Making A Meal Out Of Mismanagement

Mar. 19th, 2026 08:00 pm
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Posted by Not Always Right

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The second weekend I worked, I developed a little sniffle. I made my "self-serve drink" a small cup of orange juice when there were no customers at the register. [Manager] slapped the cup out of my hand and pointed a finger in my face.

Read Making A Meal Out Of Mismanagement

sabotabby: (jetpack)
[personal profile] sabotabby
I feel guilty every time I post about something shallow and trivial. However, I enjoy shitposting and we could all use the distraction. The way I distract myself is being spicy in fannish communities.

If you have emotional attachments to a certain cancelled sci-fi show and its creator, skip this post.

Still with me? Okay.

So I want to propose a new TV show for you. It's set IN SPACE in the far-flung future, think gritty space dystopia, think found family, think QUIPS and BANTER and BIG DAMN HEROES. 

Our heroes are the crew of a spaceship. They dress in snappy black and silver uniforms. They're all played by white guys and women, most with blond hair, all of them extremely fit and attractive. They have a cool logo that looks great on merch. Their ships are very cool looking and the best in the galaxy. They stand up for the common man. 

They are fighting a snivelly and sinister enemy, a vast galactic conspiracy that is secretly pulling the strings behind every bad guy of the week. Maybe they turn out to be, IDK, some kind of lizard alien or something.

By the way in case you're getting ideas about historical analogies here, I should make it clear that the first officer on the heroes' ship is a Jewish woman and the heroes don't commit any genocides on screen. In fact, one of them has a speech about how violence is bad in the first episode! They are shown to be very against war crimes in fact, it's the antagonists who are doing all the war crimes.

Now, a poll:

Poll #34385 Which would be less bad?
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 1


Which would be better, if this show concept HAD to exist?

View Answers

Depicting the protagonists doing war crimes
1 (100.0%)

Not depicting the protagonists doing war crimes
0 (0.0%)

[syndicated profile] rockpapershotgun_feed

Posted by Oisin Kuhnke

Is it fair to say Cities: Skylines 2's development has been incredibly messy? I'd say it's fair, after all, the game has completely shifted developers in the past few months, that doesn't sound like smooth sailing to me. In the nearly three years since it was released, the city builder still has plenty of issues to deal with, perhaps a symptom of a more industry wide problem. But in a recent interview, Mariina Hallikainen, CEO of the game's now former developer Colossal Order, has spoken about the specific difficulties the studio faced with the engine the game was built in, Unity.

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Posted by Julian Benson

It's easy to look at a walking simulator like Firewatch and only see what's been stripped out. After all, it's a genre that got its start when developers took the shooting out of first-person shooters. However, look a little closer and you will see how much design can go into the simplest interactions.

In the lookout cabin you call home in Firewatch there is a desk. On one side of that desk you will find a pine cone and on the opposite side you will find a picture frame. Hover your cursor over either item and press 'E' and you will pick up the item and hold it in your hand. It's when you press 'E' again to put the item back down things get interesting. The pine cone will roll off the desk, but the picture frame will return it to the spot you picked it up from.

In that difference, you can see the world that Campo Santo made in Firewatch.

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Posted by Oisin Kuhnke

Shenmue is a game that will just always be there, I can't quite imagine a world without it. Just hanging around in the background, waiting for you patiently, maybe even coming into the foreground to say hello again because it missed you. That time of saying hello appears to be rearing its beautiful head again, as Ys Net (and of course the one and only Yu Suzuki himself) have announced a new, shinier edition of Shenmue 3 is on the way.

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extrapenguin: (swtor)
[personal profile] extrapenguin
Over the past few days, I've rediscovered my drawerfic, All That is Solid Melts into Air (currently at ~65k). RotS canon divergence, TCW/Prequel Trilogy. I thought it was great, so I immediately went and bugged the author for an ending.

As it currently is, I'd written the setup for the grand climax, had notes for the grand climax, and had written a ~700-word epilogue chapter.* Why, then, was a I blocked?

I realized it was a matter of pacing. I could have hopped straight into the climactic battle, sure, but that would have been unsatisfying. I knew, instinctively, that I needed something in between to make the transition less abrupt, but not exactly what I needed to write to build the tension and anticipation. Now I have an idea for the necessary two scenes in there, after which I can write ~3 scenes of climactic space-and-ground battle, plus ~4 shorter scenes of wrap-up before transitioning into the epilogue chapter.

