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Prominent Train James Elisa Rae Shupe roped...

https://ovarit.com/o/GenderCritical/659572/james-shupe-first-nonbinary-passport-ended-his-life-a-month-after-vaginoplasty

here is an interview with him (which i didnt watch)...

>highly informative and filled in a lot of blanks. When he was lucid, James was able to explain exactly how porn addiction led him to his fetish, and why there's an over-representation of AGPs in the military. He was able to explain precisely how psychiatrists basically brainwashed people into believing that they are trans. A lot of details we roughly suspected but he gave very concrete, clear experiences.

suicide note (didnt read) but apparently he was mad at Elon...

>Have that Nazi piece of shit Elon Musk and his DOGE henchmen deduct the savings from my $93,000 of federal pensions from your bankrupt coffers.

https://zerodoesntsleep.substack.com/p/vet-found-hanging-draped-in-trans

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Fighting back against Redditors
47
look at this cute tired deer

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this is cirno

Almost as if it isn't actually child safety that they care about

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Here's how Harris can still win. :marseyturkey:

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@BWC

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Reported by:
  • Fabrico : :mods:
  • Y : Shit award = marsey coin tax, i will always give your Jew Kings Ceaser Tax as my Life is to GOD β™‘

Rules:

Asking to see who saved comments/posts=1 day ban

>*why are users saving my posts? Watch yall going to do with them? Ima scareedda :marseyscream: :marseyletsfuckinggo2:

You must be 18 or older to view this site.

>Pluto takes 248 years to orbit the sun for each 1 year. Means we are ALL underage according to the Nasa.

NO RIGHTWING AGENDAPOSTING.

>:marseyhesright: :marseyblackcock: :marseynotes: :marseylongpost:

Groomercord users will be banned on sight.

>"Hey, Im John Cena from groomercord."

Don't post anything illegal.

>* 'anything illegal'

No doxxing.

>8675309 - Jenny

Using alts to game dramacoin will get you banned.

>* oooooooooOOooooh :marseyscream:

If you post screenshots of publicly-available content, make sure to also include links.

>* nah neighbor

Supporting free speech is an immediate ban.

>I support this!

Absolutely NO anti-CCP sentiment.

>I dont know what that is, but i Love China! That Emporer Xi is a GREAT MAN.

Absolutely NO homophobia, transphobia or furphobia.

>Im not afraid to call yall cute twink TRUST ME

Absolutely NO misgendering.

>Dont mansplain things to me please.

Absolutely NO antisemitism.

>How about antiantiantiantisemitisms?

Absolutely NO vaccine misinformation.

>I got my 24th vax last week

You are encouraged to post drama you are involved in.

>I live a drama free life bub

You are encouraged to brigade in bad faith.

>black magic and jesus is my jam, yo.

You are encouraged to gaslamp, to gatekeep, above all else, to girlboss.

>Shut up and just listen for a second, you havent even said anything about my nails πŸ’…πŸ’…πŸ’…

You are encouraged to egg people on to transition or otherwise make drastic life changes.

>I will def egg people on. They will transition. They WILL make DRASTIC life changes, Jesus is the way.

This site is a janny playground, participation implies enthusiastic consent to being janny abused by unstable alcoholic bullies who have nothing better to do than banning you for any reason or no reason whatsoever (MODS = GODS)

>I literally never participate. Yalk never gave me the badge for not being able to get that badge that was made specifically in a manner that i wouldnt receive it. Still waiting. And btw, im NOT takinf abuse fork a dry Janny, ONLY THE DRUNKEN JANNIE AS THE RULES SAY, SO GET SLISHED BEFORE COMING ONLINE!


Good joke post, huh?

https://i.rdrama.net/images/174037045373Iu4Mo83VZ5VQ.webp

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I will follow for follow.

I'm looking to gain followers for my Madoka Magica content.

