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Yup.
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Vomiting It All Up
25 Things Your Dog Would Say To You Every Day If They Could Talk
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Just Sayin’
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Fuck Republicans
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Who’s With Me?
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Europeans Explain Which Everyday American Things Seem Like A Luxury
Every country has its high points and low points, and in the last couple of years, many Americans have had a lot of negative things to say about their home country.
But from the outside looking in, there are many features of living in the United States that residents view as ordinary, everyday things that people from other counties view as a literal luxury standard.
Curious, Redditor Prof_XdR asked:
“Europeans of Reddit, what do Americans have every day that you see as a luxury?”
Disability Access, Period.
“Disability access everywhere. I can go to any place (the theatre, store, office, school, whatever) with confidence that I’ll be able to navigate fine in my wheelchair, because they’ll have ramps or elevators.” – 5AgainstRhodeIsland
“Of all the things in this thread, the disability access is it. The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 was an absolute game changer and European countries and the EU as a whole should be embarrassed for not having something like it.” – jedrekk
Climate Variety
“You can pretty much choose to live in any climate you like when you live in the USA and still be in the same country. You like four seasons, move to the Northeast. You like humid ocean climate, move to Seattle. You like dry warm weather, move to Los Angeles. You like deserts, move to Arizona. You like warm and humid weather, move to the Southeast. As a German who loves warm weather, I am always jealous because of those options. If I wanted to try to move somewhere warm, I would have to move to a new country and learn Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, French, Greek, or other southern European languages.” – DaucauPrince
Wide, Open Spaces
“Space. America is f**king enormous.” – fullspectrumdev
“Once, on Tumblr, there was a post that went around talking about the differences between American horror stories and European horror stories, and how a lot of European horror stories have a fundamental element of something being very, very old. This led to a discussion about how America has no places like that (which is completely incorrect considering we have very old indigenous communities and structures spanning from Canada to the southernmost tip of South America, but still), and someone made the distinction between the two horror styles that you see a lot: Europe is scary because it’s old, and the United States is scary because it’s huge. Just truly vast expanses of land, a lot of it fairly empty. As someone who has taken Greyhounds from the great plains to the east coast many times, it really hits you when you’re driving through the midwest and there’s just nothing at all beyond farmland.” – rayballesta
Large Refrigerators
“Big kitchens and big refrigerators/ freezers. Even in my student apartment, we had a pretty good-sized kitchen. I was dating a Czech girl and her parents came to visit. When they went to my apartment for dinner, the mom was just amazed at the size of my fridge. They were also amused when I dumped the scraps in the sink and turned on the garbage disposal. They’d heard about it but had never seen one – Granadafan
Garden Space
“Backyards. I’d plant so many vegetables.” – Lanky-Truck6409
Free Refills
“Free refills.” – meeehhhhhh
“While traveling with a friend, he was determined to get a refill at a restaurant while we were getting lunch. He also didn’t speak Spanish and thought he could smile and get his way. He took his cup to the register, placed it in front of the employee, and smiled. The employee had a confused look but proceeded to take his cup and then toss it in the trash for him.” – _skot
The 3:00 AM Walks
“There used to be 24-hour stores and restaurants. That went away with the pandemic.” – MikeDunleavySuperFan
“Walmarts closing at 11:00 PM now is just bonkers to me. I miss my 3:00 AM trips.” – glovato1
“Kids these days will never understand the joy of walking around aimlessly at Walmart at 2:00 AM.” – Heatdish1292
“Walking aimlessly around superstores sounds like a very American type of luxury indeed.” – escfantasy
Nature Park Culture
“I’m a Canadian who just returned from a trip visiting Grand Canyon, Zion, and Vegas. Our last few trips were in Europe. As mentioned elsewhere, drink refills and plentiful bathrooms (clean too!) were a nice change. The American National Parks System just blows all others out of the water, including Canada’s. I’m especially embarrassed about BC’s Provincial Parks. People love to complain that tourists are gross but the American Parks were just as busy but actually had maintained facilities and people who, you know, work to maintain the parks. I didn’t see any toilet paper on any of the trails in the US; meanwhile, I have PTSD from Garibaldi trails last summer.” – Binknbink
“The American Southwest is absolutely ridiculous as far as natural beauty is concerned. Bryce, Arches, Zion, and Grand Canyon NPs are all super close together and are individually worth making a trip for.” – ColonelAverage
Air Conditioner Use
“Air conditioning. Americans pump it all summer long.” – websurfer49
“Our AC went out for a day in Phoenix in the middle of July when it was 120 out. The house was 90 by 11:00 AM. F**k that, haha. Arizona actually has laws for tenants that require AC depending on the temperature since it can get so hot.” – ThatSpecialAgent
A Positive Relationship
“Remember, the world’s longest undefended border is between Canada and the United States. That says something about our relationship.” – Dervishler
