The receipient's will see your real identity next to the message, but no one else (beside site admins of course) can see it. (If end to end encrypted, the site admins only see only the ciphertext, but with your real identity next to it.)

But does that really count tho? You dont own any death note, just have one sheet.

[-] IDKWhatUsernametoPutHereLolol@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Off topic, but I remember my apartment in China had like metal bars protecting the windows in the apartmeny, but in the stairwell of the building, there was a sort of "window area" that isn't protected. As a kid, I had fear of heights, but also have intrusive thoughts about falling out the building.

Like, I'm gonna try to illustrate on my notes app:

So that little rectangle is the apartment and the smaller rectangle is the door. So the right side of the stairs goes down. Then ir turns 180 degrees around then goes down further, get it? On in the middle platform where it turns (in between floors, there is a "window" area. The window looked like this:

The part colored below is a concrete barrier. About like 3-4 feet in height (feet, because I've been acustomed to useing american measuremenys).

Above that is just nothing. Zero barrier. Outside is the air, and below is death.

So if you were an adult, you could just leap over the concrete barrier and fall to your death.

I lived like 5-6 floors high.

Every day I would fear I accidentally run down the stairs too fast and accidentally leap over and die.

I'm pretty sure that barrier is not gonna be legal in the US. (Correct me if I'm wrong)

(Sorry about the shitty illuatrarion, words are hard to describe)

Not the person you replied to, but:

My Options are:

  1. Remain in US

  2. Go back to China, an actual dictatorship. Hopefully Xi doesn't find all the anti-CCP stuff I said while in the US? China tends to label people who have moved oveeseas as "汉奸" (Han Traitor). I could potentially end up in prison. Also job market has like 10 times more people competing than the US. Also 户口 (Hukou) issues, my Hukou was in some rural village, very shitty place. If I go to a city (where the actual jobs are), I'm essentially treated as a foreigner in my own country. (Also, China revoked my Chinese citizenship already. So I'd technically be an actual foreigner lmao)

  3. Become... stateless and get stuck in an airport?

Or secret option number 4:4. Hope an advanced alien civilization abducts me? 😏 /jk, but that's be fun tho

Lol. Most of the world still officially considers the US a democracy, so nope, no asylum. They'll tell you to relocate within your country (aka, move to a blue state, blue city).

Good luck, and bye! you get deported back to the US

If you're in the US and is a Citizen, run for Congress.

"Worst day of my life" is my typical answer

I mean, they asked, I'm just being honest

But a person doesn't magically stop being president just because they are in prison.

Do do we just have a prisoner that hapoens to be president?

What if this prisoner/president just orders the military to break him out?

Yea this doesn't work, any attempt to imprison a president will lead to an invocation of the insurrection act and martial law, and trump would declare anyone who tries to imprison him an enemy and order for their arrest. And if in prison, the military will get him out. (remember, the military leans right wing, most of the military voted trump)

That's why the judge is saying it's "impractical". Its not necessarily the judge being a bootlicker, the judge just knows its futile.

Japanese Animated Videos, obviously.

🤭

It feels most active the month after June 12, 2023. Then it kinda got quieter

[-] IDKWhatUsernametoPutHereLolol@lemmy.dbzer0.com 9 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

If you write 他 to refer to a woman on a test essay, you'd still get marked correct.

Writing 她 to refer to a man would be incorrect.

Basically

他 = He OR She

她 = She

它 = It (refer to objects and non-human animals)

他 is what gets used all the time to refer to both genders. 她 is rarely used, unless maybe in an English class to teach the difference between the English pronouns He and She.

Also, they are all pronounced the same: (tā)

view more: ‹ prev next ›

IDKWhatUsernametoPutHereLolol

joined 2 months ago