[-] throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works 1 points 48 minutes ago

Inb4 trump announces a nationwide no drone zone.

(There's zero check on that power btw, its completely under the purview of the president)

TIL my mother lives like a Queen.

(She does not wash her hands ๐Ÿคฎ, and she calls me an "OCD germaphobic")

How else are you suppose to show the difference between a male cat and female cat? Show their butt holes on camera?

17

Especially considering the fact that your country's politics could change in the future.

Going on an honest rant against the regime seems very dangerous.

๐ŸŽผ Shit on the floor ๐ŸŽถ

17
submitted 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago) by throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works to c/nostupidquestions@lemmy.world

You can have a face-to-face conversation with a friend, but how do you do that if you want to talk to a therapist? No therapist is gonna make an exemption and leave their phone in another room, not to mention, they literally write their notes into the computer system, instead of on paper.

And with lawyers? I just read about how Luigi Mangione's conversation with his lawyer is being unlawfully recorded. How do you even have a conversation with your lawyer if you are in custody and they could just hide recoding devices all around the jail?

Sure, maybe they can't use the evidence in court, but they could just leak an out-of-context audio clip to the press to win the "court of public opinion".

Oh I really want to see them go busting into a home of a 2A gun nut hillbilly. I don't say this often, but I'd root for the hillbilly.

LMAO why do people always say this.

If it were that easy, the entire population of every authoritarian country would have already moved out.

19
submitted 3 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago) by throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works to c/asklemmy@lemmy.world

This question is common throughout the internet, but I'd like to see Lemmy's response.

The country you end up in would be random, you don't get to pick.

Mods don't like Super Mario Bros? ๐Ÿค”

[-] throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works 30 points 5 hours ago

China is communist

Not really.

Communist would mean the workers own the means of production. If they truely did, then they wages wouldn't be so low while the west get to benefit from cheap labor.

Rental properties still exist, landlords still exist. Usually the tenants are migrant workers from rural areas and the landlords are people who happened to have money to buy up few apartments in the city. ("Buy" is really a misnomer tbh, you're buying the remainder of a 70-year lease term)

When the tenants don't pay, the landlord will keep calling you or put up a notice on your front door and keep nagging for you to pay. But if it last for a few months, the lanlord usually engages in self-help eviction. Waiting for the tenant to be not at home, then go in and change the locks.

Sometimes, the public security bureau (police) will help the landlord if they have leases and can clearly show the tenant be in the wrong.

Sometimes, they would also help the tenant retrive their belongings if the landlord didn't give them the opportunity to get their stuff and just locked everything inside.

Often times, the tenants would just leave before the landlord starts doing self-help evictions to "save face".

Court hearings for residential evictions are rare. Even most criminal issues (things like petty theft, simple assault) are settled outside of court. Things like fighting is just mediated by the public security bureau.

This is assuming residential leases. Commercial leases would probably end in a lawsuit.

As for what happens after evictions, I'm not sure about that. In China, most migrant workers would have an "ancestral home" that's passed down each generation. its usually given to the eldest son, but if everyone already went to the cities to look for work, then it'd be empty and they'd just tell the elders who you were, hope someone recognize you and confirm your identity, and you then ask for the keys. If a family member is already home, then I guess you just knock on the doors and say hi. (Although, I'm not sure what happens if someone has multiple decendants and they all simultanesly got kicked out of the cities.)

For those with Urban Hukou, I think they just have to go to a homeless shelter since they likely don't have "ancestral homes". Its a homeless shelter just like in the US, overcrowded and not fun to be in.

This is anecdotes from people I know, I can't find much news sources reporting on this. So take it with a grain of salt.

For actual answers, internet searches isn't gonna reveal a lot. Maybe go visit a Chinatown in the west and try to talk to a first-generation immigrant? (and bring a translator with you)

[-] throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works 10 points 6 hours ago

A large portion of Chinese housed donโ€™t have internet

They do. Most people, even some in rural areas, have access to the internet. But due to both censorship issues, and most importantly, the language barrier, its really rare for someone to seek out the western internet. Even first generation Chinese immigrants to the US still mostly use Wechat, even when they have unrestricted access to western-based media (because of the language barrier).

[-] throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works 12 points 8 hours ago

"We're the party of Lincoln"

also

"Lincoln was a woke radical feminist abolitionist"

๐Ÿค”

53
submitted 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by throwawayacc0430@sh.itjust.works to c/nostupidquestions@lemmy.world

Obviously this is about the power outage in Spain.


While normally, if a card declines, people would probably have to leave their IDs with the restaurant while they went to get a withdrawl from their bank; this is a power outage, withdrawls wouldn't work. It would be silly to arrest people because of a power outage. So I'm assuming people just have to give the restaurant owner/management their identity info with a promise to pay?

And power outages shouldn't affect buses, since they run on gasoline/diesel, but the payment system processing transit passes might not work. Do buses still get run during a power outage and they just let people on for free, or do they just shut down the bus lines?

246

cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/37022405

This is a carrier in the USA (T-Mobile).

I did a quick search for the other 2 carriers using the term "[Carrier Name] Family Tracking" and Verizon and AT&T also seems to have it.

And according to https://www.t-mobile.com/support/plans-features/t-mobile-familywhere-app, it says:

FamilyWhere uses geolocation data from the T-Mobile network and is not affected by changes to device location settings.

So it appears that its using cell tower triangulation. Turning on Airplane Mode should stop it (assuming there isn't a separate tracking app on your phone)

Oh Wow, What a wonderful tool for abusive spouses and abusive parents. And telecom companies are making money off of it. ๐Ÿ™ƒ

TLDR: Its a good idea to get your own separate cellular plan.

103

This is a carrier in the USA (T-Mobile).

I did a quick search for the other 2 carriers using the term "[Carrier Name] Family Tracking" and Verizon and AT&T also seems to have it.

And according to https://www.t-mobile.com/support/plans-features/t-mobile-familywhere-app, it says:

FamilyWhere uses geolocation data from the T-Mobile network and is not affected by changes to device location settings.

So it appears that its using cell tower triangulation. Turning on Airplane Mode should stop it (assuming there isn't a separate tracking app on your phone)

Oh Wow, What a wonderful tool for abusive spouses and abusive parents. And telecom companies are making money off of it. ๐Ÿ™ƒ

TLDR: Its a good idea to get your own separate cellular plan.

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throwawayacc0430

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