Skip to main content




Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 17th August 2025


in reply to Cy

in reply to Wulfy

Worst thing about neo luddites is the Luddites weren't opposed to technology. They just didn't like how one guy got to own the whole factory. So I get why people don't want to risk learning about some stupid stuff, but they're not luddites.

in reply to Sunshine (she/her)

Academic here. I'm arguing amongst my colleagues that, practically, its already a hybrid regime. What's that? Think China or Iran. Some local autonomy, some voting, but the real power is centralized in one person or party. A touch of aged democracy with a heavy dose of authoritarianism baked at 451 degrees.

The Constitution is not worthless, not bynany means. Its useful but in a new way. It has been co-opted into the regimes (and it is a regime now) ruling apparatus. A nostalgic and nebulous rallying cry when needed, and a useless piece of paper that doesn't apply when necessary. Because the rule of law, that all important and oft misunderstood phrase, is truly dead, the regime can and is doing whatever it wants.

There may be a few moments of respite, a court case win a back off there, but those are strategic withdrawals. Distract and redirect.

That's all. Keep your heads up, fight for a better tomorrow even if today is lost.





US alcohol consumption at a record low as health warnings grow, survey finds


Alcohol consumption among adults in the US is at the lowest level on record, as most Americans, for the first time, view even moderate drinking as harmful, a new survey has found.

Pollster Gallup’s latest Consumption Habits survey, conducted annually, showed that about 54% of Americans reported drinking alcohol, compared with 58% in 2024 and 62% in 2023.

The figure falls below the previous record low of 55% in 1958 in the nearly nine decades of such tracking by Gallup. And the figure appears not to be driven by people turning to alternatives, such as legal recreational cannabis, the researchers said.


So, by supply and demand, why aren't beer prices going down?

in reply to Powderhorn

Went to a family event the other day. We realized it was the first one we were having without Boomers. By coincidence(?) it was also the first one we had which was completely alcohol free. Everyone just happened to bring no alcohol.


What Does Palantir Actually Do?


https://www.wired.com/story/palantir-what-the-company-does/


in reply to PhilipTheBucket

šŸŽ¶America, fuck yeah! šŸŽ¶

There's nothing we can't profit off of!



ā€žWe Are Lady Partsā€œ (Serie, 2021-2024)

Ich liebe sie alle. Keine weniger als die andere. Für das, was sie sind und für das, was sie tun! Hier hat das @ZDF einmal mehr in den britischen Serienkatalog gegriffen und viel mehr als eine Serienperle an Land gezogen. Das hier ist ein gesellschaftspolitisches Statement, das im Gewand einer Punkband-Sitcom zugleich emanzipatorisch und subversiv agiert. Gut so! (ZDF, Neu!)



A Republican's sex scandal exposes the media's evolving shrug toward congressional disgrace




in reply to lazynooblet

I contributed to this, but I always thought that the Western obsession with moving out at 18 was really weird and wasteful. Obviously everyone is different, but when I've talked to non Western residents who do family housing, one saves money on rent, food, housework, etc. Old people are cared for and have something to do, parents get help with baby sitting, kids haves more adult interactions.

That said, I've talked to enough non Western residents who this setting failed for them because their family was toxic. I'm sure that happens too.

I don't pretend to know about this very well, so please forgive me if this sounds like an authoritative word.

in reply to ButtBidet [he/him]

Spanish here. We move late* (traditionally when married somewhen in the twenties) and remain close to our families. We like it.

But that used to be a choice. You could move out sooner if you liked (in previous generations, only men,obviously).

The problem is when you can't even plan moving out before you are forty. Even if your family is not toxic, there's a very low chance of building your own life.

* From my perspective it is not late, it is just the right time.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)


Public School Enrollment Is Declining — But Not Everywhere, or for All Students



in reply to cyborganism

I spent about a decade as a KDE developer.

KDE has this mindset where if someone wants to implement something they think is cool, and the code is clean and mostly bug free, well -- have at it! Ever wonder why there's 300 options for everything?

Usually (because there's a bunch of people trying to optimize the core for speed and load times and such) this also means that the unused code-paths are required to not contribute negatively to things like load times. So a plugin like this that doesn't get loaded by default unless enabled, and thus doesn't harm everyone else's performance. It also means that if it stops working in the future and starts to bitrot, it can be dropped without affecting the core code.

in reply to schnurrito

In my entire life (and as context my earliest experiences with a PC predate the first consumer-available apple computer) there has not been a single time where I have felt the phrase "only Apple can achieve" to be worthy of anything other than a snort.