* I find epilogue chapters very useful if you're posting chapter by chapter and also want reactions to the climax. Usually, reader comments on the final chapter are less about the contents of the final chapter and more about the fic in its entirety, which can be a bit of a bummer if you did something cool in there and wanted to see people's reactions.

[Podfic] Burial Ground

Mar. 19th, 2026 04:55 pm
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Posted by semperfiona_podfic (semperfiona)

by

Wei Wuxian has just been delaying the inevitable. He's promised to stay alive until everyone is safe.

Now they are.

Now the war is over, and his body crumbles as the demonic cultivation holding him together loosens its grip.

Until a cultivator with a white ribbon pulls him from the rain, attempting to coax the life into staying in his body for just a little longer.

Podfic of Burial Ground by SneakySteef.

Words: 37, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English

Don't Seduce My Husband

Mar. 19th, 2026 03:22 pm
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Posted by Neha2233

by

Alpha Wei Wuxian and alpha Lan Wangji are a married couple, but one day their lives are turned completely upside down when alpha Lan Wangji begins an extramarital affair within their own home with Wei Wuxian's younger brother, omega Wei Ying then this affair eventually results in the omega becoming pregnant.

Will WWX be able to endure the betrayal he suffered at the hands of his younger brother and husband, or will he exact revenge on them both?

~~>>Special Warning<<~~

Youtubers are not allowed to shared my story on their YouTube Channel. Don't like it, don't read it you can skip this ff immediately.

Don't copy my stuff on other sites or don't translate without my permission or legal concent. This story is also available on my YouTube Channel "Love Scandals."

Adult-content🔞, adult dialogues, cheating, multiple relationships, different sex partners.

Whatever abusive language you say to me, you will be indirectly saying it to yourself. So before speaking, choose your words carefully because in the end you will end up abusing yourself.

If you have any problem with the concept or anything then you can skip this FF immediately without commenting any haterate.

Words: 1750, Chapters: 1/?, Language: English

Series: Part 24 of Boypussy weiying

Rotting Grey Walls

Mar. 19th, 2026 07:19 am
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Posted by queernightly

by

"Jin Rulan! Whatever is the meaning of this?"

Wei Wuxian woke up on a cold stone floor with chains wrapped around his wrists and throat. Beside him were Lan Zhan and A-Yuan, bound similarly by chains attached to the wall. Lan Zhan, famous for his face still as jade, was finally showing some emotion, eyes wide and furious, mouth in a trembling line. A-Yuan was weeping uncontrollably, trying to keep his sniffling quiet.

Jin Ling was standing over them, with a smile so reminiscent of his Xiao-shushu that it felt like it was Jin Guangyao with them instead of his grumpy little nephew.

Words: 1180, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English

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Posted by Kyle Orland

OpenAI announced Thursday that it has entered into an agreement to acquire Astral, the company behind popular open source Python development tools such as uv, Ruff, and ty, and integrate the company into its Codex team.

The deal, whose financial terms were not publicly disclosed, will help OpenAI "accelerate our work on Codex and expand what AI can do across the software development lifecycle," the company said in an announcement post. Integrating Astral's tools more closely with Codex after the acquisition will "enable AI agents to work more directly with the tools developers already rely on every day," it continued.

Astral's most popular open source projects include:

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The Friday Five for 20 March 2026

Mar. 19th, 2026 03:19 pm
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[personal profile] anais_pf posting in [community profile] thefridayfive
These questions were suggested by [personal profile] melagan.

1. What was the reason you began a Dreamwidth or LiveJournal account (or both)?

2. How many DW or LJ communities do you subscribe to?

3. Do you have a favorite community or one you check out often to see what's new?

4. How did you pick your user name?

5. If you could change your user name, would you?

The following bonus questions are brought to you by the fact that I (anais_pf) have been unable to access any page of LiveJournal for more than a week (and therefore cannot post to The Friday Five there):

6. If you have a LiveJournal, are you currently able to access it?

7. Do you have any information about why one would be unable to access LiveJournal?

Copy and paste to your own journal, then reply to this post with a link to your answers. If your journal is private or friends-only, you can post your full answers in the comments below.

