I swear, if I hadn’t lived through the time period of the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, I’d swear that CW was written recently

u/TerrakSteeltalon — 6 days ago

Home Protection Specialist

Maddie was acting a little weird.

In retrospect they all were… both cats and both dogs were hanging out by the kitchen back door and I thought they were all chasing each other.

Then Maddie starts climbing the curtains. When she swatted at something and leapt for the kitchen floor, I couldn’t wait to see what bug she found.

And then she tried to take the mouse into her basement lair.

We’ve never had a mouse problem in 9 years, but this year they’re all over — even broke our outside AC unit when an entire family moved in and snipped a wire.

But Maddie enjoys it and, when she’s managed to eat one, is exceptionally happy.

u/TerrakSteeltalon — 10 days ago
▲ 1.4k r/neoliberal+2 crossposts

Actually, Democracy Dies in H.R.

Submission statement: this article explores how authoritarian regimes exploit the ambitions of the mediocre and the incompetent to enforce their will. Offering promotions and benefits to the otherwise undeserving acts as an incentive to commit crimes and atrocities.

While large parts of the article discuss authoritarian regimes generally (including the growing power of ICE under DJT in the US), the argument revolves around hard data from Argentina published by two German researchers.

>"Making a Career in Dictatorship", a new book by two German political scientists, Adam Scharpf and Christian Glassel, reads like what you might get if you crossed Hannah Arendt’s ideas about the “banality of evil” with a business school guide on how to get the most out of low performers.

>Their in-depth study of Argentina’s military during that country’s era of coups and forced disappearances found that low performers — whom they refer to as “career-pressured” individuals — filled the ranks of the secret police. That service allowed them to “detour” around the ordinary military hierarchy, the book shows, achieving promotions and career success they could never have managed otherwise.

>It turns out that would-be authoritarians don’t need to staff their regimes with ideological true believers, offer extreme enticements or impose draconian punishments in order to make successful power grabs. They just need to figure out how to target their ideal labor pool: the frustrated and mediocre.

A very good article and if you are able to pick up a copy of the book as well, I'm planning to. "Meal Team Six" is not just a meme, but a measurable phenomenon.

nytimes.com
u/TerrakSteeltalon — 2 months ago
▲ 179 r/rarepuppers+2 crossposts

Went to Third Eye comics in Annapolis this morning, which is already one of his favorite places in the world because the staff give him so much attention. But as big of a crowd as was there… and the fact that I had him wear his cape… he had to lie down while I was in the checkout line

u/TerrakSteeltalon — 2 months ago