#Ill think on it and use the poll to at least find the place holder name.
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someone asked what the tag for that post apocalypse thing is. and like. I dont tag things, because I'm bad at remembering to do so, but. if any project was going to be somewhat consistently tagged, it would be the one that's less than a week old.
unfortunately That means I'd have to come up with a name for it that isn't just that post apocalypse thing.
So I'm offloading the decision.
The story is about a young man, Lino, from a post nuclear apocalypse solarpunk city state who is Unique⢠because he looks like a very short dude with 4 arms instead of a silent hill monster. Lino wanders into what he thinks is an abandoned bunker to scavenge whatever value might still be inside so that he can pay his dues to the Leader but finds the bunker it still very much inhabited by one of the more severely mutated people, Vinncent.
Shit happens involving one of the dresses Vincent has made. then Lino gets his leg obliterated when Vinncent closes an airlock on him because he at first believes Lino to be one of the mutated 'vermin' who roam the surface. After inspecting Lino's unconscious body Vincent decides he is not Vermin, but instead an Actual Angel from Actual Heaven sent to reward Vincent for not 'soiling' the surface with his own mutations and to help help him eradicate the vermin who do.
And that's just Lino's problem now because only Vincent can open the doors, and Lino isn't getting far with only one leg and a badly infected stump.
the Story⢠reasons these are the options are below the cut in case you want them
Tailored Wings: References Lino's heel turn moment and his eventual acceptance of the roll Vincent has cast him in.
Hide Where The Sun Can't Reach: The sun is the city state Lino is from. Over the course of the story Lino runs afoul the Leader and ends up trapped between running the rest of his life, or hiding where the sun will never be able to reach him; Vincent's bunker.
Amadeus Bunker: That's just the name of Vincent's Bunker
The Vermin's Angel: sounds the most like a romance, because this is a romance, and is referencing Vincent's genuine belief that he himself is vermin, and that he has Earned an angel's help/companionship/ love/ or whatever by being the only vermin who knew his place well enough to stay off the surface.
#tbh the fact im putting this up to a vote probably means none of these are very good.#Ill think on it and use the poll to at least find the place holder name.#Itll help me narrow down the direction i want to go with the name#vermins angel
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democracy was on the ballot and it won
I am a slow-boring-of-hard-boards realist about politics. I am delightedly surprised when I get what I want AT ALL. Months and months ago, I said that my number one issue in this election was the desperate need to put the brakes on democratic backsliding in the United States. Iâm not sure how to process the fact that Iâve started to get what I wanted even before the transition.
There is a real path forward for democracy reform in this country. EVEN WITH an aspiring autocrat doing everything he could to rig this election, EVEN WITH a pandemic raging, EVEN WITH malicious foreign actors still trying cause problems, EVEN THOUGH we still have not restored the Voting Rights Act, EVEN WITH all the structural imbalances built into our creaky eighteenth-century constitutional system:
Voter participation went way up! People voted over the course of several weeks from the comfort of their own homes, or on weekends, or on Election Day. And because people took responsibility and spread out their votes like that, it was safer to go to polling places. That was a huge collective choice to prevent a lot of suffering and even some deaths.
A big part of why they could do that is the enormous number of citizens who rallied to work at the polls so that the retirees who usually do the job could sit this year out.
Cities and states around the country took the time they need to count carefully.
Media gatekeepers, for the most part, had the discipline and the patience to be helpful to users about what we knew and what we didnât. If anything, theyâre erring on the side of being too cautious. This is after weeks of most media gatekeepers having the discipline to debunk a disinformation campaign by Trumpâs allies and Russian backers, instead of aggressively participating in it.
Social media companies took the most aggressive countermeasures yet against election misinformation.
The person who got the most votes is also the person who won the election, which is pretty cool!
That is a huge improvement from EVERY PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY. Just in terms of how well the election itself was administered, my only major criticism is that we still did not do something called risk-limiting audits. In the case of an election, audits are basically a carefully calibrated statistical smell test. Theyâre not a recount. They are a reliable and cost-effective way of figuring out if a recount or some other type of scrutiny should be done for the sake of public confidence in the results â and that makes them a cost-effective deterrence against any bad actors who are considering sabotage. Audits are important whether an election goes your way or not, just like smoke detectors are important whether your building catches fire or not.