If you'd like to suggest questions for a future Friday Five, then do so on DreamWidth or LiveJournal. Old sets that were used have been deleted, so we encourage you to suggest some more!

lots of posts

Mar. 19th, 2026 08:10 pm
kareina: (Default)
[personal profile] kareina
 It has been a while since I had time to copy my blog posts over here, so here are links to them, for anyone who may want to know what I have been up to. Many of these have photos, some more than others.
 
 

kareina: (Default)
[personal profile] kareina
 While on the bus home today the shop called—they have now fixed the car. Since I was mostly home, there was no possibility to get there to pick it up today, so it will have to be tomorrow. Since it broke the day before we were to do our annual inspection (which we obviously cancelled), the first thing we have to do upon picking it up is to get it inspected. I opted to use the station closest to my house, in Ånäset (since it is legal to drive to the inspection place if you have time booked and paid for). They are part of a national chain, but I got to their web page from clicking on their entry on Google Maps. When the page opened, it clearly stated on the first page that it was Opus Ånäset. I wrote by licence plate number in the box, pressed “Inspection” chose a suitable time tomorrow, paid, and started copying information into the calendar. When I went to copy the address it looked strange. Looked closer. It turns out that the web page changed the location when I wasn’t looking, and I was booked to a workshop in Stockholm! So I found their customer service number, called them straight away and she re-booked me to Ånäset for tomorrow, and I got a new email straight away showing the new time. It arrived even before we hung up the phone. Yay for real customer service that can solve a problem so easily!
 
Now I just need to take my normal bus in in the morning, then catch the bus to the other side of Umeå, and drive to Ånäset.
 
In other news, it was a very pleasant day at work. The electrician finally had time to come do wiring in the attic, so I caught a later bus than usual, so I could show him all the places we want outlets etc up there. This meant that I arrived at work at 09:20. Fika is normally 09:30, but I thought, nah, I will do some work before the Archaeology Subject meeting at 10:00. But first I needed to re-fill my water bottle, so I grabbed the bottle, locked my office door, and started walking towards the stairs. Ran into a handful of our PhD students, who were on their way to fika, so I joined them.
 
We had a pleasant chat, and then went to the meeting, where we had cake, to celebrate a handful of published papers by a couple of people in the department.

cake

Between both fika and the meeting, I got lots of embroidery done on the Keldor copper trim tunic. The meeting ended in time for lunch, so I joined colleagues for lunch, and had a pleasant time explaining to Sofie about the SCA and the embroidery on Keldor’s kaftan. Then I returned to my office to work, realised that I had left my water bottle in the fika room (having set it down before washing my dishes), so I went back for it, and got into another conversation with another colleague, largely about medieval stone churches in Sweden.
 
I had never really thought about the fact that there was no pre-existing stone building tradition in this region, so when it became necessary for all of the Swedish churches to suddenly build in stone, they needed to import lots of expertise, and, up here, they even had to import the lime to make the mortar, as there is none. All this meant that it was after 13:00 before I finally started working, and had only till time to leave to catch the 14:30 bus for work in my office. I did keep working on the bus, of course, till the shop called to say that the car was ready, so I called Keldor to let him know, and chatted till I was nearly home.
 
He stayed late to work on some projects for the house, one of which was making a cover extension for the laundry room threshold, which meant we could swap the places of the washer and drying on their shelf, so now their doors open out away from one another, so it will be much easier to transfer stuff from one to the other. Then we replaced the old, short hose with a new, longer one, which we ran up against the threshold, with the new cover extension over it, so that no one will trip on the hose.
 
Then we checked the attic and the progress up there. Yay! Now we have a light switch also at the top of the stairs, there is a small wall mounted electric heater in the bathroom, there is a working outlet just outside the bathroom by the door, and one on the other side of the bathroom in the cold side of the attic, so we can have light over there, too. The electrician has also drawn wires and set in the plastic boxes where the outlets will be in the walls we haven’t finished building, so now we can finish putting up the last of the insulation and make the walls themselves. The Create an attic bedroom and Create extra bathrooms projects are really moving forward!

