• 7 Posts
  • 165 Comments
Joined 30 days ago
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Cake day: December 10th, 2025

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  • Doesn’t twitter force you to make an account to see posts?

    No… I don’t think I could have taken a glance at his twitter/x page. I don’t have an account. Every time someone tries to show me something from twitter I just get the login page. I’m not going to go through the trouble of making a sockpuppet account just because you gave me a chore I clearly don’t care about. If you need me to see it so badly you can take a screenshot. You’re the one who cares about this guy so talking about him is 100% your responsibility. If you want me to care about him too, that’s on you to accomplish, because I don’t care about him naturally.

    If you’re the person who states a fact it’s up to you to prove it, it’s not up to your listener, who btw isn’t going to care until you give them a reason to care. You are a stranger and we don’t have a built in social contract so I have even less motivation to do something in order to please you than I would if we actually knew each other.

    I tried to click on your link but it took me to something called X cancel, which I navigated away from. Thanks for sending me a phishing link instead of a screenshot, now I’ve got to go change my passwords.




  • I don’t agree with calling people “selfish” in this sense.

    Imagine that you have ZERO connection to anyone other than your blood relatives in any material way. If you were literally dying on the street, anyone who wasn’t a direct blood relative would literally step over you while you were dying. Everyone who isn’t your literal best friend or your mom is rude or apathetic towards you.

    In this circumstance, what material motivation do you have to show solidarity to anyone other than yourself and your first degree blood relatives? Please don’t give me an emotional argument, I want a material one. “It’s the right thing” or “because humanity” or “because Heaven” isn’t going to cut it here.






  • I’ve learned that it all starts with the phone, and the internet router. The phone is essentially a little computer that people use as a wallet. Phone number is connected to almost everything people do. If someone has a smartphone they should update it every 5-8 years, even if they don’t use online banking.

    Personally, if I didn’t want to buy a smartphone I’d just get a fliphone. Those are like $15, $20. You can afford to buy one of those every 8 years. Tracfone sim cards are essentially disposable so it’s possible to use a phone number to create an account and then discard it if needed, or keep it active indefinitely. When I used Tracfone, I’d pay by the minute or by the text, and the time would last until used. I’d pay $20 once and get say 60 minutes of talk and however many texts. At the time I communicated mostly on messaging apps so I’d use the phone number for things I’d need a phone number for, like the doctor. The smartphones are like $40-$100.

    I wouldn’t use fake identities for e-commerce but rather I’d choose a trusted e-commerce platform, use a fake email and phone number because they now demand both but use your real name and address. I don’t know how you’re getting things on e-commerce using an alias, because they need to be able to send you the thing you bought. There’s a service called Hushed, requires a tablet or phone, which sells phone numbers in packs of 1-3. 3 pack of phone numbers is $15, so you could have a phone number for personal use, a phone number for work, a phone number for e-commerce. There’s also MySudo, which sells 9 pack of email/phone number aliases for $15. With Hushed it’s possible to login on other devices but MySudo is device encrypted and requires a QR code to sync a limted number of devices.

    If you’re interested in investing, want to use a mobile device for some reason but don’t want a phone, you should get a fliphone and a tablet instead of using a smartphone. A lot of smartphone apps, including those for online banking or trading, are also on the tablet. Tablets are a lot more advanced today than 5 years ago, and they’re more like ‘lite’ computers, but they have the same smartphone apps a lot of the time. But, you’d have to feel comfortable spending $200-$800 every 8 years on a tablet instead of a phone.