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More than 1/4 of Canadians see the U.S. as an 'enemy' country: poll :marseycanadian: :marseytunaktunakinvasion: :marseyjetfighter:
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LMAO Kaney has completely LOST it!
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chadmom helps child choose a more productive hobby, reddit calls it "abuse" :marseyeyeroll2:

					
					

who the frick even stands with their toes touching

and as @corp discovered, it was all anime girls

https://i.rdrama.net/images/17397197337LaxxeYBBMEDHw.webp

!chads !art

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:marseymilei: Men who eliminated women :marseyelonmusk:
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test

white extinction is long overdue

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:#marseycut:

https://media.tenor.com/j0BAcRArt6kAAAAx/luka-luka-doncic.webp

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:#marseyretardchad:

https://i.rdrama.net/images/17403744364Qs5r6BstTa7jg.webp

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Caught With Your Pants Down, Mark? :marsey57:
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"I'm a Luigi sympathizer, and I'd like an open dialogue."

					
					

... proceeds to make the flimsiest arguments ever :marseylaughpoundfist:

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:marseysnoo: :marseydead: Dating apps could be in trouble – here's what might take their place :marseyxoxo: :marseyhearts:

A year into their relationship, Jess and Nate got engaged next to the sea. "It was a golden, sandy beach – empty and secluded," says Jess, 26. "It was just us two there, so it was really intimate."

Except that the couple were actually hundreds of miles apart – and they were role-playing their engagement in the video game World of Warcraft.

Nate, 27, was living just outside London – and Jess was in Wales. After meeting briefly at an esports event in Germany in March 2023, the pair developed a long-distance relationship, playing the game together "from the moment we woke up to the moment we went to bed", says Nate.

The couple still play the game daily, even though they've been living together in Manchester since March 2024. And they know other couples who have found their partners through video games: "It's a different way of meeting someone," says Jess. "You both have such a strong mutual love for something already, it's easier to fall in love."

Nate agrees. "I was able to build a lot more of a connection with people I meet in gaming than I ever was able to in a dating app."

A selfie of Nate and Jess on the left, and on the right, a screenshot from World of Warcraft showing Nate proposing with the words, "Will you marry me?"

Nate and Jess (pictured, alongside their virtual engagement), found love online - but not on a dating app

Nate and Jess are not alone. According to some experts, people of their generation are moving away from dating apps and finding love on platforms that were not specifically designed for romance.

And hanging out somewhere online that's instead focused on a shared interest or hobby could allow people to find a partner in a lower-stakes, less pressurised setting than marketing themselves to a gallery of strangers. For some digital-native Gen Zs, it seems, simply doing the things they enjoy can be an alternative to the tyranny of the swipe.

Internet dating at 30 - a turning point?

Since it first appeared with the launch of match.com 30 years ago, online dating has fundamentally altered our relationships. Around 10% of heterosexual people and 24% of LGBT people have met their long-term partner online, according to Pew Research Center.

But evidence suggests that young people are switching off dating apps, with the UK's top 10 seeing a fall of nearly 16%, according to a report published by Ofcom in November 2024. Tinder lost 594,000 users, while Hinge dropped by 131,000, Bumble by 368,000 and Grindr by 11,000, the report said (a Grindr spokesperson said they were "not familiar with this study's source data" and that their UK users "continue to rise year over year").

According to a 2023 Axios study of US college students and other Gen Zers, 79% said they were forgoing regular dating app usage. And in its 2024 Online Nation report, Ofcom said: "Some analysts speculate that for younger people, particularly Gen Z, the novelty of dating apps is wearing off." In a January 2024 letter to shareholders, Match Group Inc - which owns Tinder and Hinge - acknowledged younger people were seeking "a lower pressure, more authentic way to find connections".

"The idea of using a shared interest to meet someone isn't new, but it's been reinvented in this particular moment in time – it signals a desire of Gen Z," says Carolina Bandinelli, an associate professor at Warwick University whose research focuses on the digital technologies of romance.

Getty Images Joggers running in a parkGetty Images

Many younger people are exploring alternatives to dating apps, from gaming to running clubs and other social activities

According to Danait Tesfay, 26, a marketing assistant from London, younger people are looking for alternatives to dating apps, "whether that be gaming or running clubs or extra-curricular clubs, where people are able to meet other like-minded people and eventually foster a romantic connection".

At the same time that membership of some dating apps appears to be in decline, platforms based around common interests are attracting more users. For instance, the fitness app Strava now has 135m users – and its monthly active users grew by 20% last year, according to the company. Other so-called "affinity-based" sites have seen similar growth: Letterboxd, where film fans can share reviews, says its community grew by 50% last year.

Rise of the hobby apps

And just as in the pre-internet age, when couples might have met at a sports club or the cinema, now singletons are able to find each other in their online equivalents.