sovay: (Otachi: Pacific Rim)
[personal profile] sovay
I can't believe I dreamed an entire opera whose closing performance by a small local outfit I was all set to attend before it was canceled at the last unavoidable minute. It was a Gian Carlo Menotti from 1948 and had never before received a Boston premiere. I had read its libretto for years because it was full of sand and sea-haunting: No body that presses its mouth to the shore closer than your mouth to mine. No eye that fades into the haze of the sun more fixed than your eye to mine. No ship of a letter that crosses the seas faster than my hand to yours, unless it has foundered, unless it has torn on the black rocks of the heart. It had one of his terse, enigmatic titles, The Visitor. The company that had put it up was called Marmalade and Gold, an allusion whose meaning did not escape the event horizon of waking, and specialized in bare-bones, slightly more than concert performances of oddities or undeserved obscurities of the twentieth-century opera world: I remember perusing the catalogue of previous seasons on their website and approving of their choices, all of which I suspect of not existing outside of the hour or so I was asleep. Erich Wolfgang Korngold did write a bunch of operas, mostly before—very popular choice—leaving Germany, but I do not believe a 1932 Der lahme König was among them. I am having a terrible week for which the external world offers nothing in the way of respite and even if I didn't get to hear any of its music, I appreciate the inside of my head attempting to furnish a break of art.

Thu 09 Apr 15:00: Graphrag

Mar. 19th, 2026 06:33 pm
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Graphrag

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Add to your calendar or Include in your list

The best privacy money can buy

Mar. 19th, 2026 06:09 pm
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Posted by jwz

North Oaks, Minnesota is the only city in the United States that is not on Google Maps Street View. YouTube documentarian Chris Parr, who grew up not too far from North Oaks, set out to change that earlier this year. For a brief few days, he literally put North Oaks on the map. And then it was gone again.

"It's known by Minnesotans as a place where executives and CEOs live," Parr told 404 Media. "Famously Walter Mondale is from North Oaks, but also like United Healthcare executives and Target executives."

North Oaks has managed to largely stay unmapped on Street View because of the way the city handles its streets. In almost every city and town in the United States, property owners give an easement to their local government for the roads in front of their homes (or don't have any claim to the roads at all). In North Oaks, homeowners' property extends into the middle of the street, meaning there is literally no "public" property in the city, and the roads are maintained by the North Oaks Homeowners' Association (NOHOA): "the City owns no roads, land, or buildings." [...]

"Technically, if you launch your drone from public property, which anyone can do if you're a registered drone pilot, you can fly it straight up and above private property," Parr said. And so Parr stood at "six or seven different spots" directly outside the boundary of North Oaks and flew his drone around. "I just pulled my car over onto the shoulder and popped my drone up and flew it over," he added. [...]

"According to North Oak's ordinances, you can go like, visit a friend, or if you're a contractor working on a house, you can go into the city, but you have to be an invited guest," Parr said. "I made a Craigslist post asking for somebody to invite me and I got an absolute ton of responses."

Previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously.

Mini-Mum’s The Word

Mar. 19th, 2026 05:55 pm
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Posted by Not Always Right

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Comeuppance Just Desserts Getting What They Deserve

Rather than getting any sort of praise (this company has felt anti-praise since I started) or being asked how I did it, I get an email from management stating my numbers are "concerning" and that they’re essentially opening up an investigation to see if I cheated somehow.

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Posted by Samuel Axon

The dream of the metaverse may have died for now, but Meta has decided it's not completely giving up on the VR experience in Horizon Worlds, the virtual worlds service that it originally envisioned as the first step toward said metaverse.

The news was announced via the Instagram account of Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth. "We have decided, just today in fact, that we will keep Horizon Worlds working in VR," said Bosworth in an AMA on the platform in response to someone who expressed disappointment at the previously announced plan to end support.

He went on to clarify that only games and experiences that already support VR will continue to do so, while new games will be exclusive to mobile, and the majority of the team's development focus will be on mobile instead of VR.

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Posted by Ashley Belanger

On Wednesday, Afroman won a widely watched defamation lawsuit that seven cops filed after the rapper made music videos mocking them for conducting a 2022 raid of his home that resulted in no charges and no marijuana found.

Videos for songs like "Lemon Pound Cake," "Why You Disconnecting My Video Camera," and "Will You Help Me Repair My Door" used real footage from the raid, pulling from security camera footage and videos shot by Afroman's wife. Cops from the Adams County Sheriff's Office alleged they were humiliated and received death threats after the videos went viral.

