• Mario_Dies.wav@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 months ago

      One thing I’ve learned living in a conservative state in the US is that everything is my fault by proxy

      I should just be rich enough to move, how hard can it be

        • Mario_Dies.wav@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          10 months ago

          “We should just build a wall around your state and force it to secede. All the LGBT+ and POC should relocate immediately because it’s not safe to live there.”

          “What about all the people who can’t afford to move? What about all the people living on tribal land?”

          “Oh, them? Hmmm. They should move, too. Again.”

          The fact is, right-wing extremism shouldn’t be tolerated anywhere. Putting all the fascists “on an island” doesn’t fix anything because there will always be children and other people who never asked to be there, yet have to suffer.

      • uis@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Huh. Welcome to “you should have been rich adult” club. I’m not alone in such shit.

      • GhostFence@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Stop being poor, dang it!

        20 minutes into the future: “Poverty comes from poor character”.

        Also look up “prosperity gospel”. Clive Barker has nothing on that.

      • hdnsmbt@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        How do all those immigrants move, though? Are they all secretly rich? Or are you, in fact, just comfortable enough not to want to move?

        • Holzkohlen@feddit.de
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          10 months ago

          Are you comparing fleeing from war and poverty to moving to some other state because you care about abortions being available?

          • Mario_Dies.wav@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            10 months ago

            He’s not talking in good faith. I’m married to a first-gen immigrant from Mexico. I can tell you how “they” move. Unless they’re rich out the gate, in which case there’s a completely different process, they save up money for years, ask for money from relatives, live in extreme discomfort, and then eventually are able to move.

            Once established, it’s not like “they” can pick up at any time and relocate. Now they’re trapped in three or four jobs working the entire day, with still barely enough money for rent and food.

            Eventually, some of “them” might be fortunate enough to be able to afford the massive investment of time and money for residency and maybe even citizenship.

            Maybe even some of “them” will fall in love and get married and start a beautiful life together.

            But maybe “they” and even their spouse have misfortune. Healthcare can totally collapse you. Maybe “they” and their spouse save up money for years, but it’s never enough. “They” have got PTSD from their prior life experiences, and their spouse develops health problems. Neither of them want these things to happen, but one ends up in and out of psych wards and psychiatrists’ offices, and the other ends up shitting himself for more than five years, finally after thousands and thousands of dollars discovers he has celiac, but has also fucked other things up in the meantime by developing addiction to alcohol and opiods, which are so easy to become addicted to in this society. So their big plans to move to the big city keep falling through. “They” might lie awake at night feeling tremendous guilt about this, on top of everything else, even though it’s not “their” fault.

            That’s how “they” move, and that’s how many of “them” might not be able to just fucking relocate like some privileged neckbeard from lemmy.world suggests.

            I know many other immigrants and refugees. I know many similar cases.

            TL;DR “They” are the same as “us”

            • hdnsmbt@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              What did I say for you to badmouth me here, exactly? And why do you keep putting “they” in quotes? I can tell you’re waiting for some big gotcha moment. What is it?

          • hdnsmbt@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Yes. One is more uncomfortable than the other. I believe you already understand that.

        • Mario_Dies.wav@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          10 months ago

          They don’t move, either. I’m married to a first-gen immigrant. Getting here is a massive undertaking, but then?

          And what do you mean, all “those” immigrants?

          • hdnsmbt@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            They move at least once in order to be immigrants, from their home country to the foreign country they now live in.

            I mean literally every single immigrant because that’s the definition of an immigrant.

      • The Octonaut@mander.xyz
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        10 months ago

        rich enough to move

        Just so we’re clear, you’re simultaneously too rich to move (like a Guatemalan farmer) and too poor to move (like a IT graduate)?

          • The Octonaut@mander.xyz
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            10 months ago

            To make it abundantly clear, for most people on earth, and for most of human history, being poor was and is not a blocker to moving. In fact it’s a great enabler. Comfortable middle income people don’t move.

      • Ross_audio@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Time to start the rejoin in only another 10 years or so I think. We’ll be voting on single market membership again before the decade is out I think.

        • tobbue@discuss.tchncs.de
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          10 months ago

          It’s incredible how that decision fucked the country for decades. One of the best examples why “direct democracy” does not guarantee good decisions just because it was the people’s choice.

          • Ross_audio@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            It wasn’t direct democracy though.

            No member of the public ever voted on the legislation.

            If the legislation has been put to the public and the referendum bound it to law I think it would have gone differently.

