alyaza [they/she]
internet gryphon. admin of Beehaw, mostly publicly interacting with people. nonbinary. they/she
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alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•'Congestion pricing is working': MTA says tolls keeping 82k drivers a day out of Manhattan12·2 days agoif you’re going to be this confident, have the decency to be correct instead of saying something incredibly stupid like calling congestion pricing an infringement on “freedom of movement”. if you can drive into lower fucking Manhattan–one of the most car-free areas in the country, because a huge portion of NYC residents don’t drive a car and don’t need to drive a car because they have reliable public transportation–you can pay a toll.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgMto Technology@beehaw.org•Risks to children playing Roblox ‘deeply disturbing’, say researchers17·3 days agoyeah, no shit, that’s not the same as “your entire company being predicated on the unpaid labor of children who you also let do whatever they want without supervision or actually working filtering features”–not least because you could actually get banned for both of the things i mentioned from 2010, while what’s happening now is explicitly enabled by Roblox as their business model and an externality of doing business. as has been demonstrated by recent investigations into how they work down, they basically don’t have a company without systematically exploiting children
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgMto Technology@beehaw.org•Risks to children playing Roblox ‘deeply disturbing’, say researchers21·3 days agoit’s been very strange to watch this game i grew up on–pretty innocuously, i should note–gradually morph into one of the most exploitative, undignifying, generally dangerous spaces for children online. the worst stuff i got into on Roblox in 2010 was online dating and learning about 4chan. now the company seems to openly revel in exploiting the labor of children and ripping them off
- Kazumi Watanabe – To Chi Ka
- Sahib Shihab – Sentiments
- Dr. Lonnie Smith - Boogaloo to Beck: A Tribute
- Takeo Moriyama - Smile
- Sevil - Sevil
- Collage - Kadriko
stuff that is basically jazz, even though it isn’t actually:
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•Thousands rally in 'Hands Off' protests against Trump policies and Musk-led government cuts13·12 days agothere will likely be in excess of a million people out on the streets today; there are at least 1,200 recorded Hands Off! protests today in addition to about 70 other scheduled protests against people like Elon Musk or rallying for Palestine. easily the largest mobilization so far either way–there are substantial protests in almost every city larger than about 100,000 people, and many significant ones in cities smaller than that
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgMto Politics@beehaw.org•New York Mayor Eric Adams to run for reelection as independent2·14 days agohe assuredly won’t win as an independent given his appalling numbers in the primary so, lol, good riddance
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•Target suffers eighth week of foot-traffic losses since caving on DEI23·16 days agomaybe you can be skeptical of the data source–but i think it is fairly reasonable to conclude, at this point, that trying to ditch DEI to placate conservatives has at the very least not helped Target
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgMto Gaming@beehaw.org•have positive reviews destroyed games?7·16 days agoWhat you mean? Have you seen all those articles publisher website just giving out 8-9 on every damn game they get early access to?
this has been an issue people have complained about in gaming journalism for–and i cannot stress this sufficiently–longer than i’ve been alive, and i’ve been alive for 25 years. so if we’re going by this metric video gaming has been “ruined” since at least the days of GTA2, Pokemon Gold & Silver, and Silent Hill. obviously, i don’t find that a very compelling argument.
if anything, the median game has gotten better and that explains the majority of review score inflation–most “bad” gaming experiences at this point are just “i didn’t enjoy my time with this game” rather than “this game is outright technically incompetent, broken, or incapable of being played to completion”.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgMto Gaming@beehaw.org•have positive reviews destroyed games?5·16 days agono, obviously not; is this a serious question? because i have no idea how you could possibly sustain it
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto City Life@beehaw.org•Congestion Pricing is a Policy Miracle3·26 days agodo you mean a small population on this community, or in life?
in life. most people in NYC have literally never experienced this one way or the other before NYC implemented it, and certainly aren’t seeking out the kinds of spaces that would be partisan on it in some way. their opinions on this are accordingly malleable based on “does this feel good or bad,” and you can see this in how there’s already been a large change toward supporting congestion pricing as the benefits have become increasingly tangible:
“A plurality of voters [40-33%] wants to see congestion pricing eliminated, as Trump has called for. Pluralities of New York City voters [42-35%] and Democrats want congestion pricing to remain, Hochul’s position,” Greenberg said. “In June 2024, voters approved of Hochul’s temporary halt of congestion pricing 45-23%. In December, voters opposed Hochul’s announced reimposition of the congestion pricing tolls, 51-29%.
