Delvin4519
@Delvin4519@lemmy.world
Boston area weather and transit, maybe, but probably mostly just nonsense talk.
Had to block a bunch of communities to detoxify the homepage
- Submitted 1 week ago to greentext@sh.itjust.works | 64 comments
- Comment on How much of a risk is it for naturalized US Citizens (or those with Derivative Citizenship) to protest against the US government, compared to natural-born US Citizens? 1 week ago:
and part of an at-risk group - and there are many
Are there any other “at risk groups” that may likely be targeted but are not commonly talked about or targeted at the moment? I know trans, non male/female, green card residents, and naturalized citizens are some of the most at risk groups.
Cheeto has blamed aspergers/autism on vaccinations (?), so I’m not too sure yet whether cheeto plans to go after disabled/neurodiverse/aspergers people next. I have already seen “disabilities” and “disability” on the “banned words” list in the New York Times article about “banned words” at agencies in Washington.
I suspect that if the PRC goes after Taiwan, then that may put any ethnic Chinese in the U.S. into an at risk group.
The problem is that I’m not sure the latter I mentioned qualify for political asylum just yet, aside from the former that are targeted at the moment.
Which at risk groups should plan to leave right now aside from the most obvious?
- Comment on How much of a risk is it for naturalized US Citizens (or those with Derivative Citizenship) to protest against the US government, compared to natural-born US Citizens? 1 week ago:
Yeah, it’s pretty dire. Those aformentioned countries are the only places in which to go where learning a new language isn’t necessary to get permanent citizenship.
To get permanent citizenship in any other country generally requires fluency in the native local language is pretty much all cases.
Even with Canada, since I didn’t take French in middle or high school, that means Quebec is pretty much off the table for me, unless I go through the hassle of learning French as an adult.
Even if Canada could have a threat of invasion from the south, I do not think it would likely succeed, as there are at least 5 border states that are blue/democrat, and Canada would likely get help from other countries. Perhaps Mexico may start a second front from the south siding with Canada, so that there’s 2 fronts to deal with? Canada does have the city of Edmonton located pretty far from the US border, so it is not required to live adjacent to the US border in Canada. I would say that fleeing to Canada is about the same risk as fleeing to Finland or Estonia, and the latter two are in the EU.
- Comment on How much of a risk is it for naturalized US Citizens (or those with Derivative Citizenship) to protest against the US government, compared to natural-born US Citizens? 1 week ago:
Australia and NZ also exist, those countries are likely fine in that no major global trade routes go through there (unlike the Arctic), so that mitigates the risk of war over there. Those I’ve read somewhere on r/IWantOut that some countries like Australia have a list of medical conditions that would mean one is not allowed to emigrate there.
England/the UK I haven’t read much, but that’s about as far as one can go, aside from Canada; to go elsewhere means learning a new language is outright required
I’m in a similar position as OP, and trying to leave with someone else would be even more trickier. Even Canada is very limited in how many family members/friends/relatives that one can sponsor or emigrate with.
I just hope any one country will start allowing asylum seekers to get out before it’s too late, but I won’t hold my breath given that everywhere in the developed world seems to have a housing crisis all at once.
- Submitted 2 weeks ago to greentext@sh.itjust.works | 14 comments
- Comment on Is it a common thing for people who have left authoritarian countries to still feel the fear of their now-former country? 2 weeks ago:
Canada clamped down on immigration several years ago, so that option seems, mostly difficult at best if at all. Not sure about Australia and NZ either.
By the time the world allows those who want to leave the hellscape for elsewhere, it’s almost certainly going to be too late and much worse off :(.
- Submitted 5 weeks ago to greentext@sh.itjust.works | 32 comments
- Submitted 5 weeks ago to greentext@sh.itjust.works | 15 comments
- Comment on How to mute posts containing certain keywords on Lemmy? 1 month ago:
I did this on mobile, but I would do it all twice to mute it on both mobile on desktop. It’s one of those UX things that’s gonna make it hard to get new users onboard Lemmy, unless the UX can be improved to allow muting words directly within Lemmy and storing the list by Lemmy account.
I wish at the very least, Voyager allowed one to export the muted words list to a file and import the file, which could mitigate some of the hassle. On Mastodon, I have like 75 muted words covering news and politics, so muting them all is just painstakingly time consuming, and then updating the list twice as I come up with new words that need muting/blocking.
- Submitted 1 month ago to greentext@sh.itjust.works | 27 comments
- Submitted 1 month ago to [deleted] | 20 comments