            The vote relied people voting for their own version of Brexit vs. the status quo.

            I’m not a fan of direct democracy by any means but Brexit isn’t an example of it.

            • tobbue@discuss.tchncs.de
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              10 months ago

              Ah, okay, so the referendum was just more like a consultation whether brexit should happen, but the badly done legislation came afterwards (which people probably wouldn’t have voted for)?

              • Ross_audio@lemmy.world
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                10 months ago

                Exactly.

                People were simultaneously told different things by different people on what would happen of the country voted leave. A lot of it obviously false even at the time.

                People might have known what they were voting for. But what they were voting for had no basis on what the government would actually do.

                Then we had the prime minister who held the referendum resign.

                A new prime minister is chosen in a private election amongst members of the conservative party (about 100,000 votes will do it normally but no one actually runs against them). This becomes a theme.

                There is legislation passed which essentially puts a clock on the process. If nothing passes we’d just revoke laws and break treaties.

                This was meant to scare the EU into giving us what we wanted. The EU was not overly concerned.

                The government put some very shoddy legislation together. We got a pretty poor deal from the EU, well we were pretty desperate.

                The government couldn’t pass that legislation

                We had an election for a new government

                The government lost seats and lost their majority

                The government then joined with a religious extremist party in Northern Ireland to give them a majority.

                The shoddy legislation becomes not only shoddy but also more extreme, It still can’t pass.

                The prime minister is ousted by their own party.

                We get a new prime minister.

                They still haven’t decided on the legislation but they tell everyone what they want to hear.

                We have an election

                The government gets a big working majority

                The shoddy extreme legislation, which we now know from first hand accounts the prime minister didn’t understand, still can’t pass.

                The government literally breaks the law and closes parliament illegally to try and run the clock closer to the point where we take a bonfire to massive ammous of legislation.

                The government are then forced back into the house by the courts

                Eventually at the last moment a deal is passed. It’s really bad for the UK economy, and the UK in general.

                The UK leaves the EU. Northern Ireland doesn’t. Well it sort of does.

                COVID and Another 2 prime ministers later and Brexit deals are still being negotiated.

                Essentially he EU has everything it needs. It’s protected the interests of bordering nations like the Republic of Ireland and France. The UK has increased friction on trade, labour issues.

                The current big issue is that France no longer helps us stop people crossing the channel. That was an EU agreement. So our government, now spends it’s time and energy trying to deport people to Rwanda, breaking the entirely separate European Convention on Human Rights Churchill’s government basically wrote and passed after the second world war.

                It’s worth noting that this government has had a vote share of 36.1% pre referendum in 2015 36.9% post referendum in 2017 42.4% post deadlock in 2019 (with the opposition getting 40%)

                The conservative party got that lock in 2019 on 55% of the seats with 42.4% of the vote

                Since then they’ve rotated people in and out of government to essentially do the bidding of the one who pays the most into their individual campaign funds against each other.

                The government refuse to allow an election even while they’re essentially changing constantly.

                We haven’t really got democracy in this country. We disenfranchise a lot of people through our electoral system by design. We concentrate power to a minority.

                It’s a mess.

                • CAVOK@lemmy.world
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                  10 months ago

                  Brexit

                  To be fair to the French, they do try to stop the boats. For example: https://www.thelocal.fr/20230902/tighter-french-coast-patrols-in-place-to-stop-channel-migrants

                  However what went missing after Brexit was the Dublin convention where migrants could be turned back to the first EU country they entered, in this case France.

                  I think the government tried to negotiate a returns agreement with the french who basically just said “Non!” and that was it. There is a deal where the UK pays France to patrol their coastline and stop migrants however. I’m sure someone will correct me if I’m wrong about this last part.

      • RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Okay, but it was only finalized in 2020. That’s probably why it feels like it hasn’t been that long.

      • Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        “You haven’t had a date since Brexit” was a funny burn I ehard once I remembered how long ago that was.

      • dubyakay@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        Just shows that an eight year old iPhone is still reliable today, receives updates and the approved apps work perfectly fine on it!

          • dubyakay@lemmy.ca
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            10 months ago

            Naw. The oldest supported model by IOS 17 is the XS/XR line from 2018 September. So only about 5.5 years.

            However an X/XR/XS should still work very well today, maybe after a battery swap about three years in to keep a 80%+ capacity.

    • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 months ago

      I meant this comment more in regards to your lovely voting peers in the country you have to reside in.

      Wish you best of luck rejoining the EU!