Xerodin

joined 2 years ago
[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 18 points 2 weeks ago

Forcing people out of the military for a policy that wasn't around when they joined gives the service member some leeway. There's usually a period of voluntary separation where they can opt in to receive a severance pay and streamline the process. If the service member doesn't opt for voluntary separation, they are involuntarily separated. This involves a little more paperwork, a longer process, and half the severance pay of a voluntary separation. In both cases it's an honorable discharge (unless there's something else criminal at play) and they keep all benefits and entitlements.

I'm more familiar with Navy regulations, but here's an example from the DEI rollback from March (TW for the shitty title of the message).

Trigger warningInitial Direction on Prioritizing Military Excellence and Readiness

Paragraph 5 stipulates the terms of voluntary separation. More specifically:

b. Any remaining military service obligation will be waived for members requesting voluntary separation; any bonus received prior to 26 February 2025 and subject to a service obligation will not be recouped. Absent any other basis for separation or disenrollment, USNA and NROTC midshipmen will not be subject to monetary repayment of education benefits.

d. Characterization of service will be honorable except where the member's record otherwise warrants a different characterization. The applicable separation program designator codes and associated narrative reasons for separation will be provided at a later date by an appropriate official of the Office of the ASN(M&RA) in coordination with the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness.

e. For military personnel requesting voluntary separation and eligible for voluntary separation pay in accordance with references (h) and (i), CNO and CMC will authorize voluntary separation pay at a rate that is twice the amount of involuntary separation pay for which the member would have been eligible in accordance with reference (j). Voluntary separation pay is not payable to those with less than six years or more than 20 years of service. No member receiving Voluntary Separation Pay in accordance with this ALNAV will be required to serve in the Ready Reserve.

f. CNO and CMC are authorized Temporary Early Retirement Authority for members with over 18 but less than 20 years of total active-duty service eligible per reference (k) and separated in accordance with this ALNAV.

If you have friends, family, or acquaintance who are US military members, please use this information and opportunity to educate, agitate, and organize. Some of these people are about to lose their stability and routine, and it's important to direct their frustration and blame at the racist policies of this administration, linking it to other intersectionalities, and building camaraderie.

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 38 points 2 weeks ago

Veterans were also victims of the orphan crushing machine, usually recruited from impoverished areas with the promise of a stable job, health care, and education. They were once broke high school kids from podunk towns with zero opportunities for upward mobility. I think the left in America is missing a huge opportunity to take advantage of the fetishization of veterans. A few charismatic veterans who espouse a leftist platform can lend a lot of pathos for the cause from the view of the average 'red-blooded American.'

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 6 points 2 months ago (3 children)

I mention it partially to be a contrarian, but also to not lose sight of the fact that there are people who wake up everyday to leftist ideology, and some of those are going to be American active duty service members and veterans. Mike Prysner has done a lot to help people leave active duty while planting the leftist seeds in their minds with his Eyes Left Podcast, and his work with The Empire Files has been great, too.

It's anecdotal, but I've had a lot of luck myself convincing veterans to go down the pipeline of "Bernie Sanders baby's first socialist thought" to full-blown commie who reads Lenin and abhors American Empire.

Do they really count as veterans?

In the literal, yes, they served in the military. But it's more of how they self-identity. Some refute the title of veteran altogether. Others still use the moniker as a means to get in with other veteran's groups and begin changing minds. Educate, agitate, and organize works on veterans, too. IMHO, I think purity testing someone based on prior military service does the left a disservice.

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 4 points 2 months ago (6 children)

What about American dissenters and civil rights activists like Andy Stapp?

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 2 points 2 months ago

Imperial/metric flame war! Fuck it, let's get even more pedantic and go back to using decimal time. 10 hours a day, 100 minutes an hour, and 100 seconds a minute, all altered in duration to fit into their superlative hierarchical tier. A day would then be 100000 decimal seconds. Does that make the metric powers of 10 part of your brain happy?

/s for fake passive-aggression. I'm not actually upset, your comment just reminded me of decimal time.

On a related note, 60 (seconds per minute, minutes per hour) is a cool number because it's divisible by so many factors: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, 30, and 60. It's because 60 is divisible by so many numbers that we can have increments of an hour be in while numbers of minutes without decimals. A quarter hour is 15 minutes. A third is 20 minutes. One tenth is 6 minutes. Base 60 seconds and minutes are flexible and convenient.

Anyways, that's enough late night rambling. Enjoy your day, internet stranger.

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 3 points 2 months ago

Holy shit, I haven't thought about this in years! I remember back in 2008 I had a copy of Stepmania on a flash drive and played it on school computers during class.

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 3 points 2 months ago

I had the exact same thought when I read the premise. One of my favorite indie games of all time.

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 24 points 3 months ago (2 children)

The second sentence of the Wikipedia article literally says about 2/3 were American citizens.

The section on 'Exclusion, removal, and detention' says "[s]omewhere between 110,000 and 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry were subject to this mass exclusion program, of whom about 80,000 Nisei (second generation) and Sansei (third generation) were U.S. citizens."

So yes, second and third generation Japanese Americans, natural born citizens, were held in American concentration camps.

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 24 points 4 months ago

British Columbia, a Canadian province.

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 35 points 6 months ago (3 children)

Why does he look like Tim Allen if he was stung by a dozen bees and huffed some paint thinner?

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 10 points 7 months ago (1 children)

That fantasy looks like the Western government offering tax cuts and incentives for a private company to set up shop in a rural town, hiring a bunch of employees for as little money as possible, cutting corners in safety and quality to boost their revenue from the investment, and ultimately delivering a shit product by comparison. Then, when the public finds out, the company will "downsize" by laying off most of the employees they hired, stranding those that are laid off in a rural town they can no longer afford to move away from while protecting the company's profits.

The CEO gets a bonus for record profits, a couple hundred people's lives are ruined, a small town has to deal with the fallout of high unemployment and the socioeconomic issues that come with that, and the Western government is at a loss of millions of dollars in taxpayer funds. Lawmakers get their kickbacks from the company in the form of political donations and lobbying vacation trips.

I'm sorry, my internet friend, but I have little hope for that fantasy without significant change to the system at large.

[–] Xerodin@lemm.ee 1 points 7 months ago

For single player fantasy, Outward is my favorite game to get immersed in. It has a bit of a steep learning curve, but the survival mechanics and lack of a leveling system really aid in the feeling that you're getting better at playing the game as your gear gets better. The combat encourages patience and preparation rather than jumping into the fray and swinging wildly. And the magic system, good lord. There are several vague categories, but the best way to describe it would be 'ritualistic.' There are spells with fairly benign effects on their own that, when used in conjunction with other spells or effects, produce deviating or beneficial results. And the NG+ mechanics are fair and balanced while offering a boost to follow-on playthroughs.

The most significant barrier to entry is the learning curve, mostly learning about combat, patience, and the stability system. But it's my personal favorite.

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