

i built my pc around 2014. i had to swap my gtx 970 for a rx 480 because legacy nvidia linux drivers are/were terrible, and i can’t upgrade beyond 16gb ram. but it works well enough and i couldn’t afford to replace it anyway.


i built my pc around 2014. i had to swap my gtx 970 for a rx 480 because legacy nvidia linux drivers are/were terrible, and i can’t upgrade beyond 16gb ram. but it works well enough and i couldn’t afford to replace it anyway.


you’re nearly there. generally i’d say the first month of a new ssri feels vaguely like coming up on a small amount of mdma (which gets very old very quickly) until your brain chemistry adjusts to the new conditions. i think i found escitalopram about the worst and sertraline the least bad, but all were pretty similar.
you just need to push through the transition period. be sure to keep forcing yourself to eat even if you don’t think you can, cancel extracurriculars if you need to, and try to look after yourself.


sad but i think your analysis is sound. i live in an area with not-too-dissimilar conditions and vote share and, yeah, shit’s bad.
but, still, i will remain quietly hopeful.


odd that you’d put best korea in the same list as the lesser and greater satans


something funny could happen



I don’t suppose anyone has any info bookmarked about transdermal vs rectal progesterone dosage/absorption/bioavailability?
I’ve seen a couple of spray recipes suggest a daily dosage of 6-15mg which seems rather low, given that you’d normally do 100mg or 200mg up yer bum.


I suppose “new government powers” refers to the (cw: terfdian) National Security State Threats Bill which Owen Jones did a video about a couple of weeks ago
It’s very nice to live in a normal country that just does normal things normally 


Bit woke but I heard that people of all genders are allowed to wear hoodies now.
More practically, maybe you can start pushing your wardrobe a bit more fem? Start switching out individual “mens” articles for equivalent “womens” or “unisex” (quotes because all clothes are, in fact, unisex). Start wearing a little makeup if you like and get your hair looking really good? YouTube tutorials will help you. A pronoun badge might be helpful during the transition period.


I’ve been getting this quite consistently lately - I have a lump in the injection spot on both ass cheeks. Do you feel a lump? Apparently it could be that you’re becoming slightly allergic to the carrier oil, and the solution to that is to switch to a different kind. I think in my case it’s that I’m at the end of my last vial from a set of 3 and something in there has degraded and become a rather concerning orange colour.


