DerisionConsulting

joined 2 years ago
[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 17 points 2 weeks ago (35 children)

If you scroll down it at least gives you the vibe of what the "Western Diet" is:

A high-fat, low-fibre Western-style diet (WD) induces microbiome dysbiosis characterized by reduced taxonomic diversity and metabolic breadth, which in turn increases risk for a wide array of metabolic, immune and systemic pathologies.

So, the Western Diet could still be plant-based, if all the only definition is "high-fat, low-fibre"

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 6 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

https://lemmy.ca/modlog/6

It broke rule 1.

"Fascism is alive and well in the Roman Catholic (Empire) Church" must not have been the original title of the article you linked.

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 2 points 3 weeks ago

Are you saying that you tricked him into having sex with you?

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 2 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Under your post there are little symbols. The one that looks like 2 squares is the cross-post button.

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 12 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

And Tiktok and youtube.

I hear people bring up the first and second amendment in Canada, they clearly have strong feelings about Rupert's Land and its governance.

If you have a different idea about something like how taxes should be spent, I can hear you out. If all you do is bring up points that don't apply to you from a different county, well, it's embarrassing for both of us.

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 9 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

If you allow for miniseries, then something like Roots (1977) would be one of the older ones that I have seen.

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 107 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (4 children)

In Canada, yes.

https://www.canada.ca/en/employment-social-development/news/2025/03/toward-10-a-day-an-early-learning-and-child-care-backgrounder0.htm

As of February 2025, eight provinces and territories are delivering regulated early learning and child care for an average of $10-a-day or less, and all other jurisdictions have reduced parent fees by at least 50%.l

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 4 points 1 month ago

He isn't wrong about China being a security to Canada, and he isn't the first PM to say so.

Things like the Zhao/Chong incident are far more subtle than the leader of a country saying over and over again that they want us to be the 51st state, but it doesn't mean that it's something that we can ignore. Radiation and a shotgun will both you.

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca -3 points 1 month ago (4 children)

We don't "this" here.

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 9 points 1 month ago (1 children)

You've never seen the "I wouldn't even date you" negging, where adult-aged boys try to trick women into pleading their case to the kid?

I think I go to the bar 2 or 3 times a year, and I've seen it several times. I'm glad that doesn't seem to be as much of a thing in the gay community, at least that I've seen.

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 month ago

Right at the start it has this line

Updated April 18, 2024

So they likely didn't update the URL, because it might break things that linked to it

[–] DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca 10 points 1 month ago (1 children)

A foreign megacorp using their money to try to influence Canadian politics.
Bill s-210 is a privacy nightmare, basically requiring you to give your government-issued photo ID to tech companies.

  • everything NSFW you have ever looked up is connected to your real life identity.
  • Mega corps often bend to government requests for data
  • certain things, like being LGBTQ+, get you jailed or killed in some countries
 

So, I haven't dabbled in the Word of Darkness ("WoD") or the Vampire games since I was an early teen. I only played like 2 sessions, so I am not worried about rules for other editions coming into my head. That being said, what rules am I going to get wrong when running a game of the newest edition of Vampire the Masquerade ("V5")?

Any decent house-rules out there? Any advice?

 

If you look at the communities tab and sort by new, more communities there have 0 posts than have more than 10 posts. It seems like people are just making communities for the sake of having something to control, without any interest of actually contributing. Often times the communities are opposing, so it's not as if the mod actually has knowledge or an interest in all 6 sides.

Is there any discussion behind the scenes on a way to curb this. or is this not a concern at this time because lemmy is still small?

0
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca to c/connectasong@lemmy.world
 

From the album "Mouth Moods," part of Neil's series exploring the ways to mash songs together, through the lens of Smash Mouth's effect on meme culture.

 

Grandma = gramma

 

cross-posted from: https://kbin.social/m/lgbtq_plus@lemmy.blahaj.zone/t/954958

Joewackle J Kusi was finishing his film Nyame Mma when an anti-LGBTQ+ bill was passed, bringing the threat of prosecution for those ‘promoting’ queer stories

Arare Ghanian film featuring a queer main character could not have been released at a worse time for its director and cast. Joewackle J Kusi was making finishing touches to his short film, Nyame Mma (Children of God), and arranging screenings in the capital, Accra, when a piece of legislation passed through Ghana’s parliament, targeting LGBTQ+ content.

According to the bill approved in late February, those involved in the “wilful promotion, sponsorship or support of LGBTQ+ activities” will face jail sentences of up to five years. The legislation, awaiting presidential endorsement before it becomes law, also stipulates a prison sentence of between six months and three years for those found guilty of identifying as LGBTQ+.

