Alaskaball

joined 5 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 7 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

they're not colonies, they're Champagne Domains. See even Champaign agrees with the British Crown!

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 9 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

is it really imperialism when you're hellbent on introducing superior British cuisine to the rest of western Europe, and eventually central Europe?

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 9 points 2 weeks ago

that goon can put himself feet first into a meatgrinder for his fetid greaseburgers

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 5 points 2 weeks ago

The english are worth a good jab of tough love to the ribs, "Y'all" aint with jack

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 17 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)
[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 12 points 2 weeks ago

I found it funny that a random smattering of our "allied" nations got to humiliate the navy.

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 33 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

She became an unironjc Hillary lib

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 52 points 2 weeks ago (7 children)

Somebody get the contrapoints reaction seeing that her bestie is out in public again

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 19 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

To the lovely tory rat that reported my comment as "bigotry", sorry, White Anglo-Saxon Protestants don't get to play that card. Go boil your babby yed along yer mum's yams.

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 18 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

floss your limeymaw teeth with my asshair

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 47 points 2 weeks ago (6 children)

Upvotes mean jack, where's the community engagement

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 17 points 3 weeks ago

Wigs are praxis.

 

Revolutionary heroes ranging from John Brown to Kim Il-Sung are isekai'd to a fantasy world that parodies shows like 'the rising of the shield hero' to break the chains of slavery in all forms once more and liberate the fantasy workers and the peasants from the yoke of feudal oppression while hunting down so-called "heroes" summoned by the feudal lords who intend to use them as tools to preserve their power and the economic base of their feudalistic slave economy.

Show me Stalin riding a chocobo or some shit leading a calvary charge against slaver caravans!

Show me Marx, Engels, and Lenin working together in the cities inspiring the proto-proletariate to take up arms against the feudal robber-barons and their land-leechs that bleed them dry

Show me Mao, Tito, and bonus character Jan Žižka, on a rural bro-venture with the three in a competitive rivalry to see who can organize the greatest peasant rebellion between the three!

 
 
 

Link here https://x.com/sfliberty/status/1955774275433976212

Through the mountains, you'd use less steel but massive engineering resources. Around the mountains, you'd use more steel but save engineering for other projects. Both steel and engineering are desperately needed elsewhere for irrigation, trucks, harbors, thousands of other uses.

To choose wisely, you'd need to know what millions of people know. What farmers know about crop yields. What grocers know about customer demand. What truckers know about delivery capacity. What families know about the meals they want to cook tonight.

You'd need surveys of millions. By the time you processed the data, it would be obsolete. Even if people could articulate their preferences accurately, which they often can't until facing real choices. Ludwig von Mises called this "groping in the dark."

Now imagine you're not a commissar, but a railroad CEO in a market economy. Your goal isn't "the good of the nation" but profit. You calculate costs: engineering hours × price of engineering + steel tons × price of steel. You choose whatever costs less.

Here's the miracle: By choosing what's cheapest for your company, you automatically choose what's best for society. Those market prices you calculated with? They contain the knowledge and preferences of millions of people you'll never meet.

When customers want better produce, they offer grocers more. Grocers offer farmers more. Farmers offer more for irrigation. Irrigation companies offer engineers more. The price of engineering rises, signaling everyone that this resource just became more valuable.

Prices aren't just numbers. They're a distributed intelligence system that coordinates billions of decisions without anyone being in charge. No commissar needed. No surveys required. Just voluntary exchange revealing truth.

This is why socialism always fails and why markets always win. But most college students never learn this. They graduate thinking prices are arbitrary, that central planning could work "if done right."

Load of shit.

Facts don't care about your feelings, the Soviet Union objectively was better than the U.S when it came to State-ran railways.

That's not even touching China.

