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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
mutant-aesthetic

Blink twice if you’re OK

big-block-of-cheese-day

Re: http://afloweroutofstone.tumblr.com/post/164602028137/id-like-to-thank-everyone-who-provided-me-with

Am I crazy, or do post-pile-on, post-death-threat “I’m so so so sorry and promise to make myself as small as possible and defer to my betters” posts sometimes sound like the statements they make hostages read in front of the cameras?

isaacsapphire

A bit. Hadn’t realized before this that the OP had blocked me, had to do my usual work around to see if they’d deleted or blocked.

mutant-aesthetic

Honestly, these sort of gushing “I’m sorry for not being sufficiently woke” posts gives me some degree of schadenfreude, though it is a little bit sad that people seem to be afraid to take the Michael Tracey/Fredrick DeBoer route in terms of not backing down in the face of public pressure.

mitigatedchaos

Is it really the correct route?  I’m unsure.

Maybe the correct route is to bow and scrape, wait several months, then go back to doing exactly what you were doing before.

Source: big-block-of-cheese-day politics the culture war
kontextmaschine
kontextmaschine

In retrospect, it looks like Mic’s commitment to social justice was never that deep — which surprised and disappointed many of the young ideologues who went to work there. (The Outline spoke to 17 current and former staffers who requested anonymity due to nondisclosure agreements.) Mic chanced upon the social justice narrative, discovered it was Facebook gold, and mined away. Now the quarry is nearly dry.

trained-chimpanzee

whoever drank that particular flavour of neoliberal koolaid deserved it 

association-of-free-people

Oddly I haven’t missed them.  Hell, I didn’t even notice their absence.  

sadoeconomist

I noticed they were gone because Mic actually had me blocked here

Every so often I’d try to comment on some long discussion and I couldn’t because the OP was a shitty Mic article

association-of-free-people

I was blocked also, but their pandering shit kind of blended into the rest of tumblr I guess.

In a sense Tumblr stole their thing because any self-loathing hubris filled tween could write for them.

kontextmaschine

Wait a second don’t bury the lede, Mic blocked people on tumblr (as a way of making sure the reblog chains of their official ports-to-tumblr never went through ancaps and were more hugboxy) ??

One more thing I didn’t realize could happen until someone broke a norm and it looked obvious in retrospect. 2017!

mitigatedchaos

Yes, this is fascinating!  And I say this as someone quite averse to Anarcho-Capitalism.

politics

Who captures a wage subsidy?

Basically every benefit we give to the working poor ends up being an indirect subsidy for business - see, for example, employers telling their employees how to obtain food stamps.

One of the complaints about a wage subsidy over a higher minimum wage is that it will just be captured by employers, who will pay their employees less by that amount.  That’s also potentially true of a basic income, and with a minimum wage, employers may opt to gain non-monetary compensation (e.g. terrible hours).

Now, here’s where the limits of my economics education probably show a bit, in that I’m not familiar with the literature on how, empirically, this works out.  (Maybe @xhxhxhx can chime in.)

I realized that this is actually related to the marginal productivity of labor - how much revenue (and thus, potentially, profit) does each additional employee bring in, across the whole economy?  There are limits to this based on the amount of equipment/capital needed for a marginal employee or marginal hours, including facility size, as well as the potential customers it might bring in (e.g. why haven’t they hired additional labor already?).

The reason for this is that to determine the leverage of a low-wage employee under a wage subsidy system, we need to know how many potential jobs our wage subsidy can create, and at what quality.  How easy is it for an employee to just walk right out of the store, walk right in to another store, and get a new job?  Even if the pay is somewhat lower, this creates a much stronger incentive against bad hours, bad bosses, and unsafe practices, about which employees will then either demand higher pay, or just tell the employers to knock it off.

However, that increase in leverage only occurs if enough potential jobs emerge, and this is more or less an empirical question.

The greater the marginal increase in the number of jobs per marginal decrease in minimum wage prior to subsidy, the more of the subsidy that will be captured by the workers.  However, if cutting the minimum wage creates no new jobs, then leverage doesn’t change much at all and employers capture the majority of the subsidy.

If the leverage is high enough, wages may even be driven higher than they were prior to the subsidy, depending on employer margins that they were exploiting leverage over against employees.

However, since employers capturing part of the subsidy is potentially true for all subsidies for the working poor, even rental vouchers or healthcare, it has to be compared with other alternatives (such as basic income).