Kusi says the bill’s passing forced him to cut the schedule short, to just one private screening for prominent art and film figures. It was shown on 6 March, Ghana’s independence day, at a venue in Accra, but Kusi has no idea if it will ever reach a wider audience.

“I was nervous, I was anxious because of the bill,” Kusi says. “The safety of my cast and crew kept me up at night.

“We considered that it was safer to just have one night. We didn’t go big because it didn’t feel safe to screen a film with a queer character in Ghana around the time this bill was passed.”

Nyame Mma tells the story of Kwamena (played by Kobina Amissah-Sam), who moves away from home to live in Bolgatanga, a town in northern Ghana, because of family friction over his sexuality. After the sudden death of his father, the 30-year-old queer man returns home to Sekondi, in the country’s south-west.

There, he meets his estranged lover, Maroof (played by Papa Osei A Adjei), who, under intense societal pressures, is about to marry a woman. Kwamena is left grieving not just for his father, but also the loss of Maroof.

In a touch of magical realism, Kwamena, in a dream sequence, meets his father in the afterlife. The film also alludes to Sekondi’s annual masquerade – the Ankos festival – with spirits featuring in surreal episodes.

“Some of the stories we are going to tell are going to be heavily impacted by the bill. It’s stifling to creativity,” Kusi says.

“When this film goes out there at the right time I could spend four to five years in prison because I made a film that acknowledges and highlights marginalised and queer stories.”

The bill, he says, is in contrast with Ghana positioning itself as a tourist destination, particularly after its 2019 Year of Return initiative, designed to encourage the diaspora to come back to the country.

Based in Accra, Kusi, 31, studied broadcast journalism and mass communications at the Ghana Institute of Journalism. He worked as a writer and producer at a local television network before losing his job during the pandemic which led him to focus on film-making.

One of his first major productions was a well-received audio drama called Goodbye, Gold Coast, telling the love story of a Ghanian schoolteacher and her European lover on the eve of Ghana’s independence in 1957..

Finding actors willing to play queer characters was a major challenge during Nyame Mma’s production. Kusi choose straight actors because “if I had to cast queer actors then they would have to go in hiding”.

“People read the script and said beautiful things about it but said they can’t act the role,” he says.

“Growing up, every single time I have seen a queer representation in a Ghanian film it’s been in negative light. You’ll see them at the end of the film giving their life to Christ, or they’re probably on the bed dying from some STDs. I felt that shouldn’t be the only real representation, so I tried to create positive characters.”

The existing colonial-era gay sex law in Ghana, which carries a prison sentence of three years, has recently led to arrests. In 2021, a group of 16 women and five men were arrested in southeastern Ghana after attending a meeting for LGBTQ+ advocates, in a case that attracted global attention – however a few months later they were acquitted.

“The [new] bill is targeting and criminalising all aspects of nonconformity,” Kusi says.

Human rights groups have been urging the president, Nana Akufo-Addo, not to sign the bill into law. One, Outright International, says it would “lead to a surge in violence and human rights violations against LGBTQ persons in Ghana”, including “an increased risk of mob attacks, physical and sexual violence, arbitrary arrests, blackmail, online harassment, forced evictions, homelessness, and employment discrimination”.

But Kusi points out it is election year in Ghana, and the season for populist policies.

“The only thing that unites Ghanians, no matter what political party, or religion, is homophobia,” Kusi says.

“Homophobia makes it really hard for people to think clearly. It obstructs your reasoning.”

 

cross-posted from: https://kbin.social/m/worldnews@lemmy.ml/t/825753

The country will imprison or publicly flog 60 other suspected homosexuals.

 

Specifically, Rule 2: No Illegal Content

Which country?

The rainbow in the banner isn't legal in some of the more backwards counties, so which country's laws are we going by?

I think Lemmy.world is based out of the Netherlands, so, are we using Dutch laws?

Edit: The rules were updated, and the old Rule 2 is gone.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/11100216

When registering a country code domain, keep in mind where the domain is being registered. A shift in government or geopolitics can have serious consequences.

 

This has a few caveats, you need to know what you're getting into.

This is a low-budget movie about homelessness in Winnipeg (Canada), in the 1990s. It's a "slice of life" movie, meaning that it's not about a tightly written story, but about trying to get a view into the lives of these characters.

It's about the bitter irony of being homeless and trying to sell a heater in order to survive while trying to not freeze.
It's not exciting, but it is my favourite holiday movie.

 

Alien.top's raison-d'etre is to create bots and repost things from Reddit.

The instance makes a bot with the same username as the poster from reddit, then makes a bot with the same username as all the commenters, and re-posts each comment.

Every alien.top user in this thread is a bot.
https://lemmy.ca/post/10599153?scrollToComments=true

I did a quick check, and it looks like 138 of the comments are bots.

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