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9 votes
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Kirkenes, the Arctic town at the centre of a Norway-Russia spy war
4 votes -
LGBT in Russia: smashing stereotypes and creating a queer future
7 votes -
As some locals claim sleep deprivation and environmental racism, I-70 construction will continue into the night for at least a year
6 votes -
What happened to Christiania's dream of becoming Denmark's hippie paradise?
9 votes -
Mentorship networks/software for Leftists?
Reading HackerNews and saw that some mentorship software launched: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20656223 and someone mentioned another software as a service that does mentorship:...
Reading HackerNews and saw that some mentorship software launched: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20656223 and someone mentioned another software as a service that does mentorship: https://mentorloop.com/
Now I'm wondering where the mentorship for leftists and leftist organizing is.
And I'm wondering if anyone else feels like most of the good ideas that leftists have slowly trickle into businesses but in ways that can be controlled by executives/managers. Their "features" include these slogans:
Tools to Turn Human Resources into Superheroes
Don't let employees slip through the cracks
Stay on top of hundreds to thousands of mentoring interactions in a way that still feels personal. Check in on employee relationships, give them the right nudges they need.What's your take? Is there a need for more mentorship and peer to peer training/collaboration amongst anarchists and communists? Is that realistic? Or is this something that we just need to be on the defense against and form our own networks outside these systems of control?
16 votes -
How the queer community can embrace the asexual spectrum
9 votes -
Soviet living: a gallery of 272 photos of ordinary life in the Soviet Union
28 votes -
'If we don’t kill these people they will kill you': Policing Africa's largest slum
6 votes -
Sweden to return remains of twenty-five Sámi people after more than half a century – historic event aimed at mending ties with the community
7 votes -
A small city with big delusions: Pine Island, MN (population 3,000) has huge dreams, yet they can’t take care of their basic systems. Who pays the price?
8 votes -
Do you know who your ‘friends’ are?: Making digital conversations humane will require defining our online relationships
5 votes -
When having friends is more alluring than being right
14 votes -
The world’s last Blockbuster has no plans to close
10 votes -
How the Goth pubs of Sweden transformed drinking in Scotland's industrial heartlands
8 votes -
Finding the future in radical rural America: It's time to rewrite the narrative of “Trump Country.” Rural places weren't always red, and many are turning increasingly blue.
11 votes -
Pateros and North Central Washington continue rebuilding five years after Carlton Complex
4 votes -
Nine easy ways to create an avatar | No Sweat Tech
11 votes -
The town fighting the climate crisis to stay afloat, one hurricane at at time
6 votes -
Death and broken livelihoods: Farmers and wildfires in British Columbia
4 votes -
Honor-related crime could become a specific offence in Sweden
4 votes -
The internet has spent three years taking care of this guy’s plants: The subreddit r/takecareofmyplant has 11,300 members, all dedicated to, well, taking care of a plant
17 votes -
Vanished neighbourhoods: The areas lost to urban renewal
6 votes -
These community wind farms in Denmark and Scotland are decentralising power to the people
6 votes -
Torn apart: The vicious war over young adult books
11 votes -
Denmark's housing minister wants to scrap ghetto label for underprivileged areas
4 votes -
The Veterans Affairs is using video games to help disabled vets recover and reconnect
4 votes -
In the world’s northernmost town, temperatures have risen by 4°C, devastating homes, wildlife and even the cemetery. Will the rest of the planet heed its warning?
17 votes -
An eleven-year neighborhood feud involved restraining orders, spells, and jail time
4 votes -
The culture war has finally come for Wikipedia
35 votes -
Istanbul's LGBT community holds small rally after march banned
9 votes -
Can tourism ruin cities?
8 votes -
How the Swedish town of Eskilstuna became the world capital of recycling
5 votes -
A fundamentalist community forges a new identity: Hildale and Colorado City, born of fundamentalist LDS doctrine, are rebuilding themselves—but not without holding on to their core beliefs
8 votes -
Why I found my community in a Starbucks
6 votes -
Inside the black (cherry) market of vintage Kool-Aid packet collectors
9 votes -
Overtourism in Amsterdam's red-light district provokes local outrage
7 votes -
Forty online resources all women in tech careers should know about
7 votes -
When street food builds one community, and rankles another: Berlin’s Thaipark has long represented the best of what informal food markets have to offer. So why does the city think it’s a problem?
4 votes -
For remote communities in Scotland's Outer Hebrides, mobile libraries are a lifeline
7 votes -
Why we need to bring back the art of communal bathing
28 votes -
The city of tomorrow: What decarbonized, climate-resilient, and equitable cities could look like
7 votes -
Here comes the neighborhood: Many US cities are booming -- and experiencing housing crunches as a result. Here's a look at two cities that tried to do something about it.
6 votes -
~lgbt now has a wiki page for support organisations: please help compile additional resources for it
23 votes -
What are some of the smaller communities that you enjoy?
Heya! The question is rather straightforward. Even though I said smaller, size doesn't really matter for this - the focus is more on the community aspect rather than it being small. Here's my...
Heya!
The question is rather straightforward. Even though I said smaller, size doesn't really matter for this - the focus is more on the community aspect rather than it being small. Here's my non-exhaustive list (in no particular order):
- Tildes - This is unsurprising. It's definitely large for a "small" community, but it's managed to preserve it's culture very well, which is rather impressive. It's cozy and has high quality discussion.
- Various Discord servers and IRC channels. This one is harder to pinpoint, to be honest. As far as IRC channels/Discord servers goes, some of the more niche gaming ones are probably some of the nicest environments. IRC-wise, I really haven't managed to find any particularly active ones, outside of the ones for the next list member...
- tilde.town and probably the larger tildeverse. Not affiliated with Tildes, but generally just... a nice place to be. It's rather quiet a lot of the time, but their main IRC channel is, frankly, quite great. When it's active.
- A lot of Mastodon instances, although of course not all. The fediverse is generally a nice place to be, although politics on there is kind of mushy and one sided. Genuine interactions on there, however, are extremely common and sorting by the global timeline is quite nice (most of the time.)
- rateyourmusic is a nice community of those who are passionate about music. It's quite nice overall, though.
There's definitely a lot I've missed out, mainly because I probably don't know about them.
So, what are some of the smaller (or not) communities that you enjoy?
20 votes -
Community can offer a cure to our technology addictions
5 votes -
Why shaky data security protocols for apps put LGBTQ people at risk
8 votes -
With workers hard to find, immigration crackdown leaves Iowa town in a bind
8 votes -
Having a library or cafe down the block could change your life
16 votes -
The subtle economics of private World of Warcraft servers: Anarchy, order and who gets the loot
5 votes