"People have always bonded over shared interests, but it's been given a digital spin with these online communities," says Luke Brunning, co-director of the Centre for Love, S*x, and Relationships (CLSR) at the University of Leeds.

"It's increasingly difficult to distinguish between behaviour that's on a dating app and dating behaviour on another platform."

Hobby apps are taking on some features of social media, too: in 2023, Strava introduced a messaging feature letting users chat directly. One twenty-something from London explains that her friends use it as a way to flirt with people they fancy, initially by liking a running route they've posted on the platform. Strava says its data shows that one in five of its active Gen Z members has been on a date with someone they met through fitness clubs.

"[Online] fitness communities are becoming big places to find partners," says Nichi Hodgson, the author of The Curious History of Dating. She says a friend of hers met his partner that way, and they're now living together.

The same appears to apply to Letterboxd, too. With users including Chappell Roan and Charli XCX, it's a popular platform for younger people - two-thirds of members in a survey of 5,000 were under 34.

The company says it's aware of several couples meeting through the app, including one who bonded over a shared love of David Fincher's opinion-dividing 2020 drama Mank. "It could be that seeing other people's film tastes reveals an interesting aspect of themselves," says Letterboxd co-founder Matthew Buchanan.

Why the shift?

So what might be driving this? While dating apps initially appeared to offer "the illusion of choice", and a transparent, efficient way to meet partners, the reality for many has often proven to be different. The Pew Research Center found that 46% of dating-app users said their experiences were overall very or somewhat negative.

The recent decline in user numbers might also be a response to the way some apps are structured – in particular, the swipe feature for selecting potential partners, launched by Tinder in 2013 and widely copied.

Its creator, Jonathan Badeen, was partly inspired by studying the 1940s experiments of psychologist BF Skinner, who conditioned hungry pigeons to believe that food delivered randomly into a tray was prompted by their movements.

Getty Images A psychological experiment with pigeons conducted by BF SkinnerGetty Images

Tinder's swipe mechanism was partly inspired by Harvard Professor BF Skinner's psychological experiments with pigeons in order to understand the brain's reward system

Eventually, the swipe mechanism faced a backlash. "Ten years ago, people were enthusiastic and would talk quite openly about what apps they were on," says Ms Hodgson. "Now the Tinder model is dead with many young people – they don't want to swipe any more."

According to Mr Brunning, the gameifying interface of many dating apps is a turn-off. "Intimacy is made simple for you, it's made fun in the short term, but the more you play, the more you feel kind of icky."

The pandemic may have had an impact, too, says Prof Brian Heaphy at the University of Manchester, who has studied dating-app use in and after the lockdowns: "During Covid, dating apps themselves became more like social media – because people couldn't meet up, they were looking for different things."

Although that didn't last after the pandemic, it "gave people a sense that it could be different from just swiping and getting no responses – all the negatives of dating-app culture," says Prof Heaphy.

And in that context, the fact that video games or online communities like Strava or Letterboxd aren't designed for dating can be appealing. By attracting users for a broader range of reasons, there's less pressure on each interaction.

"Those apps aren't offering a commercialised form of romance, so they can seem more authentic," says Prof Heaphy.

The World of Warcraft characters of PurplePixel and Wochi

The humans behind Wochi and PurplePixel (pictured) met while playing World of Warcraft, though they say finding a partner wasn't their original intention

It's a type of connection free from the burden of expectation. A different couple who met on World of Warcraft – and go by the names Wochi and PurplePixel – weren't looking for love. "I definitely didn't go into an online game trying to find a partner," says Wochi.

But although initially in opposing teams, or guilds, their characters started a conversation. "We spent all night talking until the early hours of the morning, and by the end of the night, I'd actually left my guild and joined his guild," says PurplePixel. Within three years, Wochi had quit his job and moved to the UK from Italy to be with her.

According to Ms Hodgson, "While some dating apps can bring out the worst behaviours, these other online spaces can do the opposite, because people are sharing something they enjoy."

Because of these structural elements, she doesn't think the recent decline in numbers is temporary. "It's going to keep happening until dating apps figure out how to put the human aspect back."