Accusing Afroman of defamation, cops individually sought damages as high as $1.5 million. But Afroman's lawyer, David Osborne, argued this was a clear-cut First Amendment case. At trial, Afroman testified that cops had no one to blame for the reputational damage but themselves, arguing that "if they hadn’t wrongly raided my house, there would be no lawsuit," The New York Times reported.

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Tinder to AI your dick pix

Mar. 19th, 2026 05:36 pm
[syndicated profile] jwz_blog_feed

Posted by jwz

In a feature the dating app says is set to roll out in the U.S. later this spring, Tinder plans to access users' camera rolls to pick photos and determine what they're into.

"It's up to you to figure out what you're comfortable sharing back with Tinder," Tinder Head of Product Mark Kantor told 404 Media. Still, users can't pick individual photos they want analyzed or ignored. [...]

Tinder has already leaned heavily into AI. Kantor told 404 Media that artificial intelligence is writing more than half the app's code these days.

Previously, previously, previously, previously.

[syndicated profile] rockpapershotgun_feed

Posted by Mark Warren

Right, roll call time. "A barbarian (for all the bonk boys in the audience)". Present. A mage who's the smartypants choice. Yeah. A thief, who's both "classic" and "obligatory". Here. "Rat with saxophone". Yup. Right, that's all of the fantasy trope character types accounted for in Dark Scrolls, a roguelike dungeon-running platformer from the devs behind Gunbrella and Gato Roboto.

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Posted by Edwin Evans-Thirlwell

The co-creator of extremely good horror game Darkwood is making a cleaning simulator, comparable to PowerWash Simulator and Viscera Cleanup Detail. Or at least, something that starts out as a cleaning simulator, and may even end as a cleaning simulator, if you choose, but which harbours sunken secrets that unlock an entirely different species of game. A bit like Inscryption, yes. They're calling it Hoarder.

The development team are Byzel (Polish for mess or clutter, apparently), who are part of boardgame company Awaken Realms. They're led by Acid Wizard co-founder Gustaw Stachaszewski, and include a few of the people behind time management FPS Superhot and Youtube horror show Poradnik Uśmiechu, or Smile Guide. I have a Hoarder announcement trailer for you, and it is quite the thing, though I encourage you to stop at the staircase part if you don't want to spoil certain discoveries.

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Posted by Ryan Whitwam

Google is planning big changes for Android in 2026 aimed at combating malware across the entire device ecosystem. Starting in September, Google will begin restricting application sideloading with its developer verification program, but not everyone is on board. Android Ecosystem President Sameer Samat tells Ars that the company has been listening to feedback, and the result is the newly unveiled advanced flow, which will allow power users to skip app verification.

With its new limits on sideloading, Android phones will only install apps that come from verified developers. To verify, devs releasing apps outside of Google Play will have to provide identification, upload a copy of their signing keys, and pay a $25 fee. It all seems rather onerous for people who just want to make apps without Google's intervention.

Apps that come from unverified developers won't be installable on Android phones—unless you use the new advanced flow, which will be buried in the developer settings.

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Posted by Andrew Cunningham

Apple's MacBook Neo is impressive for its $600 price, but its A18 Pro processor is one of its biggest compromises compared to a modern MacBook Air—in our review, we found it was more than up to basic computing tasks, but for demanding workloads that benefit from more CPU and GPU cores and RAM, the Air is a better choice.

But those limited computing resources are still enough to run Windows on your Mac using the Parallels Desktop virtualization software—so says Parallels itself, which after some testing and benchmarking has declared the Neo suitable for "lightweight computing and everyday productivity, document editing, and web-based apps" while running Windows 11.

Parallels says the MacBook Neo's respectable single-core CPU performance keeps the Neo feeling "quick and responsive" when running multiple Windows-only software packages, including QuickBooks Desktop and other accounting apps, Microsoft Office, "light engineering and data tools" including AutoCAD LT and MATLAB, and "Windows-only courseware and education software" with "no Mac equivalent." In Parallels' testing, the Neo's single-core CPU performance in Windows was still roughly 20 percent faster compared to a Core Ultra 5 235U chip in a Dell Pro 14 laptop.

