[-] searabbit@piefed.social 4 points 7 hours ago

As expected, poorer people with no insurance and chronic illnesses are most affected, but even in their highest earning group of $240k+, 25% of people said they delayed a major life event to pay for healthcare. It underscores this as an issue that affects the bottom 99% of Americans as we all pretty much could guess.

I do think further studies should expand the survey questions because I go to the doctor way too much for chronic illness and I've never considered cutting back on utilities or literally skipping meals to pay for healthcare since where I live those savings are not enough to cover the costs on their own. In my experience, it's more common to travel for medical procedures/diagnoses, get medications shipped from other countries, and to literally just stop paying any medical bills that they don't make you pay upfront because fuck them.

[-] searabbit@piefed.social 17 points 1 day ago

What a great incentive to move off oil and towards literally any other energy source that doesn't rely on the US/Israel not starting dumb wars in the middle east, too bad no one had any other reason at all to stop relying so much on oil half a century ago. It would've been completely doable with decades of runway, but oh well, shutting down entire industries in a last minute panic it is.

[-] searabbit@piefed.social 7 points 1 day ago

Maybe the interests we serve are the friends we made serving another's interests along the way...to serve interests? Or something like that

[-] searabbit@piefed.social 24 points 1 day ago

"Just try to advocate for yourself," she said. "Stand up for yourself the best that you can … I guess it didn't go great for me, so — have better luck."

That made me chuckle. Yeah pretty much. I've seen a lot of doctors for chronic issues over the years and it's just really hard to know when to be pushy and when to shut up and trust them or give up and just get a second opinion. Although this was pretty blatant negligence. The guy didn't even look at her head ffs.

[-] searabbit@piefed.social 4 points 2 days ago

Lyft already has this feature, it's called women+

[-] searabbit@piefed.social 10 points 2 days ago

I don't think this issue is reflective of American gender wars in particular. I can think of dozens of countries I'd be way more terrified of being in a car alone with an unknown man as a woman. I've never had a bad encounter with any uber drivers in the US, but I have heard directly from drivers that drunk riders can be a fucking menace, so I don't mind if female drivers would rather take their chances with drunk women vs drunk men.

[-] searabbit@piefed.social 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Action is usually less appealing and scarier than procrastinating through analysis. But since no one ever calls out what actions to take, I'll give my 2 cents:

  • If you see something, say something. At a minimum, record any ICE/state interactions you come across and post it online. Don't be a useless bystander.

  • Build a community if you don't have one. Talk to your neighbors, local businesses, nonprofits, and politicians. This is actually how grassroots organization begins.

  • Do not concede in advance. Stop posting doomer content that demoralizes your own side. Don't make compromises to appease the enemy in advance. Do not believe you have lost before you have tried.

  • Obstruct. Most of us work for corporations that are directly working with or benefiting from the current regime. If you are in this situation, don't go above and beyond in your work. At a minimum. Be curious about how many "mistakes" or "laziness" you can get away with. I used to work in what is basically employee surveillance and employees have so much more power than they think especially when your boss has no idea what you do, the loopholes you've found in their system, or the access that you probably don't need. Have fun with that knowledge.

  • Engage in activism. This is the one everyone jumps to when talking about "taking action," but it is obviously too much to ask of most people as their first step. Assuming you already have a plan to vote at a minimum, this would encompass everything from canvassing, to protesting, to running for office.

This is definitely not a comprehensive list. If anyone has book recommendations on the topic, I'd love to hear it.

[-] searabbit@piefed.social 3 points 4 days ago

A quick Google search says this was in 1908 in the Rochester NY Democrat and Chronicle newspaper, and the suffragette movement (first wave feminism) peaked around early 1900s so yes.

[-] searabbit@piefed.social 9 points 4 days ago

The religious equivalent of a little kid acting out in school hoping their cop dad gets called and he actually shows up this time.

searabbit

joined 4 days ago