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ShittyDarkSouls @lemmy.world

Easiest way to look like an anime villain too

People Twitter @sh.itjust.works

Check out this guy

Palworld @lemmy.world

Also stairs/hills

Funny: Home of the Haha @lemmy.world

What a deal!

TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name @lemmy.world

The federation needs to ban these already

Memes @sopuli.xyz

Anybody want a peanut?

memes @lemmy.world

The USA's oldest ally

ShittyDarkSouls @lemmy.world

What madness looks like

Gaming @lemmy.world

You just had to be there

Humor @lemmy.world

The most polite tourist attraction

when things get too real for me_irl @lemmy.ml

2meirl4meirl

Memes @sopuli.xyz

Oh, she sounds nice. So when do we get to meet her?

memes @lemmy.world

Why wouldn't it work?

Funny: Home of the Haha @lemmy.world

Nobody wants to hire this monstrosity

RetroGaming @lemmy.world

Nothing was off-limits for retro game ads

Political Memes @lemmy.world

"Unfriendly" countries

Lemmy Be Wholesome @lemmy.world

Remember that big accomplishments don't happen overnight

Microblog Memes @lemmy.world

Living the high life

Gaming @lemmy.world

We've been taken for fools!

memes @lemmy.world

If it ain't broke

  • So... psychedelics?

  • Great advice, but I can't find the m8 square. What should I do next?

  • Yeah, this meme was the first I've heard of it, but from some googling, apparently conspiracy forums have been obsessed with this weird "censored" pattern in space since like 6 or 7 years ago. Reading old threads that were using this to predict the end of the world in 2017 while it's currently 2024 is pretty entertaining.

    Found this page that gives an overview: https://themanilafolder.fandom.com/wiki/Red_Dragon

  • Maybe I click-baited you!

    But in all seriousness, I go back and forth with putting anything in the body that I want people to read. I think it's a separate click in some apps, because frequently people go straight to the comments and will ask about something that the body text answers.

  • Oh man, I've done that plenty of times. He yells a lot, but somehow it's relaxing.

  • If someone wasn't in the comments saying this, or "that asphalt isn't the right type for La Guardia", or "based on the sky in the background, this is actually somewhere in the southern hemisphere", then I'd be on the wrong website.

  • This is why I love TNG so much. Even though TOS is the original that laid the groundwork for everything, TNG took that "boundless optimism" and ran with it. Watching TNG inspires me to continue to self-improve and encourage it in others.

  • Context: people having been memeing about this tweet by Sky News

  • The Lindbergh baby has been wandering around La Guardia for decades like Tom Hanks in The Terminal.

  • Every night. It can't be helped.

  • If you run for office on that platform, you have my vote.

  • Lol, there are just so many random variations of every opening that it's virtually impossible to know them all. It's sometimes helpful to see what an opening is called so that you can potentially look it up later, but 99% of the time I feel like Michael in the meme.

  • I'm lost and genuinely can't tell if you're joking or mad.

  • I've still not tried it. I should probably turn off chat and give it a go.

  • Yeah, there's a singular implied "universal morality" throughout Star Trek of accepting diversity and learning to not impose on other civilizations or each other on the basis of one's biological differences or culture, even for Klingons! I'd say the rest is hard to define and subjective, as @ValueSubtracted@startrek.website said above, but post-scarcity and free agency in life to follow your passions has to be pretty close!

  • I don't know if it was the same people, but it definitely felt like a spiritual successor!

  • That's a good point. I think this contrast between individual (often flawed) human judgment vs collectivist ideals has always been a theme. In TOS, you see Kirk calming McCoy's knee-jerk reactions almost every episode. In TNG, it was Yar or Worf. In DS9, probably Kira.

    Even then, I would say the collectivist ideals (i.e. Starfleet regulations) were more often portrayed as overly-cumbersome in implementation, which leads to someone like Kirk violating the rules in place of the ideals that they stand for. For example, how many naïve (but well-meaning) diplomats do we see in TOS or TNG? However, rules being restrictive or imperfect in an effort to support larger agreed-upon morals can still be trusted, compared to corrupt power structures, which cannot.

  • Ah damn, sorry about the paywall. It let me hit "continue reading" on mobile, but I know sometimes these types of sites can be inconsistent.

  • It’s just another tired bit about how following orders and perfect institutions are what Star Trek is really about, to hell with any evidence to the contrary.

    I'd argue that the theme is less about following orders and more We are all individually flawed and are at our best when we follow our shared values - which is represented by both Starfleet and the utopian setting as a whole.

    I can see the argument (for fiction and real life), that as we trust institutions less, our focus becomes more on individual judgement rather than collectivist ideas. It also tracks for me that as this occurs in real life, our media would reflect individualism more and more.

  • Haha, sorry - I just assumed everyone had heard of this wonderful nightmare! Like the other commenter said, it's called "Getting Over It". It has cool narration as you're playing - you'll fall down and then get a talk about overcoming failure.