“Having one-third of voters statewide supporting the continuation of congestion pricing is the best congestion pricing has done in a Siena College poll,” Greenberg said. “Additionally, support currently trails opposition by seven points, when it was 22 points in both December and June 2024.”
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto City Life@beehaw.org•Congestion Pricing is a Policy Miracle5·26 days agobut I feel like the people who oppose congestion pricing / are pro-car operate on feelings and vibes.
you’re describing a small percentage of the population here–most people have no strong opinions on congestion pricing (because it doesn’t really have a prior in the United States), and as such it’s extremely important to write articles like this which can show them that it is working and it benefits them in every way
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto City Life@beehaw.org•Congestion Pricing is a Policy Miracle8·26 days agocongestion pricing has been pretty consistently found to make air quality better for obvious reasons (fewer cars on the roads) so you can safely infer this is also the case here. unfortunately, there are several significant air quality variables outside of NYC’s control that are probably going to make reductions less obvious than, say, Stockholm or London. most recently, nearby and unseasonable wildfires caused the city to have several days of terrible air quality. back in 2023, those huge Canadian wildfires caused the same problems on and off for their entire duragion.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•Columbia bows to Trump administration, hoping to restore federal funding15·26 days agoColumbia effectively committed to a punitive line that threw its student protesters under the bus last year; this is, unfortunately, not a very surprising development with that in mind
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto Politics@beehaw.org•Zo-mentum: Breaking down the most exciting campaign in New York City3·27 days agoi’m removing this because it’s a completely empty calorie comment with literally no relation to an extremely detailed, well done article. please don’t make comments like this, thanks.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto Politics@beehaw.org•Bernie Sanders and AOC to headline five resistance rallies in three days3·28 days agoAside from the obvious stuff like promoting mutual aid, grassroots agitation efforts are probably your best bet. Organize in workplaces and other places where people meet, get them angry and suggest effective courses of action.
respectfully: this is just not a serious proposal. and the fact that you think nobody is doing these things—rather than what is actually the case, which is that people do them but they are simply not effective or easy-to-scale acts of political praxis in an American context—is indicative that you should stop making confidently bad tactical prescriptions.
and i’m not even going to address your fantastical idea of how to build a spontaneous general strike out of “mass protests” when it is evident you have bad tactical prescriptions. you’re not even treading new ground here, really. Peter Camejo’s speech “Liberalism, ultraleftism, or mass action” is the definitive dunk on your flavor of politically delusional theorycrafting, and that speech turns 55 this year:
This is the key thing to understand about the ultraleftists. The actions they propose are not aimed at the American people; they’re aimed at those who have already radicalized. They know beforehand that masses of people won’t respond to the tactics they propose.
They have not only given up on the masses but really have contempt for them. Because on top of all this do you know what else the ultralefts propose? They call for a general strike! They get up and say, “General Strike.” Only they don’t have the slightest hope whatsoever that it will come off.
Every last one of them who raises his hand to vote for a general strike knows it’s not going to happen. So what the hell do they raise their hands for? Because it’s part of the game. They play games, they play revolution, because they have no hope. Just during the month of May the New Mobe called not one but two general strikes. One for GIs and one for workers.
