Yeah... this isn't a meme, it's literally children being sold.
As I recall it, the family were facing eviction, and the kids were indeed sold, including the one she was pregnant with. A couple of them ended up basically being slaves on a farm somewhere.
I'll laugh at plenty of things I probably shouldn't but this isn't one of them.
My grandfather was sold into what amounted to slavery during this time period under similar circumstances. Many of these children were treated with incredible cruelty, then grew up and were shipped off to war. Mostly voluntarily, given that war was actually a quality of life improvement where they got perks like socks and food.
This is not a meme, but a reminder of a terrible time and this particular event. Post it in a history community, but not here. Why would we find something so sad funny?
The caption is there. But that doesn't even matter. That isn't the point. Point is the attitude towards the image, what it stands for and that it shouldn't be used like this.
Using images of people suffering to make fun of a current situation is insensitive and disrespectful to the people who were suffering at the time. It also trivializes the situation and makes light of something that is serious and important. Essentially it isn't ethical to use an image like this to make a point like yours.
It's similar to someone posting a picture of a starving child and captioning it with "how I feel when I'm on diet." It's inappropriate, disrespectful and offensive.
Frankly, this post should be deleted for the same reasons.
Despite the rustled jimmies in this thread, I don't really care what people post in a fucking 'memes' channel. However, you should know the caption does show up in sync and doesn't make it any better. This might help clear things up:
The caption is there. Point isn't that anyone missed it. Point is that this picture shouldn't be used like this. It's also not about some people getting upset.
Using images of people suffering to make fun of a current situation is insensitive and disrespectful to the people who were suffering at the time. It also trivializes the situation and makes light of something that is serious and important. Essentially it isn't ethical to use an image like this to make a point like yours.
It's similar to someone posting a picture of a starving child and captioning it with "how I feel when I'm on diet." It's inappropriate, disrespectful and offensive.
Frankly, this post should be deleted for the same reasons.
The caption is there. Point isn't that anyone missed it. Point is that this picture shouldn't be used to complain about high rent. It's also not about some people getting upset.
Using images of people suffering to make fun of a current situation is insensitive and disrespectful to the people who were suffering at the time. It also trivializes the situation and makes light of something that is serious and important. Essentially it isn't ethical to use an image like this to make a point like yours.
It's similar to someone posting a picture of a starving child and captioning it with "how I feel when I'm on diet." It's inappropriate, disrespectful and offensive.
Frankly, this post should be deleted for the same reasons.
I wish I could go back in time, "buy" those kids and raise them in safety and comfort. This is not an okay "joke" OP, and I see people are finally starting to realize what I realized in 2017 after watching that shitty movie "Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children" that literally drove me to insanity.
A lot of people don't care about children, instead seeing them purely as a burden unless the child is forced to work. It's disgusting and rooted entirely in overly conservative values.
Many who don't fit into the above category are simply sexist and hate kids as being the result of either "being a traitor to your gender" (if you're female) or "pussy whipped" (if you're male).
This seems to have been the majority view since at least 2015, though I only noticed it when I realised children were being cast exclusively as villains, victims of the villains, or heroes who are forced to "grow up" over the course of the story. If proof is needed, I can provide a list of not one, not two, not three, but 33 different stories that do this and almost all of them are either made in the 2010s or became popular in some way in the 2010s.
Hey lemmy users , lemmytors or whatever, lemmy is desperately in need for commenters. Can't expect to compete against reddit comments. They have thousands of users and and a few of their comments are bound to become super popular just because there are so many of them. It feels like lemmy users are too shy because of reddit popularity. For instance in this case don't tell me you didn't wonder whether the photo was real or not and then got afraid to just ask.
It feels like lemmy users are too shy because of reddit popularity.
I see you've never heard of the 90%/9%/1% rule of social media users.
90% are lurkers. 9% are intermittent posters. 1% are heavy use posters.
It's not that people are shy, it's that literally with a fraction of the userbase Reddit has, that 10% that actually makes posts is just a smaller number of people.