“Every summer, I like to go to Voyageurs National Park which shares border lakes with Canada. If someone is with us for the first time, I always ask them while we heading up the lake if they would like to go to Canada. They always say sure. So I turn the boat to the right and say welcome to Canada. It’s Dad-level humor, but I enjoy it.” – Goldie1976
Helpful Home Features
“Spacious hallways and corridors and homes in general, dedicated laundry rooms (not a washing machine in the kitchen), apartment complex pools, and the regular washing of the windows of high-rise buildings (it’s infrequent in Europe).” – petrastales
“We also have these crazy-a** things on our windows so we can open them without letting all the bugs in.” – DontForgetYourPPE
Features in American Schools
“Huge schools with labs and gyms and theaters.” – PckMan
“As a rural Canadian, I grew up watching American TV and was always seething with jealousy about American schools on TV. There were 300 kids in my high school, and I was related to a bunch of them, so I was especially jealous that Americans could sign up for the school play and meet a teenage heartthrob. We didn’t have a school play… or a theatre. Or band. Or football. No swimming pool. No art classes.” – Crow_away_cawcaw
No Purchase Necessary
“Free use of bathrooms.” – New_Midnight6134
“As an America who lived in Europe with little kids, this was frustrating. My wife found an app of free public restrooms in Europe.” – QuotidianPain
The Price of Gas (Yes, Really)
“American here visiting Germany right now. I’m gonna go out on a limb and say fuel cost. The station down the road here sells petrol for 1.75 Euro/Liter, that’s about $7.20/gallon if my math is correct. For comparison, I’m from Phoenix, Arizona, and just paid $2.85 per gallon last week, which is about 0.75 Euro/Liter. Gas is even cheaper than that in the Midwest US.” – xsvspd81
“I’m Canadian so we have a lot in common with the US in terms of nature and appliances and AC and many other things on this list, but one thing I’m always jealous of the US for is gas! It’s so much more expensive here (which is ridiculous because Canada produces a ton of oil but that’s another conversation).” – aweirdoatbest
Gratitude All the Way
“American here who has always envied European culture (slower pace, less capitalistic, more relationship-oriented than career), and this thread made me feel grateful. I love my kitchen, my washer and dryer, my college/sorority experience, my AC, my access to National Parks, and my two-day Amazon delivery. I still hate my healthcare, though, lol (laughing out loud).” – Aggressive-Flan-7226
As much as there is to complain about the United States, like the cost of healthcare and often lack of maternity leave, there’s also a lot to be grateful for that’s difficult to experience anywhere else.
[source]
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A Reminder…
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I Don’t Think There’s Been a Conjual Visit in YEARS…
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Karma In Action
The video was taken from surveillance cameras. Three girls on the Paris metro were exposed to “harassment” (group sexual assault), which is a common crime in Paris by some young men to lure girls into these places… but unfortunately for them, the girls who were attacked this time were from the special paratroopers squad. In the French army… and well trained!
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No Lie Detected
A Little History…And A Warning
From Still Godless:
In the immense social upheaval following World War I, Berlin emerged as the global hub for gay life and gay art. In 1921, Berlin was home to 40 documented meeting places for gay people. By 1925, that number had jumped to 80.
Cheif among these hotspots was the cabaret Eldorado, whose drag pageants and performances were immortalized by the likes of artists such as Otto Dix. In 2023, Netflix released a documentary about the club, Eldorado: Everything the Nazis Hate.
At the center of the movement for gay rights was Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld and his Institut für Sexualwissenschaft.
Ins 1896 Hirschfeld was operating as a regular physician, when he received a note from a soldier who was engaged to be married. The soldier was suicidally depressed because he could not get over his attraction to men, and was desperate to be cured of it. Being gay himself, Hirschfeld related tremendously to the soldier, and was spurred begin studying homosexuality in a scientific manner.
He was led to the conclusion that homosexuality was a natural occurrence that happened the world over. More importantly, he argued that homosexuality was not immoral and that homosexuals should be free to live and love as they pleased.
Hirschfeld was also the first scientist to recognize and study what we’d call transgenderism today, and was the person who coined the term “transvestite.”
(Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld, 2nd from right)
Das Institut acted as both a medical clinic and a center of education. Members of the public could come and be informed on the mechanics of how sex worked as well as receiving non-judgemental medical care for STIs and other sexual conditions. Women could receive information about safe abortion. It was also one of the first places where trans people could come and receive hormone treatment and information about gender-reassignment surgery.
Then, in 1933, with the appointment of Adolf Hitler as chancellor, everything changed.
Queer lives were officially deemed not worth living, and public queer places became the chief target of Nazi persecution. The voluminous libraries of Das Institut were raided and then burned, destroying so much early queer history and science that was irreplaceable.
Dr. Hirschfeld managed to escape Germany and died in France in 1935. Queer people who were not lucky enough to leave to the country were arrested and sent to die in concentration camps.
The lessons of Weimar Berlin are painfully pertinent today. Progress can be destroyed faster than it gets made. Rights are not guaranteed and must always be fought for. The past cannot be allowed to happen again.