I’d like to participate please


By
Marco Rubio
July 13, 2026 10:00 am ET
The International Criminal Court in The Hague. Peter Dejong/Pool/Associated Press
Most of us would struggle to imagine a world in which U.S. soldiers, police officers, Border Patrol agents and elected leaders could be dragged before an international court, tried by judges from random countries across the globe, found guilty under international laws we neither consent to nor control, and then imprisoned thousands of miles from America.
But that is what the International Criminal Court now claims the power to do.
The ICC was born at the turn of the century. At first, it was marketed as a narrow backstop to prosecute the gravest crimes. Now the ICC and its allies seek a standing world tribunal with near-unlimited reach, empowered to override the courts and constitutions of the U.S. and other sovereign states—and to prosecute and arrest our citizens.
Americans never agreed to any of this. Both of our major political parties opposed the prospect of handing a distant global court the power to prosecute and jail our own citizens. President Clinton refused to submit the Rome Statute (the ICC’s founding charter) to the Senate for ratification due to his “concerns about significant flaws in the Treaty.” Two years later, a bipartisan Senate supermajority passed the American Servicemembers’ Protection Act, authorizing the president “to use all means necessary”—including military force—to prevent the ICC from detaining or arresting Americans.
Americans found themselves in the crosshairs anyway: In 2020 the ICC launched an investigation into what chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda of Gambia described as “war crimes by members of the United States armed forces” in Afghanistan, declaring that the U.S. government hadn’t prosecuted enough American soldiers to satisfy the court. In effect, Ms. Bensouda was anointing herself the final judge of U.S. military policy and the entire U.S. justice system.
The Afghanistan investigation was only the opening move in the assault against American self-government. The ICC is backed and run by a powerful network of leftist nongovernment organizations, smug globalists, and hostile Third World governments united by their enmity toward the U.S.
In the second Trump administration, these calls have continued to grow. Last year, major activist groups urged high-ranking international officials “to take immediate and meaningful action” against the Trump administration’s deportations of violent criminals to El Salvador. Months later, a former ICC chief prosecutor declared that President Trump’s strikes against narcoterrorists amounted to “a crime against humanity” and should be treated as such under international law—a line that was echoed by United Nations leaders, and major leftist nongovernmental organizations, Democratic Party officials and politicians. In March, the Washington-based Democracy for the Arab World Now urged the Iranian regime to request an ICC investigation of “apparent war crimes” committed by American personnel.
U.S. efforts to push back against the ICC’s illegitimate interventions have been framed as a further reason for the ICC to target Americans. When 12 U.S. senators wrote to the ICC prosecutor about their concerns, the prosecutor’s office accused them of crimes. When Mr. Trump imposed sanctions against ICC personnel, a former head of Human Rights Watch said that “all 125 ICC member states would have a legal duty to arrest him were he to show up.”
It is only a matter of time before the ICC begins making good on these threats. Border Patrol agents working to remove violent criminals from our country, U.S. Marines risking their lives to restore order in the Western Hemisphere, federal prosecutors working to dismantle terror networks plotting attacks on the American homeland—all would face the constant risk of persecution for the “crime” of defending our country.
The ICC’s interfering with American military and law enforcement operations isn’t just only a grave overreach of its purported authorities. It would mean the death of the U.S. as a sovereign and independent nation. Our decision and our people would be at the mercy of the ICC and its collaborators in the “international community.” To accept the ICC is to surrender control of our national destiny.
Perhaps more polite and compliant nations could make their peace with that arrangement. But this is America. Our forefathers fought a revolution against a foreign power “transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences.” Independence is our birthright. We don’t intend to trade it for rule by a self-appointed priesthood of “international law.”
The Trump administration will always protect American service members from this threat. The U.S. is launching a diplomatic campaign with a simple message—sovereign states over globalism. Those who benefit from American security must not stand idly by while those who provide that security are targeted. This is only the beginning. Using all the tools at our government’s disposal, working beside every ally with whom we can make common cause, we will dismantle the ICC—brick by brick, if necessary.
Mr. Rubio is U.S. secretary of state.


I had a good week again. Spent the longest contiguous period out of the house in years - just under 8 hours and I held it together. Went to 1 demo, 1 meeting, 1 march. I’ve spent a lot of time with my new friend and honestly she’s a great influence on me.
Next week I’m planning to go to 1 meeting, 1 peer support group, 1 action (nothing spicy), and 1 march. And hopefully I’ll hear back about a voluntary role I applied for. I’ve really got my fingers crossed for this one because they’re a very cool group who are providing a very important service.


Yeah this one please!


Porky must be fucking with me because my facial SPF is discontinued too


this is going to be our charlie kirk moment and keith starmer’s going to add antifa, transgender, and anti-racism to the terrorism watchlist


went to a demo last night to protest some fucked up stuff the government is doing to us and there is honestly such an overlap in terms of comrades organising for palestine, tenants and workers unions, the green party (yes, really - they’re actually good in some cities here), queer liberation and so many other causes. like whatever i go to, there are always familiar faces. it gives me such hope to see people recognise that these are all facets of the same class struggle and i’m feeling kind of good about our chances.


i didn’t read this initially because of the cw but i’m glad i did and i’m glad things are looking up for you. feels good, right, to finally start living your life and actually look forward to tomorrow?


Oh cool. Sorry - I meant to say that nobody in Europe seemed to have any stock when I was looking around 2 months ago
Happy shopping!
wired article