislodged. However, there suspended in space and time was that barn! It still didn't fall, it just hung there suspended in place. HOW?!@

As it had collapsed, it started leaning against an old poplar tree ever so slightly, which we didn't notice. Somehow that old tree held up the entire barn all by itself. We eventually just pulled the barn apart piece by piece, as the tree was clearly not going to let it fall.

That moment where the barn seemed suspended in mid air got me thinking a lot about collapse again. Even through years of rot, bad weather, baking sun, cows rubbing against it, etc, it still wouldn't come apart. I remember thinking: "Boy they sure don't build them like the used to. " In fact, that might be the point.

The Collapse of humanity has been happening for a while, but like the Roman empire before it, it might take a really long time for the effects of collapse to affect or impair a majority of us. It may collapse all at once, but the stronger the foundations of the building the longer it will take to erode enough to start falling apart. Even when it does start to fall apart, it will likely lean on something else to keep it supported for a while longer.

[–] webdoodle@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

I've been Reddit free for a couple years now, after Reddit deplatformed me for planning a peaceful protest of the yearly Billionaire's Summer Camp in Sun Valley, Idaho. It's where Billionaires give there marching orders to the Operation Mockingbird media.

Quitting Reddit is way harder than any other addiction I've experienced, because it plays on the collectivism that is hardwired into us. It's why they peddle it to kids like the tobacco, alcohol and gambling industries before them. Get them while they are young, and there brains aren't developed enough to build up self-control!

It's not just Reddit though, Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, Instagram, etc, etc, etc all do the same things to varying levels. I highly encourage everyone to watch the Documovie The Social Dilema. The only way to free ourselves of this new form of digital slavery is to educate people on the dangers our such technology.

 

The arctic sea route, versus the Suez Canal, shortens time to deliver by 1 week.

[–] webdoodle@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

It disgusts me that schools were complicit in giving Google our children's education data.

[–] webdoodle@lemmy.ml 5 points 2 years ago

Because the U.S. government used the 2001 Microsoft Internet Explorer Antitrust hearings to blackmail Microsoft into government servitude: implanting NSA backdoors, not patching vulnerabilities, disabling system administration tools, constantly hiding or moving useful features. Remember from the Snowden leaks that the NSA's favorite prey is the System and/or Network Administrator who holds all the keys? But what about the guy that makes the keys, wouldn't he be the biggest prey?