Being out for the count before anything actually happens doesn’t seem to be good strategy
you’re right, people have never martyred themselves (and, in a sense “been out for the count before anything happens”) for successful political change before. do you realize how ridiculous this sounds? you are the classic person who–even if they are legitimately radical, which i don’t think you are–upholds the status quo by, in the words of Martin Luther King, Jr, “lives by a mythical concept of time” and always wants to wait for a more convenient season to do something. but plainly, the more convenient season will never come if nobody does anything because they might be “out for the count”.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgMto Space@beehaw.org•There’s a good chance that Apollo 11’s lunar module is still in orbit around the moon8·29 days agothis is not serious enough for the mod shield, but my god stop misusing the word clickbait and stop being confidently incorrect. some of you literally just use this to mean “thing i don’t like” or even “thing that explains itself in a way that is not my fancy”–neither of which is what the word actually means.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto Politics@beehaw.org•Bernie Sanders and AOC to headline five resistance rallies in three days4·29 days agoSo… I’m not really pro-capitalism as you’d likely conceive of that term,
i don’t know what you think “not really [being] pro-capitalism” means, but the fact that you can neither straightforwardly state that you believe in socialism nor elaborate substantively on your economic beliefs is an indicator you’re just some sort of radical liberal. and that’s fine–and radical liberalism is nice and all for this moment–but it is not a serious ideological system with credible tactics that will eradicate fascism or solve the inequalities and inequities that create the basis of right-wing authoritarianism.
I don’t think you get me. You likely don’t have until 2026. A lot of the infrastructure for a full authoritarian takeover is already in place.
okay, let’s suppose this is true: what would you like me as an individual to do besides what i am already doing. help organize a general strike? one is already being organized for 2028, and you can’t exactly spin up the infrastructure for one of those in a matter of months unless you operate under a very incorrect idea of how unions work. a strike is a massive financial, political, and organizational commitment–to say nothing of how a strike necessitates buy-in from the workers who engage in it (perhaps 40% of whom are in favor of the current administration, and would thus need to be convinced to organize against it).
or maybe you propose some sort of political violence? maybe firebombing a government office or assassinating an elected official? aside from op-sec considerations, those would be very stupid ideas to take up. bluntly: we’ve been there and done this. most left-wing political violence in the West does nothing to substantially harm the state, and frequently, it actually legitimizes authoritarian violence in the eyes of the public. the primary base of support for ideas like this are ultraliberals and ultraleftists who confuse the spectacle of political violence for meaningful political action–people who, in other words, think the most transgressive action they can take is the most correct one.
and if not these, what else? organize boycotts? people already do those. organize public marches? people already do those, to the point where it’s impossible to keep up with all of the ones being organized. organize sit-ins and other nonviolent protest? people already do those. i don’t know what you expect here that isn’t already happening.
If not wanting to get arrested and tortured (again, this is not a hypothetical) is slothfulness then… Uh… Okay?
if you aren’t willing to face meaningful political consequences for what you believe in, then what tactical or ideological advice could you possibly have that i should care about? the law has already pacified your politics and your convictions into uselessness–you have essentially stated you won’t fight for what’s right because it would inconvenience you.
this is also contradictory to what you’re arguing in the first place: how is this position of yours any different from Sanders’ supposed failure to meet the moment with tactics and radical politics? if fighting for what’s right means potentially being arrested and tortured then, yes, as unpleasant as such a commitment sounds you should be willing to be arrested and tortured!
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto Politics@beehaw.org•Bernie Sanders and AOC to headline five resistance rallies in three days5·29 days agoFirst, I never said I was a socialist.
well then i definitely don’t care what you have to say in terms of criticism—if you’re not a socialist then the ideological framework from which you make that criticism is incorrect on merits and an incorrect basis on which to build a political movement which will ever resolve the crises you identify here. these crises are symptomatic of capitalism and a product of it;[1] you cannot separate the economic system out here, nor will superficial political and economic reforms ever prevent what is happening now in America and Europe from occurring again in the future.
you need only look at the Nordic and Finnish democracies—where genuinely social-democratic reforms still define many aspects of society and are load-bearing aspects of the contemporary political culture—to illustrate this. they still have massive problems with reactionaries, would-be authoritarians, and open fascists gaining political credibility; but this is unsurprising if you recognize that, at the end of the day, they still live in a hegemonic economic system which cannot exist without necessarily impoverishing some people to make others wealthy, and creating debilitating social and political inequities. you will never deprive reactionary politics of their oxygen and grievances until this is resolved, and socialism is the only economic system which can bring this about.