New kinds of dating app

The dating apps aren't giving up without a fight, however. Hinge is still "setting up a date every two seconds", according to a spokesperson; Tinder says a relationship starts every three seconds on its platform and that almost 60% of its users are aged 18-30. In fact, the apps appear to be embracing the shift to shared-interest platforms, launching niche alternatives including ones based around fitness, veganism, dog-ownership or even facial hair.

They're also evolving to encourage different kinds of interaction. On Breeze, users who agree to be set up on a date aren't allowed to message each other before they meet; and Jigsaw hides people's faces, only removing pieces to reveal the full photo after a certain amount of interaction.

It means that it's premature to proclaim the death of the dating app, believes Prof Heaphy. "There's now such a diversity of dating apps that the numbers for the biggest ones aren't the key indicator," he says. "It might actually be a similar number to before, in terms of overall membership."

And there's a downside to people going to more general-interest apps looking for love – people might not want to be hit on when they just want to talk about books. Dating apps, at least, are clear about what their purpose is.

What might the future look like?

In an increasingly online world, the solution to improving relationships might not simply be to go offline. Instead, apps that can offer an experience which more closely mirrors the best of IRL interactions, while tapping into the possibilities of digital ones, might also show a way forward.

With the imminent integration of AI into dating apps, we are "right on the cusp of something new", says Mr Brunning. "It's interesting to see if we'll end up with specific apps just for dating, or will we end up with something a bit more fluid?"

He points to platforms in China that are more multi-purpose. "People use them for chat, for community, and conduct business on them – they can also be dating platforms, but they're often not exclusively for that."

In the meantime, the interactions possible in less mediated communities like World of Warcraft could offer more of a chance to connect than conversations initiated by a swipe.

Jess and Nate's in-game engagement on the beach might not have been real, but the couple are hoping to change that soon. "It's a matter of when, really. There are a few things we need to tick off the checklist, and then she'll be getting her ring," says Nate. And there'll still be a gaming element.

"You can role-play getting married," says Jess. "So it could be funny to get all our friends together at some point in the World of Warcraft cathedral, and we could have a marriage ceremony."

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:c::a::r::p: :space: :a::l::t:

:c::a::r::p: :space: :a::l::t:


:u::r: :space: :s::t::u::p::i::d: :space: :f::i::l::t::e::r: :space: :d::o::e::s::n::apostrophe::t: :space: :c::o::v::e::r: :space: :t::h::i::s: :space: :c::a::s::e: :space: :b::i::t::c::h:

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https://i.rdrama.net/images/1738776455qtpHpyAxGXArXg.webp

Those minnesota links are to a channel/playlist that just redirects to a channel (not an actual livestream)

right now some guy is talking about midwifes

>33 people watching

https://i.rdrama.net/images/1738776458LLT3Ix6ctfXv8A.webp

DRUMPF is finished

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https://i.rdrama.net/images/17405798720cMAsePE4CIDsw.webp

After pointed grilling by federal judges who have seemed incredulous that no one in Donald Trump's administration could provide the name of DOGE's administrator, the White House told news outlets that it was Amy Gleason, a nurse-turned-technology expert who was once honored by former President Barack Obama and who then worked in Trump's White House during his first term and also in the first year of President Joe Biden's term.

>a nurse turned technology expert

>a nurse :marseytransmerchant: turned technology expert :marseychtorrr2:

mmt of the Equifax data breach fiasco

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017_Equifax_data_breach

the wiki refuses to mention that the head of cybersecurity at the time was a music major with next to no cybersecurity training or experience.

https://www.marketwatch.com/story/equifax-ceo-hired-a-music-major-as-the-companys-chief-security-officer-2017-09-15

https://media.tenor.com/LoGEmhB7NXoAAAAx/pinkupinemame-that-was-a-classic.webp

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!chuds

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Foids Posting L's :marseyl:

					
					

I'm not filling the silence, I'm not starting the conversation, and I don't ask his opinion on anything. We sat in silence for 25 minutes before a live show this weekend because I didn't carry the conversation singlehandedly. When he speaks to me, I always respond and keep the conversation going as long as he does. I don't ask him his opinion, though, and I'm not letting a lack of knowledge on a subject deter me from sharing my opinions. Woo!

>Foid learns to be quiet, things instantly improve for both of them and his depression goes away. :marseywomanmoment2:

Imagine talking so much that not doing so actively increases the amount of free time you have.

Edit: Ofc she's a :marseyflagcanada: :marseychonkerfoid:

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