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Posted by Tim Harford

If the 21st century has produced a more prescient book, I’ve not seen it. I’m thinking of The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth, by Harvard economics professor Benjamin Friedman. The book was published in late 2005, making it the same age as this column.

Friedman’s argument was wide-ranging but the bottom line is easy to summarise: “Economic growth — meaning a rising standard of living for the clear majority of citizens — more often than not fosters greater opportunity, tolerance of diversity, social mobility, commitment to fairness, and dedication to democracy.”

Friedman noted that a thriving economy might have a number of welcome side-effects, consequences which we might call moral progress. For example, if jobs were plentiful and workers were scarce, discrimination on the grounds of race, sex or religion “most often gives way to the sheer need to get the work done”.

Yet for Friedman, the key to unlocking the virtues he admired was not jobs but an increase in broad-based material living standards, which is measured — or at least proxied — by GDP per person. He argued that we naturally judge how things are going by making comparisons, and two types of comparison are readily available. The first is to compare ourselves with others. The second is to compare our current situation with our own past experiences. If living standards were briskly increasing, then we would notice that we were comfortably richer than we had been a decade ago. If living standards were stagnating or falling, then we would stop making contended comparisons with our former selves, and our envious gazes would turn to the lives of others.

Such zero-sum thinking is likely to be toxic and counter-productive. After all, as Friedman writes, “Nothing can enable the majority of the population to be better off than everyone else. But not only is it possible for most people to be better off than they used to be, that is precisely what economic growth means.”

At the time, Friedman was criticised from the left for being too reductive about what economic progress meant (what about inequality? What about environmental sustainability?) and from the libertarian right for confusing moral progress with centrist ideals such as an inclusive, redistributive welfare state (what about rewarding excellence? What about freedom?).

These critiques have lost their bite. The events of the past two decades have proved that on the big questions, Friedman was unnervingly, tragically correct. The 21st century has been an era of economic trauma, and the consequences for our attitudes and our politics have become all too obvious.

The US economy has certainly grown over the past 25 years, but the growth has been uneven, uncertain and repeatedly interrupted. The century began with the unnerving popping of the dotcom bubble, followed by the post-9/11 recession, which blurred into the “China shock”, an influx of Chinese imports that for a few years inflicted localised but traumatic damage on US communities dependent on manufacturing. All that was made to look tame by the banking crisis of 2007-08, which depressed growth rates for years afterwards, as well as draining the US economic system of legitimacy. The final one-two punch was the Covid-19 lockdown followed by the surge in inflation of the past few years.

What does all this drama look like in the economic data? Simple. Over the quarter-century beginning in 1950, real GDP per person grew almost 80 per cent. Over the following quarter-century, 1975-1999, real growth per person was again just under 80 per cent. But from 2000-2024, total real growth per person halved, to just under 40 per cent.

Or consider the experience of the finance-heavy UK economy, in which the banking crisis looms even larger. That crisis was followed by an anaemic recovery — not helped by the tax rises and spending cuts of the coalition government — and then, in 2016, the vote for Brexit. The data, again, tells the story: between the peak of 2007 and the last full year before the referendum, 2015, the UK’s real economic output per person grew by a grand total of 1 per cent. Since 2016 the average is still well short of 1 per cent a year. For context, in the 1990s, real per capita growth was more like 1 per cent every six months.

Friedman’s basic thesis was that robust, broad-based growth would encourage tolerance, social mobility, fairness and a commitment to democratic values. Should we be surprised that an economic slowdown has given us the opposite?

Since The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth was published, economists have investigated its thesis with a more quantitative lens. Lewis Davis and Matthew Knauss looked at more than 80 countries between 1989 and 2007. They found that people were more eager for governments to “take more responsibility to ensure that everyone is provided for” where the growth rate had recently been rising and income inequality had recently been falling.

That’s an intriguing finding, particularly the counterintuitive proposition that people want more government provision in places where income inequality is falling. And not everyone would agree that there is anything “moral” about wanting government to take a bigger role as a provider. Still, it is striking that Davis and Knauss find that in economies that are misfiring, with falling growth and rising inequality, the typical response is: every man for himself.

In January, Timothy Besley, Christopher Dann and Sacha Dray published a study of “Growth Experiences and Trust in Government”, and concluded that individuals who had experienced higher GDP growth since they were born “are more prone to trust their governments”. Again, trusting your government is not quite the same thing as moral rectitude, but Besley and colleagues are pointing to some of the same fundamental issues as Friedman was: when economic growth sags, it doesn’t just change what we can afford — it changes what we value, what we believe and who we trust.