By which I mean, for the love of all that is holy, if you want to continue to have any rights at all, pleasepleaseplease vote for Joe Biden on November 5th. Don’t not vote in protest. Don’t vote 3rd party. If Donald Trump is re-elected this WILL happen again. Just imagine your favorite local queer hang-out being shut down with “Make America Great Again” signs in the window, and vote to stop it.
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Fuck Trump And Fuck The GOP
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Ain’t That The Truth!
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Words of Encouragement
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Audio Pr0n


I’m happy to see some of these classic manufacturers getting back to their roots. Marantz, Technics, and Yamaha all come to mind.
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Sunday Sacrilege
366 Days of UNF: January 21st
Oops!
From Shitposting4Satan:
All jokes aside, I think there’s reasonable evidence that the “Rapture” may have already happened.
Here’s my points…
The Covid pandemic would have been the perfect time for hundreds of thousands of people to vanish and nobody notice. I mean we couldn’t even attend funerals.
Also in the Bible, Christians’ favorite book they never read, Jesus warns repeatedly and clearly that LOTS of people will THINK they’Il make it into heaven and be in for a rude surprise (the parable of the sheep and the goats in Matthew, for example).
But wait, there’s more.
The Bible says that Jesus will return “like a thief in the night.”
And here’s something I’ve been wondering about. Why do Christians think this means it will be a sudden and cataclysmic event? A thief in the night doesn’t surprise you, that’s the whole point, he’s sneaky and steals your shit while you’re sleeping and you don’t notice. So maybe it REALLY means “the Rapture will happen and nobody will notice, at least not right away.”
“But won’t people notice a billion or so people suddenly vanishing from the Earth in an instant?” You might ask.
To which I point out Jesus’ constant warnings that not everyone will make it into heaven. The sheep and the goats, narrow is the way, etc.
So why do we assume BILLIONS of Christians will go to heaven? Maybe the number will be a LOT smaller. Like so small that during the chaos of a global pandemic, it goes unnoticed.
Several Christian sects believe that only 144,000 people will make it into heaven, based on that number in the Bible. Most mainstream sects claim it’s a metaphorical figure and not to be taken literally. But it’s food for thought.
And of course, this would cause a problem, because who would be there to tell everyone after the Rapture happened?
Could it be, I don’t know…
Someone like me, a former hardcore Christian and missionary, who left his faith?
This would also explain why Christians are such hate-filled assholes today. The few actually Christ-like ones among them were already raptured, leaving the assholes behind.
And we all know how obsessed Christians are with the end times, Mark of the Beast, the Rapture happening at any moment, blah blah blah. Maybe they’re right, but they’re so close to the obvious truth that they’ve missed the forest for the trees: The Rapture already happened, and you guys got left behind with us godless heathens.
Now you might say. You’re a Satanist shitposting memes on Insta. Why should I believe you?
Well in the Bible, God made a donkey speak to a prophet because he was being too stubborn to listen.
I only wish I was hung like a horse, but maybe I’m that donkey.
You’re welcome, and God bless!
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THIS.
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Truth
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Right?!
???? ???? ????
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It’s CGI, But I’d Still Live There
Further Adventures of an Aging Audiophile
So…I did a thing today. ???? And yes…when all was said and done, IT LIVES! (Color me surprised!)
When I got this 1200MK2 turntable a couple years ago, it came wired with a European electrical plug with a US adapter tacked on. Being the anal-retentive bitch that I am, that wouldn’t do. So I ordered a US cord (basically a meter-long extension cord that I cut the end off of) and replaced it. Sadly, I failed to take into account how much of the cable was actually inside the turntable, and the resulting length of the cord was much less than I would’ve liked, making it difficult to plug into my power strip.
When I pulled the entertainment center out from the wall a couple weeks ago to do some long-overdue cable maintenance, I decided it was time to do something about it. Despite my soldering skills being that of a six-year-old, I felt it was necessary to dive back into the guts of the machine and make this right.
While perusing YouTube later that day, I happened across a video that showed how replace the power cord with a socketed version and another that showed how to install an adapter that allowed you to use any signal cables instead of the mediocre OEM ones that came with the turntable.
I conferred with my friend John (an expert on Technics turntables), showed him the video, and verified he thought this was something I could do myself. (It wasn’t rocket science, but with my soldering skills I was naturally nervous.)
Two weeks and about $85 (not counting shipping) later, I had the parts.
The process was surprisingly simple, even with my abilities. (TBH I’ve seen a lot of electronics repair videos since I initially swapped the power cord on this table so I now knew what mistakes to avoid.) In total, both swaps took about 45 minutes; a lot of that time being taken up with disassembly and reassembly of the table itself. And dare I say it, the new audio cables (nothing special; the same cables I have connecting everything else in my system) I bought for this project actually do improve the sound. (I never thought I’d find myself saying that cables improve sound, but here we are…)
If you’ve got a SL-1200/1210 MK2/3/4/5 (basically anything prior to the MK7) and hate the original Technics cables, this is a surprisingly easy and recommended project. You can order yours here.
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Just Sayin’
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