foyrkopp
@foyrkopp@lemmy.world
- Comment on [deleted] 10 months ago:
This isn’t about guys’n’gals.
This is simpky about how people work:
If your peers have an opinion (any opinion), their expectation is that you share that opinion
You can demonstrate solidarity by agreeing - this is virtually always the safe option.
You can demonstrate backbone by disagreeing - this can generate respect or animosity.
You can refuse to weigh in - this tends can go either way.
How it actual shakes out in reality will depend on a myriad of factors, many of which you’re not even consciously aware of.
Thus, this random internet stranger can give you only three pieces of advice:
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Trust your instincts on how to handle this. Your subconscious is very well wired to navigate social situations as best as possible.
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If you ever change your opinion or “change your opinion”, announce it clearly and give/make up a reason. People disrespect people who are inconsistent, but they respect people who can admit to mistakes / learn.
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Sometimes, you can’t win. Sometimes, someone will be pissed off, no matter what you do. It’s no fault of yours, some situations are just not salvageable to begin with.
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- Comment on Where do guns go when people are done using them? 1 year ago:
I had something vaguely similar happen to me.
We got called out of the line for a manual luggage inspection because, as a surprisingly bored security agent informed us, X-ray showed a knife of about a foot length in our luggage.
We had no idea what they were talking about.
We were half-way through unpacking the whole pack when my SO lit up and asked “could it be my ice skates?”
Agent took a look at the X-ray, nods, and lets us pack it back up without any further checking.
Overall, turned out harmlessly, but the sheer confusion of where that supposed knife had come from, combined with how blasé that security person was about the whole affair from start to finish stuck in my mind.
- Comment on What makes a bicycle so expensive? 1 year ago:
I’m fairly certain that’s the same area where wild hogs no longer find enough food in the wild and are currently enthusiastically reclaiming said golf courses.
I, for one, am rooting for the four-legged pigs on this one.
- Comment on Don't forget to tip 1 year ago:
I’m aware.
I just didn’t want to go into detail with this particular can of worms.
- Comment on What kind of upbringing makes an incel? 1 year ago:
Hypothesis: what matters here is a social toolbox for engaging with “attractive”/compatible women in a non-romantic/sexual way.
I.e. someone who, even as a teenager, had lots of female friends, is likely to have a learned how to deal with them beyond “I’d like to hit that”, but just as persons.
(Paradoxically, such a person is more likely to find a romantic partner, because they might have lots of M-F acquaintances/friendships that can potentially become something more.)
Someone who never learned that can only interact with (to them) attractive women through the lens of “I’d like to hit that”, which has a much higher risk of ending in failure.
If someone in the second category was always raised on the values of romantic success being a requirement for a non-failed life, and possibly with a touch of chauvinism/misogyny, they might wind up caught up in a frustrating loop of failure.
This is how incels can happen.
- Comment on Don't forget to tip 1 year ago:
A landlord and their tenant(s) are at a natural conflict of interest to begin with.
Also, for most tenants, the rising costs for many goods and services associated to housing are bundled into rent, so to them, it’s their landlord who’s jacking up prices and being frugal with repairs etc.
Next, the term “landlords” encompasses not only uncle Mike who invested his life savings in two apartments to secure his retirement, but also the millionaire who owns a dozen houses and the middle manager who doesn’t even own the units they’re managing but has to represent a large company.
So landlords make for easy targets of frustration to begin with.
A LL who is, on top of that, intent on not only covering costs (including their own), but wants to
create generational wealthget rich(er) quickly, will have to squeeze their tenants more.Remember: wealth isn’t created. It’s extracted.
(Yes, there’s wells of money somewhere in the realms of credits and banking, but my LL isn’t being paid by a bank. They’re being paid by me.)