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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: October 4th, 2024

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  • Until now I honestly thought I’d have to host an Instance to create a Community, for some reason. Now I’m a bit embarrassed.

    Thank you.

    Edit for visibility:

    This answer is the direction I chose to go in, mainly for simplicity’s sake.

    If the fediverse gods are watching, it might be worth considering automatically making communities associated with people’s usernames. Maybe reserved automatically, but invisible unless you opt-in? That way nobody can create harassment communities targeting your username on your home instance. Just a thought.



  • Yes, but definitely not proper form, as my left hand rests on WASD+CTRL/Shift+Space.

    I’m around 100 wpm, so maybe it doesn’t matter.

    While I completely understand people who can’t get to 100 wpm (much like people at 110+ completely understand me), I cannot fathom young adults who cannot touch-type (barring disability, obviously).



  • I don’t think I insulted your intelligence other than to imply you are not omniscient, and I immediately acknowledged I’m in a similar boat, just not in this very specific topic.

    If implying you’re not perfect is an insult, sure, you’re welcome to throw in the towel and put that wall up by pretending I’m arguing in bad faith. Ironically, that actually does diminish your intelligence - actively fighting the opportunity to learn.


  • ’ll bet my left nut that if we both tested our English skills, I’d have a larger vocabulary and better syntax. More than ten years ago I surpassed the average native speaker in vocabulary size.

    Real talk? I don’t care. Good on you if you’re right, but I’m almost certain you’re wrong. I do understand why you made your assumption based on the average internet user, though. Literacy rates are dropping in the US and it’s equally embarrassing and dangerous.

    My point by pointing out your terrible writing was that if you’re going to argue in such bad faith, you should at least put some effort into it. Put some pants on before you go scream at your neighbors that their grass is giving you migraines. By pointing out your penis was exposed, I’m not actually upset that I saw a penis, I just was hoping it’d embarrass you enough to shut up and go away.

    No, you’re just a dummy.

    Seeing this part and glancing at your many more paragraphs finally gave me the kick in the head that I needed to make me realize what a colossal waste of time talking to you is. Congratulations, you’re about to be the first person I’ve ever blocked on Lemmy.

    … that said, before I hit the block button, I did notice this bit which tempted me to respond because it’s an all too common trope that I’d happily enter an in-depth discussion with you about my lived experience counter-anecdote if you weren’t such a prick:

    There are laws in place which allow cops — just like soldiers, to not do what they’re commanded to do. They’re called “illegal orders”.

    There are also laws that prevent Donald Trump from serving a second term. Does that comfort you, resting assured in the knowledge that your logic means he must not be President again? Definitely doesn’t comfort me; I’d prefer to live in reality and advocate for his removal. Backing away from my metaphor, I promise you there are cops who have been fired for failing to follow illegal orders, you just didn’t know about any of them because you never bothered to put in any effort to find out they exist. Ironically for the cause you pretend to care about enough to virtue signal on the internet, that pressures more cops to follow illegal orders (because they know they’re completely screwed if they do the right thing). I would know, I sit in the former camp and know many who sit in the latter. Enjoy the illusion, though!



  • I didn’t insult you other than to say that you’re biased, which I don’t think is an insult personally. I’m biased too, about different things. All humans are.

    My point, for the third (3rd) time, is that having Harry be interested in being a cop is not out of character and poor writing because Harry’s traits and background don’t preclude him from an interest in being one.


  • I think you just don’t understand that cops come from the same schools, communities, homes, families, etc. as anyone else, including you; in other words, you have a significant mental rift that makes it impossible for you to walk the bridge of logic I built for you.

    I don’t know if I can build a bridge big enough for you to cross. I guess just stare at my previous comment for a while until it clicks.

    TL;DR: If you think, and even shout from the rooftops, that the only people suitable for law enforcement are pieces of shit, guess who is going to become law enforcement? Oh my, we seem to have a Too Many Pieces of Shit in Law Enforcement problem! Wonder how that happened…


  • “No but you have to understand, All Cops might Be Bastards but they’re could be way worse bastards!”