(For my preferred implementation, the accompanying decrease in minimum wage should be lower than the wage subsidy, and the wage subsidy should be paid directly to the employee, thus at least not resulting in a decrease in effective income even if the entire subsidy is captured.)

the invisible fist the iron hand economics flagpost policy
discoursedrome
nihilsupernum

all tumblr ads are so sketchy

like if i see an ad on facebook most of the time i don’t wanna click on it but at least i generally believe there is probably a real product that they want to sell me

if i see a tumblr ad for like, a watch, my alief is that they 3d rendered the watch and it literally doesn’t exist

how do you make ads this bad! i can’t believe they’ve sunk to “literally failing to convince me that they’re marketing a real thing”

multiheaded1793

If I see a tumblr ad for a “watch”, I’d just assume that it’s an alien tentacle-frog infiltrator psychically releasing spores into my brain to disguise itself as a watch. This is my opinion of tumblr ads. None of them are from this world, none.

explodingbat

1) maybe nobody buys tumblr ads because they know we don’t buy things based on ads, but tumblr still has to make it look like they have ads in case anyone *does* want to buy some useless spam propaganda, so they make their own fake ads which no one will click on?

2) the only people clueless enough to buy tumblr ads are also really terrible at advertising (i once had one trying to sell me “TANKS. Sturdy, reliable, durable. London area.” no image of what sort of tanks)

possibly both

anaisnein

Also I’ve seen NASDAQ ads here? Legit ones, not uncanny-weird ones. Wtf. How did they decide this was right channel to advertise in, what are they even trying to sell or achieve, what.

discoursedrome

At one point Tumblr really wanted to sell me B2B software. There are good marketing departments advertising on Tumblr, but they do it by getting actual Tumblr users to shill for them. The actual adroll stuff is like a cry for help from someone who faked their way into a job interview by pretending they had 10+ years of marketing experience.

mitigatedchaos

I think part of the problem is that they’re mostly not marketing real products that people might conceivably want. I could do a better job than some of these guys, although I admit “Are you investing in the right kind of Asia?” is a lot more innocuous than some of them.

Source: nihilsupernum
the-grey-tribe

One of the reasons I enjoy writing standalone novels is that it allows me to tell stories that have a beginning, middle, and an end. Series fiction is, almost universally, stuck in the second act by its very nature.

ACT ONE: Peter Parker gets bit by a radioactive spider, gains superpowers, learns a lesson on personal responsibility.

ACT TWO: Spider-Man struggles to fight crime and redeem himself in his own eyes and the eyes of the city he defends.

ACT THREE: Spider-Man learns to balance his obligations as both a superhero and an ordinary man, gets married, has some kids, stops being such a sadsack.

Yes, it’s that Act Three that’s the problem. It NEVER happens. It was never intended to happen. Spider-Man is stuck in that second act, and he will never actually get out of it. This is why he’ll never have a successful marriage (even when married to his beautiful dreamgirl who is both understanding and a supermodel), he’ll always be an outcast (even while a prominent member of The Avengers, his world’s preeminent superhero team), and why he’ll always be broke (did I mention his wife was a successful supermodel?), and always ALWAYS debating whether or not he should even be Spider-Man in the first place (regardless of how many times he has saved New York and the world).

Continuing Drama versus The Dreaded Third Act | A. Lee Martinez

There’s more, and it’s worth reading.

I actually think this is why I’m wary of trying to get into some of the longer-running comics series. I mean, when I read something, I’m almost invariably reading it for the characters; I want to see who they are, what they struggle with, how they deal with those struggles, and how their story turns out. I want good, solid character arcs! And the thing about arcs is that they have to have a beginning and an end–otherwise they just loop back around and… become circles. (I think. My grasp of geometry is a bit fuzzy.) And circular characterization is just not something I’m interested in.

(I mean, seriously, Bruce Wayne is never going to get a happy ending, unless it’s in an animated/movie ‘verse or some kind of Elseworlds ‘verse. For that matter, he’s never going to get a sad ending. It just isn’t gonna happen, because DC will never let his story end. Sure, he can have character development arcs within his ongoing series, but… well, we can’t have too much of that either, because heaven forbid he ever move too far away from his broodiness and angst-ridden-ness! No, any “character development” he gets will a) make him even darker and grimmer–and eventually you have to wonder just how much more grimness this guy can take before he goes completely bonkers [I will not turn this into a rant about Damian’s death, I will not turn this into a rant about Damian’s death…]–or b) it will eventually be overturned in favor of the more profitable and comfortable status quo. This is why I have next to no desire to pick up any of the mainline Batman titles, past or present, even though I love the Batfamily.)