 
  1. Estonia🇪🇪
  2. Sweden🇸🇪
  3. Denmark🇩🇰
  4. Ireland🇮🇪
  5. New Zealand🇳🇿
  6. Belgium🇧🇪
  7. Czechia🇨🇿
  8. Switzerland🇨🇭
  9. Iceland🇮🇸
  10. Spain🇪🇸
  11. Finland🇫🇮
  12. Luxembourg🇱🇺
  13. Germany🇩🇪
  14. Norway🇳🇴
  15. Latvia🇱🇻
  16. Chile🇨🇱
  17. Taiwan🇹🇼
  18. Costa Rica🇨🇷
  19. Japan🇯🇵
  20. Uruguay🇺🇾
  21. USA🇺🇸
  22. Australia🇦🇺
  23. Lithuania🇱🇹
  24. France🇫🇷
  25. Austria🇦🇹
  26. Italy🇮🇹
  27. Netherlands🇳🇱
  28. Poland🇵🇱
  29. Canada🇨🇦
  30. Portugal🇵🇹
  31. Croatia🇭🇷
  32. Slovenia🇸🇮
  33. Panama🇵🇦
  34. UK🇬🇧
  35. Albania🇦🇱
  36. Greece🇬🇷
  37. Romania🇷🇴
  38. Slovakia🇸🇰
  39. Argentina🇦🇷
  40. Brazil🇧🇷
  41. Botswana🇧🇼
  42. South Africa🇿🇦
  43. Bulgaria🇧🇬
  44. Korea🇰🇷
  45. Hungary🇭🇺
  46. Armenia🇦🇲
  47. Honduras🇭🇳
  48. Tanzania🇹🇿
  49. Paraguay🇵🇾
  50. Israel🇮🇱
  51. Mongolia🇲🇳
  52. Peru🇵🇪
  53. Georgia🇬🇪
  54. Serbia🇷🇸
  55. Bolivia🇧🇴
  56. Nepal🇳🇵
  57. Ecuador🇪🇨
  58. Colombia🇨🇴
  59. Malaysia🇲🇾
  60. Guatemala🇬🇹
  61. Kenya🇰🇪
  62. Singapore🇸🇬
  63. Tunisia🇹🇳
  64. Indonesia🇮🇩
  65. Nigeria🇳🇬
  66. Morocco🇲🇦
  67. Hong Kong🇭🇰
  68. Mexico🇲🇽
  69. India🇮🇳
  70. Philippines🇵🇭
  71. Ukraine🇺🇦
  72. Kazakhstan🇰🇿
  73. Iraq🇮🇶
  74. El Salvador🇸🇻
  75. Bangladesh🇧🇩
  76. Thailand🇹🇭
  77. Pakistan🇵🇰
  78. Turkey🇹🇷
  79. Zimbabwe🇿🇼
  80. Qatar🇶🇦
  81. UAE🇦🇪
  82. Venezuela🇻🇪
  83. Azerbaijan🇦🇿
  84. Cuba🇨🇺
  85. Egypt🇪🇬
  86. Russia🇷🇺
  87. Iran🇮🇷
  88. Belarus🇧🇾
  89. China🇨🇳
  90. Saudi Arabia🇸🇦
  91. Syria🇸🇾
  92. Turkmenistan🇹🇲
  93. Myanmar🇲🇲
  94. Nicaragua🇳🇮
  95. Afghanistan🇦🇫
  96. North Korea🇰🇵
 

panting posting this in complete seriousness and without any alternative intentions.

The guy is simply an excellent demonstrator of medieval arts.

 

This little lady is also sitting beneath me right now but a bit earlier she hopped up onto my lap and started kneeding my lap while rubbing all over me.

I'm absurdly allergic to cats but it love every second of attention from this little friend.

Anyways I'm out here doing field research into the revolutionary potential of the people out there and I can certainly say after interviewing some of the folks I've met from the lesser antillies, it's certainly ripe for a communist party to organize an alternative to the status quo the people currently face.

Also as I was typing this an almond tree fruit fell and bonked me on the head.

 

I’d go with:

  1. Russian

  2. Mandarin

  3. Korean

  4. Spanish

  5. Ancient Sumerian as a casual own to thr archeologists.

29
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by Alaskaball@hexbear.net to c/labour@hexbear.net
 

A group of United Auto Workers members is seeking to oust President Shawn Fain ahead of an election next year, a sign of frustration among some in the two years since the labor group secured landmark contracts with U.S. automakers.