Sorry I can’t pass your little purity test; now actually do something something so you don’t end up like us.
luckily, i am. most of my waking hours are spent doing behind-the-scenes political work, and i can also literally point you to some of the public-facing work i’m doing well in advance of our next elections. see, just as a sample, my Support 2026 and Oppose 2026 lists, or my For a “Bill of Rights” Package in Every State, County, and City which lays out an electoral strategy for American socialists to adopt and whose basic planks i’m pushing for within DSA in the lead-up to this year’s convention. don’t put your slothfulness and excuses for why you can’t do political work on me, a person actually doing political work as a volunteer day job because i want the things i believe in to be built in my lifetime.
and in the specific case of Trump, he is literally the stand-i for a “successful” capitalist to many people ↩︎
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto Politics@beehaw.org•Bernie Sanders and AOC to headline five resistance rallies in three days6·29 days agoIt might have been less disappointing if there was no goal to be honest.
unless you’re actively doing political work yourself, i genuinely do not care (and nobody else should care either) what you think is useful or useless advocacy. you do the work, if you’re so strongly opinionated that how Bernie is going about this is the incorrect approach–but don’t complain that other people are doing things “improperly” if all you ever do is post or craft opinions. socialism already has far too many people who speak but do not act.
That aside it’s still missing the final touch; what are people meant to do in and after attending these rallies? Just… Exist?
do you think that people become class conscious and politically aware of the necessity of socialism through their own volition? these rallies are political education and political mobilization–they are making people aware of the relation between what is happening in their country and the economic structure that facilitates it, and getting them back into being politically engaged in the first place (because many of them probably ended their political engagement in November, and are not used to caring about this stuff outside of the usual cycle of American electoralism).
quite simply: there will never be a mass socialist movement without people like Bernie doing stuff of this sort–there is no basis for socialism in the American public as a whole, and this is and has to be the first step in rectifying it. and once again: even if you have criticisms, i don’t think you currently have a right to voice them, considering you don’t sound like you’ve done a second of politically educating the people around you. if i’m wrong, feel free to demonstrate that–but bluntly you sound like a poster who is all talk but no action.
Moderates
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i’m going to remove your comment again because you’re, again, talking completely out of your ass and asserting incorrect things with unearned confidence. at most, only half of all households in New York City own a car. the average car owner in NYC is a single-family homeowner who is twice as wealthy as someone who does not own a car. people who own cars in NYC literally are the wealthy–because the poor, supposedly plighted drivers you’re appealing to don’t actually drive in the first place, they just take the subway or ride in buses. they simply are not being “priced out of driving,” however you think that works.
but even if somehow the poor were being pushed out (they’re not)? good! cars suck, and our urban spaces should not cater to them whether they’re driven by the rich or poor! less cars mean less air pollution, less microplastics, less ambient noise, and less traffic fatalities and injuries.
let me ask you: do you think it’s bad that noise complaints are down 70% or that traffic injuries have been cut in half because of congestion pricing? do you think it’s bad that buses–overwhelmingly servicing the city’s poor–are faster across the city because of congestion pricing? do you think it’s bad that bike lanes are being put in where car traffic has been cut significantly by congestion pricing? because i don’t, and i think those benefit poor people–who mostly don’t use cars and who are disproportionate victims of air pollution and traffic injuries and fatalities–a lot more than their potential ability to drive into lower Manhattan or whatever personal freedom you think you’re valiantly defending here.