We shouldn’t be reductive about this link between material flourishing and moral flourishing. There are certainly moments, such as the Great Depression in the US, when both the government and the people seemed to rise to the challenge rather than sinking into infighting and recrimination. And the increasing power and attention given to unsavoury political characters around the democratic world is surely about more than merely low growth. Still: low growth matters, not just because it empties out our shopping bags, but because it hollows out our character.

Written for and first published in the Financial Times on 18 Feb 2026.

I’m running the London Marathon in April in support of a very good cause. If you felt able to contribute something, I’d be extremely grateful.

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[personal profile] yourlibrarian posting in [community profile] marchmetamatterschallenge
March Meta Matters Challenge banner by thenewbuzzwuzz


Hello everyone! It's time for another writing prompt!

Do you think it's more likely that meta would be preserved and read if it were regularly included in other fanwork challenges? Would you take part if you had the chance?

Writing new meta this month is optional. If you do write something though, share a link to it in a future check-in post!

A Bookshop.org Discount For You!

Mar. 19th, 2026 01:22 pm
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[personal profile] duckprintspress
Remember our list of our most anticipated 2026 releases?

10 book covers and 2 gray book cover placeholders on the background of the Rainbow Flag. The books are: Last First Kiss by Julian Winters; I Love You Don't Die by Jade Song; The Girls Will Be Okay by Linnea Peterson; Platform Decay by Martha Wells; Common Bonds 2 ed. by Claudie Arseneault, Emery Lee & RoAnna Sylver; A Long and Speaking Silence by Nghi Vo; The Last Best Quest Ever by F.T. Lukens; Is This a Cry for Help? by Emily Austin; Bridget and Gabe Are Not Okay by Lex Croucher; Smash or Pass by Birdie Schae. The cover placeholders read: A Trade of Blood cover tba; Panguan cover tba.
 

Some of these books are now out, some are not, but regardless – if you’re as excited for any of these titles as we are, and you want to either buy them or pre-order them, I’ve got a deal for you!

Purchase any of these print books through our Affiliate Shop List, use code BSO15 to save 15% off the price!

This deal is ONLY good on print books (not e-books!), applies only to the list price (as in, doesn’t stack with other discounts), and the coupon is good NOW through April 1st 2026 (no foolin’!). You just have to make sure you use our affiliate link and get the book(s) you want through the list!

This is part of a pilot program that Bookshop.org is running to support affiliate shops like ours that utilize their list-building features. I’m pretty curious to see where they’re going with this program, and also am curious to see, like, if any of y’all use the coupon! So check out the books, save a little money, and get your queer read on.



Fuck my fucking brain, ugh

Mar. 20th, 2026 04:22 am
tyger: Axel's Avatar Kingdom chibi. Text: Axel (Axel - chibi)
[personal profile] tyger

So today has been. Bad. Mentally.

No reason I can see, unless I perhaps need to go outside more? But I'm eating a vaguely balanced diet, and sleeping enough even if at weird hours, and - oh. Right. I do keep forgetting to take my meds/taking them late/etc. That might be the problem.

Anyway today I mostly failed any and all will saves over just going the fuck to sleep. The fact that Sushi has been extremely cuddly hasn't helped, of course, but the first will save was when he woke me up at fuckoff o'clock (like 7:30 or something) and I kicked him out into the back of the house because hahaha noooo. And then didn't get out of bed again until mid-afternoon. Sooooo. Yeah. Not great.

Despite that, I did get some chore-like things done - took out the rubbish, cleaned the chook feeder (it generally doesn't need cleaning, since the inside is protected from dust, but the mechanism's stuck a couple of times recently so I figured it needed dusting. There was uh. A lot of dust), that kinda thing.

And I DID do some painting? Still only like two thirds of the way through the first edge though. :/ Kinda thinking it might be more efficient to just... do some very temporary tape and paint it quickly, rather than have to be so! fucking! precise!! Which is uh not my strong point.

Didn't do any sanding, though, which is. Less good. :/

Anyway, now is time for bed again and hopefully tomorrow will be better!!! >:

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