Workers at a Stellantis NV truck factory in suburban Detroit and an engine plant in southeast Michigan voted over the weekend to start the union’s process to remove its leader, said two UAW members involved with the effort. The votes join earlier ones by four other local UAW chapters, reaching the threshold needed for Fain’s opponents to bring allegations of financial mismanagement, workplace retaliation and other issues against him to the federal monitor overseeing the union for potential discipline.

Representatives for Fain and the UAW didn’t respond to requests for comment.

The move increases pressure on Fain, the bombastic labor leader who led a 2023 strike against Ford Motor Co., General Motors Co. and Stellantis that helped secure significant wage gains for workers. Fain won a close runoff earlier that year, the first direct vote by union members in the UAW’s 90-year history.

Now, ahead of the union’s next leadership elections in 2026, Fain is facing blowback from some members for layoffs at Stellantis factories, claims he retaliated against two fellow board members who disagreed with him and accusations that the union has mismanaged its funds.

“I supported Shawn, but his spending is out of control and he’s retaliatory,” David Pillsbury, a worker at GM’s Flint, Mich., truck plant who started the petition to remove Fain, said in an interview. “The transparency Shawn promised hasn’t happened.”

Although a small fraction of the UAW’s more than 600 locals, the groups seeking to oust Fain represent a vocal contingent that have been hurt by layoffs. Fain still has strong support among the legions of graduate student teaching aides who are also members of the union, said Art Wheaton, director of labor studies at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations.

The effort to remove Fain was started by two UAW members who have criticized Fain for a lack of transparency. Pillsbury and Brian Keller, a Stellantis worker who intends to run against Fain next year, plan to take their proposal next to a pair of plants in Ohio and Fain’s home plant in Kokomo, Ind., Pillsbury said.

Turnout at some locals has been small. At the Sterling Heights plant that voted over the weekend, 63 workers showed up with all but one voting to oust Fain, Pillsbury said. The plant has 6,200 employees.

If the union challenges any of the victories because of low voter turnout or for any other reason, he said he wants enough wins to maintain the six victories needed to push ahead.

Some UAW workers are angry over thousands of layoffs at Stellantis factories since the 2023 contract was ratified, moves the company took to tame inventory amid declining market share. The contract that Fain negotiated allowed Stellantis to fire hundreds of temporary workers, and it has since been replacing them with part-time summer employees, said Eric Graham, president of UAW Local 140.

“They told the people that ‘this is the best contract ever,’ and it was — incentive-wise,” said Graham, who represents workers at a Stellantis assembly plant in Warren, Michigan, where more than 1,500 people are currently laid off. “But when you pressure the company the way they did and make the company spend money they didn’t want to spend,” it puts jobs at risk, he said.

Five of the six locals that voted to begin removal proceedings represent employees of the Jeep maker, where Fain worked as an electrician before moving up the ranks of UAW administration.

Dissent over Fain’s leadership also centers on his decision to strip duties from two of the union’s elected vice presidents. There were about 1,900 UAW members still on layoff at the end of July, a Stellantis spokeswoman said.

Fain retaliated against UAW Treasurer-Secretary Margaret Mock after she refused to approve certain expenses, according to a report by Neil Barofsky, the federal monitor appointed by the Justice Department to oversee UAW governance after two past presidents were convicted on corruption charges.

After the monitor issued that report, Fain and 10 other board members shot back in a letter saying Mock had obstructed funding for critical organizing efforts. They also blamed the financial management issues on her, saying the monitor is looking into management of union investments during her tenure as treasurer.

The monitor is also probing similar allegations made by the other vice president, Rich Boyer, who was the UAW’s chief negotiator with Stellantis before Fain removed him from the union’s Stellantis department.

 
22
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by Alaskaball@hexbear.net to c/main@hexbear.net
 

Context: go watch some really normal gamers play and see how many of them do this.

Also I mean normal normal. Not the gamers that say heated gamer words every other word in a sentence.

 
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