    This strawman isn’t even properly put together; it’s falling apart. If English isn’t your first language, skip the following: Write better.

    Do you not understand that things are clearly immoral should lead to law enforcement refusing to enforce the laws. It doesn’t mean they get to decide which laws to enforce or not, willy nilly, but if someone says “go an arrest every minority out there” they can say ‘that’s unconstitutional and I won’t do it, you can fire me and then I’ll sue you’ or whatever it is you do there.

    Evidently not, because my understanding of your argument is that it is an oxymoron: Cops should use their own moral judgement to selectively enforce the law, but also, cops should not use their own moral judgement to selectively enforce the law.

    I’m not a Harry Potter encyclopedia so maybe your perception of Harry being a loose cannon is much more arbitrary than mine, but in the context of someone refusing to enforce a law on moral grounds, you’re making zero sense to me. It seems like you’re assigning “willy nilly” to selective enforcement you disagree with and “refusal” to selective enforcement you agree with.


  • “Loose cannons” are never good as cops. No matter how much you delude yourself they’re completely moral and even if that were 100% true they wouldn’t be good cops. Cops aren’t justice. They’re law enforcement.

    A reminder that we’re talking about choosing between lesser evils here. Would you rather an immoral by-the-book Auror/cop in league with Voldemort/Hitler or a moral loose cannon like Harry?

    Someone applying their own morality all the time instead of laws should never ever be a cop. That’s why ACAB.

    How do you feel about ICE arresting people for immigration offenses?

    How do you feel about the DEA prosecuting people for cannabis?

    There’s nuance here, and you’re pretending there isn’t.


  • Fair enough, but that argument also works against you:

    Why become a cop? He has other interests than being a cop.

    is equal to

    Why not become a cop? He’s interested in being a cop.

    Surely you know cops don’t eat sleep and breathe law enforcement too, right? As in they have other hobbies and interests? That goes for every job; a tailor has hobbies other than tailoring, and a taxi driver has other interests than driving.


  • But like the earlier dude said Harry hasn’t even got an understanding of the wider world. He would be much better at being a professor, because it also includes studying instead of just enforcing the rules.

    This section is refuted by: He’s 18, so “Duh” and “Nah,” respectively.

    Even if you imagine a perfect cop, he wouldn’t be acting like Harry. Harry constantly breaks some rules or laws. Not what cops should be doing.

    A fair point, but essentially the opposite of what looks like most people’s assertion about Harry becoming a cop, i.e. “He’s good so he should not be a cop,” and/or, “If some/most/all cops are bad, no one should become a cop.” I find both of those asinine takes, hence my refuting them above.

    TL;DR: Harry would be morally upstanding and a loose cannon (assuming he doesn’t mature past 18), therefore a “good” cop, but not a “great” cop, and assuming his world is anything like ours, should absolutely be a cop to offset the bad.

    Imagine if the magical world was (for this analogy) the US. Some who grew up in another country and hasn’t even lived in the US, just went to a mostly American school, wants to be an American cop? Even when they go through a necessary training (and we know the wizarding world isn’t big on credentials or experience) to become a cop, he’d still have very little understanding of the actual law with just some weeks of training, and wouldn’t have grown up hearing about the constitution of the US let alone all the amendments to it.

    Yes, immigrant cops have a disadvantage to face, but I disagree in your analogy and its application to Harry that it means they’re disqualified from the position; that’s a training issue that is far from impossible.


  • Again, cart before horse.

    You’re asserting that there are no helpful cops, therefore Harry being helpful means he should not be a cop.

    In reality, Harry being helpful should be a cop, because he could be in a position to help people.

    Dexter/Batman don’t do a lot of helping, they just crack skulls of people they perceive as bad. Ironically for your point, much like most IRL cops.