Apple's unshakable confidence that everything they do is earth shattering is overlapping heavily with that mediocre white man saying these days.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)


Suspect arrested after shooting at Texas Target kills at least three people


A gunman opened fire outside a Target store in Austin, Texas, on Monday, killing at least three people and injuring a fourth. The suspect, who fled the scene in a stolen car, is in police custody according to local officials.

The name of the shooter has not been released, but was identified as a white 32-year-old man with a history of mental health issues, said the Austin police chief, Lisa Davis.

An investigation into what unfolded in the Target parking lot and what may have contributed to this act of violence is still underway. Mental illness by itself is not a predictor of violence and only 5% shooting deaths in the US are committed by people with mental health disabilities, according to research from Columbia University’s Department of Psychiatry.


This occurred less than two miles from me, and everyone on the Austin subreddit is clamoring for a motive.

in reply to Powderhorn

youtube.com/watch?v=VYOjWnS4cM…





Cybersecurity ā€˜red teams’ to UK government: AI is rubbish


pivottoai.libsyn.com/20250811-… - podcast
youtube.com/watch?v=r4kpW-pGuQ… - video


new academic book about the fediverse just released!!!




new academic book about the fediverse just released!!!




Trump announces another 90-day pause on China tariffs


From the surprising-absolutely-no-one dept.:

Donald Trump has once again delayed implementing sweeping tariffs on China, announcing another 90-day pause just hours before the last agreement between the world’s two largest economies was due to expire.

On Monday, Trump signed an executive order extending the deadline for higher tariffs on China until 9 November, officials confirmed to Reuters.

Chinese officials said earlier in the day they hoped the United States would strive for ā€œpositiveā€ trade outcomes on Monday, as the 90-day detente reached between the two countries in May was due to expire.

in reply to nocturne

I'd love to see him go through with it. Let's destroy the economy. His followers would love that.
in reply to Powderhorn

TACO Tuesday?...

(sorry, it's hard to read this with a straight face)




Newsom Tells Trump: There’s a Way Out of This Redistricting Battle


in reply to Sunshine (she/her)

Founders Intent was 1 congressperson per 30,000 people to comprise a district, not 700,000
It would be much harder to gerrymander smaller districts effectively 😁
in reply to Visikde

Probably, but how would the federal government work with 11,600 Representatives in the House?
in reply to delmain

I mean, can Congress function less efficiently than now?
in reply to delmain

In the UK, the backbenchers (the nobodies of Parliament) can assert a lot of power. Case in point, the revolving door of Conservative Prime Ministers. All the changes to the Conservative Prime Minister was because of the backbenchers had a lot of power to cause problems. In essence, the Conserative MPs actually did what the Westminister style of government is meant. The Prime Minister is only the Prime Minister cause they have the support of the House.

In theory, more US House Reps would be able to act as the check on the President's powers like Congress is suppose to do. The more reps they are, the harder it would be for the President to entact their agenda. Since there would be people to convince.

in reply to delmain

Could maybe ad another layer that selects a smaller group from among them.



What Trump’s Control of D.C. Police Means for the City, Its Mayor, and Black Residents





Trump seizes control of Washington DC police and deploys national guard


in reply to Powderhorn

Last time this happened, the president (of South Korea) was impeached, suspended, arrested, and charged with insurrection.

Look, I can dream, okay?

in reply to TehPers

Trump? Impeached? And convicted?

Bwahahaha ... haha haha ... haHAhaha.






Residents in Alaska's capital city prepare for possible glacial flooding



in reply to Midnitte

Signs you are in a normal, totally functional democracy...






Companies aiding Trump’s immigration crackdown see ā€˜extraordinary’ revenues


in reply to greenfire

Entirely predictable.

Every single time that a Republican administration purports to be cracking down on "wasteful spending," you can be sure of two things: that their definition of "wasteful spending" is "any spending that benefits anyone other than ourselves and our cronies and patrons," and that all they're really going to do is shift it so that it exclusively does benefit themselves and their cronies and patrons.

in reply to WatDabney

also beware when they propose to ā€˜reform’ social security, medicare, medicaid etc—the public always loses from the GOP’s efforts against such programs


A New Economy | Inside the Revolution You’re Not Hearing About


Inspirational documentary with ideas about how to become a part of your local economy


New study shows how climate change is driving wildfire season to start earlier in California


in reply to Sunshine (she/her)

The same is happening in Victoria, Australia. The scary part is they're starting to overlap at times, meaning fire-fighting resources can't be as effectively shared between the two like they have been in the past.
in reply to Sunshine (she/her)

I mean, no shit. I lived in Southern Oregon -- as in extremely so, such that we may as well have been in NorCal -- 22 years ago (god, I feel old), and things were already starting to change. By my last summer in the Rogue Valley, we all had masks, and this was years before Covid.

⇧