This is pretty much why I gave up on the old comic series too. I like to pretend that X-men ended with the Dark Phoenix storyline.

(via jadagul)

this is exactly why i like comic books. as far as i know, most fiction has beginnings and endings, but long running comic books are one of the big exceptions when it comes to endings (the others that come to mind are i guess finnegan’s wake and dhalgren). the characters get explored endlessly, their past isn’t set in stone, everything reflects society, stuff like that. there’s of course lots of bad comic book arcs out there but the good ones are really good, seamlessly tying together things from disparate parts of a character’s decades of history. but it’s interesting to me how the entire character’s history can change as the plot moves forward (i.e. through retcons). i get why people don’t like retroactive continuity but i think it happens all the time in both myth/folklore and in reality (i.e. our interpretation of history is updated).

but i also get why people don’t like this aspect of it. the idea of fiction that lasts for decades and decades is amazing to me tho

(via eelfoe)

So I definitely don’t mind the length, or the retro continuity. What bugs me about the comic stories is that they don’t have endings they’re heading towards.

Like, I’m happy to read four million words on one subject. (My favorite fiction is the Wheel of Time). But I’d like the sense that there’s an ending, that people will get to a conclusion, that they’ll be allowed to be happy.

Honestly, my biggest problem is with the continual regression. I want to read stories about adults behaving in an adult manner; about good people making good decisions. I’m potentially willing to read stories that start out with characters who don’t make good decisions, but only as a road up to emotionally stable people being good. And comic books never get there because they keep doing the same character arc over and over again.

(via jadagul)

This is why I love fanfiction. It’s the best of both worlds – writers can explore every possible variation of characterization, plot and genre, readers can enjoy some more of what attracted them to the original story, and characters don’t have to be artificially stunted or stuck in an endless loop of reversible development.

(via molibdenita)

Interesting idea: Alternate timelines/universes- similar to the non-canon-ness of fanfics- allows the same effect of endless stories that comics want (i.e. repeatedly producing content for and making money off the same title), while allowing stuff to wrap up. An example that comes to mind is the Fate series, which produced at least 6 different conclusions in the very first installment, but has produced like 10 different series since then- although I think those are mostly prequels and side stories, only one or two alternate continuities. Still, the idea could work: keep adding branches to the VN, telling different possible outcomes. This would also allow new fans to get into it without committing to 4 million words, while still having plenty of content for dedicated fans.

I suppose the constant reboots that TV adaptations of comics keep doing is essentially a way of doing this, although they don’t tend to actually use it for concluding their stories, nor for systematically exploring different ways things could have gone.

(via alexanderrm)

Yeah, endless branching or rebooting every ten years lets you keep the characters while still having conclusions - but is it profitable?

Source: aleemartinez.com
libfas
libfas:
“ higher-order:
“What is self-awareness?
”
Kinda funny how the reactions to white people concerned about demographic decline has changed from “it’s not real” last year to “it’s not real and by the way you will all die out and that’s a good...
higher-order

What is self-awareness?

libfas

Kinda funny how the reactions to white people concerned about demographic decline has changed from “it’s not real” last year to “it’s not real and by the way you will all die out and that’s a good thing”

mitigatedchaos

The real irony: Race is not going to be destroyed by virtuous queer PoCs bravely fighting against the dark tides of white supremacy.

It’s going to be destroyed by genetic and tissue engineering technology, produced by a mostly (but not entirely!) white and Asian tech industry, fueled by markets in China and Korea, which is going to blow the lid off a number of things people very much want to keep the lid on, wiping out what we currently know as white nationalism along with it.

The entire idea of intergenerational ethnic justice will be undermined.

Source: punished-cel racepol torches in the night
the-grey-tribe
dataandphilosophy

Eyeballing the results of this study, things that don’t affect whiteness of a school: racism, history, geography, or media attention to racism.

Things that do: how technical is it?

the-grey-tribe

Don’t Filipinos count as Hispanics for legal purposes?

mitigatedchaos

That’s… actually a good question.

As for technical schools drawing more white people (and Asians), that sounds like something closer to persistent cultural problems earlier in the pipeline.

Source: dataandphilosophy