But that absolutely should not take away from the fact that we overcame all the new problems that were introduced this year and took some big steps toward solving a lot of old ones â despite the best efforts of Trump and all his enablers. Imagine what we could do under an administration that is helping democracy revitalization instead of aggressively hindering it.
The easiest way for us to make the most comprehensive change would be to win the Senate, which would allow a Biden administration to pass a revitalized Voting Rights Act and restore legitimacy to the federal courts. If you have any time or money to spare in the next few weeks, consider sharing it with the two excellent Democratic candidates in the Georgia Senate runoffs.
We should be realistic about the situation: weâre probably not going to get to do it the easy way, at least, not until after the midterms. But weâre not going to be doing it the hard way any more. The hard way is what weâre doing now. Weâre about to get a Department of Justice that opposes civil rights violations and enforces whatâs left of the current Voting Rights Act. The intelligence and military cybersecurity units are going to be able to work with the administration instead of around it. And we arenât going to have to deal with a 24/7 fusillade of lies and voter intimidation coming from the Oval Office. To spin out the âitâs a marathon, not a sprintâ metaphor: weâve been running a marathon uphill carrying forty-pound backpacks. Weâve reached the top where the path levels out, and someone just took our bags and gave us protein bars.
And while we have our protein bars, letâs look around, because the view is as clear and as beautiful as itâs going to get. Donald Trump had every intention of wrecking American democracy, and the entire Republican party had every intention of supporting his aspiring dictatorship. And, while Trump himself is and always has been a clown, the person occupying the Oval Office is the most powerful person on the planet. Actually, thatâs an understatement. Since Truman gave the order to drop the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, our technology has grown stronger and our government has concentrated more and more power in the executive branch, which means that every holder of that office has arguably been the most powerful person in the history of the world. Every other holder of that office has at least wanted to think of himself as using that power for the advancement of democracy and humanity. Donald Trump affirmatively tried to use all that power to entrench himself there permanently.
We stopped him. We stopped him peacefully. We stopped him without further harming the many vulnerable people he holds hostage in a hundred different ways. We stopped him not by elevating an equal-but-opposite charismatic demagogue for a two-men-enter-one-man-leaves smackdown, but by building a vibrant, heterogenous coalition and finding competent, experienced, principled leaders who respect that coalition in all its raucous power. We stopped him, in short, by choosing to do democracy.
That feels good today and itâs enormously consequential. It is also proof of concept. It is something that can happen, because it has happened.
Something that political scientists and democracy advocates have been saying for the past few years is that Trump has been a propaganda gold mine for dictators. They use him as a cautionary tale against liberal democracy or even against hoping that things can ever get better: see, even the Americans are no better than we are! Dictators can artificially insulate themselves from accountability in the short term, which makes them ill-equipped to think about backfire. Train your peopleâs eyes on the aspiring American autocrat, and they can all see his humiliating fall.
To our sisters and brothers around the world, from Idlib to Hong Kong, from SĂŁo Paolo to Moscow, and along every wide country road in between: this is the only true thing your oppressors have ever told you. We are no better than you are. We are no more suited for or entitled to liberation. Look what we have done. Imagine what you can do.
Thereâs kind of a false dichotomy going on where people swung from âTrump is going to successfully rig the election for himselfâ pessimism to âoh, Biden only ousted an incumbent by a freakishly large margin, it wasnât an immediate electoral college landslide, why did Trump get so close.â This take has set in before deep blue California and New York have come close to completing their mail-in ballot counts, which tells you that it isnât serious, but itâs also beside the point. Trump succeeded in making the election unfair. If he hadnât illegitimately put a whole lot of thumbs on the scale in his favor, if we���d actually had the free and fair election we deserved, I think he probably would have lost in a landslide. We did the work and showed up in numbers that were ultimately too big to rig. That led to victory, although not a victory you can quantifiably measure against the dozen or so American elections that were more or less free and fair. That doesnât mean the rigging didnât happen or have any impact. It means we beat the spread. As the worldâs most prominent train enthusiast once said, that is a big fucking deal.
A government of the people, by the people, and for the people has not perished from the earth. One day soon, it may even exist. That is our charge. That is our choice.
So take a moment to recharge. Enjoy the view. Breathe. We got work to do.
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