Cause, on 06 May 2024 - 02:46 PM, said:
Work asked me if I would be willing to move to Boston. I am! Its the number 1 biotech hub in america, I have friends there and I think its a beatiful city. Nothing is confirmed yet and I have a meeting alter today to discuss it.
However now that it may actually happen I am forced to confront my grass is greener mentality. I am quite down on philly in general these days and Boston just seems a wealthier, cleaner more exciting city. I have been there a few times for work but my most recent trip it also kind of lost it magic. Normally I just enjoy the city but on my most recent trip it kinda just was. I also revisited the aquarium which I remembered fondly but on the revisit I felt underwhelmed (though I have been to a lot of aqauriums recently and it was overcrwoded.).
Wealthier and cleaner yes, not sure about more exciting... at least after you factor in proximity to NYC, NJ, and DC (and all of the wonderful shootings, of course! and the armies of Trump loyalists spread throughout most of Pennsylvania).
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Also wow, what they say about San Francisco is true. Stepped out of my fancy hotel and immediately got asked for change by a homeless man. Nothing too unusual but later I drove past a street that had one homeless person walking, two homeless persons sitting, now a homeless person sleeping on the floor, and than suddenly I saw a small encampment on the sidewalk of at least ten homeless persons gathered together and cooking dinner over an open fire. Richest Country, richest state and one of the richest cities in the world and their answer is to just pretend its not there.
Well, the Vision Pro isn't
just pretending they're not there....
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Also when I went to the planetarium they really did make it a point to explain which native tribes land the planetarium was built on. What is the point of this? Your not returning the land so is it meant to make us feel better for acknowledging or make us feel guilty?
To make progressives (or people who feel like they're progressives relative to these particular issues) feel good about themselves and the institution doing it. OTOH it's also partly social pressure---if others are doing it and your institution isn't, that may seem like making an anti-progressive statement (as well as being behind the times).
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Indigenous leaders and activists have mixed feelings about land acknowledgments. While some say they are a waste of time, others are working to make the well-meaning but often empty speeches more useful. [...]
"The land acknowledgment gets you to that start," [...] For example, she used the land acknowledgment at the start of a lecture [...] "She put up a QR code for people to donate directly to the First Nations Garden," [...] "She literally paused so people could take pictures and create donations."
Indigenous leaders want land acknowledgments to really benefit their communities : NPR
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 06 May 2024 - 03:28 PM