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<p>People call me weeb and say the word autistic often, which are
because.. well, I am a weeb (as in I like anime) and some
conversations on the internet are just autistic. I have Asperger's
Syndrome and am a weeb myself. I am not offended by either, short
of people inappropriately calling me so (not very often!). It
seems that the same applies from e.g. the black community.</p>
<p>I can only talk about my own "diseases" and the impact upon me. I
have been in healthcare for about a decade for the Asperger's
Syndrome part which I will focus on. It has no relation the black
community whatsoever but is similarly an underrepresented and
misrepresented community. It is also a minority. With that aside,
I seek no sympathy whatsoever on any of that. I got out of those
bullshit institutions out of willpower, they sought to repress it
all, taking out of my hands any task that would require any
responsibility whatsoever. I actively pushed against all of that
for all that time because I knew that I wouldn't want to stay in
those places forever, and instead be a fully functional member of
society. And here I am. Living on my own for 3 years so far, doing
just fine. I do not consider Asperger's Syndrome a disease at this
point, rather a cognitive boost since usually AS means that there
is a significant boost in logic ability, at the cost of social
ability. Please keep that in mind when judging my messages, but
other than that I couldn't care less about my "disease".</p>
<p>What I'm trying to say through similar advocating to ban "bad
words" like autism that I've experienced is that most likely the
community these Twitter people seek to advocate for.. usually
don't care. Case in point, yours truly. You can call me autistic
and I'd really just say - more power to you and I guess I am on
the internet after all where nobody gives a damn. And more power
to the internet for being that way.</p>
<p>Let's solve actual problems such as waiting lists for autists in
their youth from being allowed to professional healthcare
institutions where they can learn to cope with it. Myself, I had
to wait for several years multiple times because government just
keeps on cutting the healthcare budget which hurts our sector the
most, despite promising the exact opposite during elections.
Shorten the waiting lists! Oh crap the budget is cut again and
waiting lists have to be extended yet again. Thank you dear
politician who did the same crap all over again!</p>
<p>Fight for real causes, not what I can only describe as censorship
which doesn't help anyone.<br>
</p>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 6/15/20 9:33 PM, Gregory Sloop
wrote:<br>
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cite="mid:702069773.20200615123330@sloop.net">
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<title>Re: BIND Masters and slaves</title>
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<span style=" font-family:'Courier New'; font-size: 9pt;">This
whole discussion seems so misguided.<br>
The TLDR; version, at least for me is;<br>
Does it really cost you that much to use language that's polite
and kind to those around you, and change that language to live
up to those ideals when you can?<br>
<br>
Sure you _have the right_ to run down the street and yell
impolite/angry/mysoginistic epithets and racial insults at those
around you.<br>
<br>
But rather than focusing on _your rights_, how about spending a
few minutes considering how you'd feel if people did equally
insensitive things to your mom, you sister, your wife, or your
best friend.<br>
<br>
When viewed from that perspective, the "outrage" at not
using/changing terms like master/slave in BIND seem, at least to
my mind, kind of hyperbolic.<br>
<br>
You can call it politically correct, but I generally like to
call it "being nice" or "polite" or "kind."<br>
When did it suddenly become so wrong to be gentle, kind and
caring? [That's a rhetorical question, so no need to "answer"
it.]<br>
<br>
The BIND and DHCP lists have historically been incredible lists
for really polite and helpful people over the many years I've
subscribed and participated. IME, these lists have been far
superior to nearly any other lists I've been a part of. Super
helpful. Really nice people> Super respectful. Totally
awesome. I'm nearly always chuffed to see the behavior here.<br>
<br>
I hope that continues.<br>
<br>
<br>
<span style=" color: #800000;"><b>MDR> Completely aside from
the topic at hand, I often like to think that<br>
MDR> after a few years I mastered something. System
administration,<br>
MDR> electronics, programming, whatever has piqued my
interest for several<br>
MDR> years already and got me to invest in it. It is
never true. The first<br>
MDR> profession I pursued was system administration and
Linux in general.<br>
MDR> Even today I still learn so much on the daily.
Mastery? I may be<br>
MDR> experienced with Linux but mastery is still far
ahead... It's quite<br>
MDR> interesting how deep the rabbit hole can go. What
matters is how deep we<br>
MDR> want it to go I guess.<br>
<br>
MDR> Crackerjack is an interesting name, if anything I'd
just want it for<br>
MDR> shits and giggles :D<br>
<br>
MDR> On 6/15/20 9:07 PM, Brett Delmage wrote:<br>
>> After I feel I have mastered DNS and BIND after
slaving over the docs<br>
>> and code for years (I'm not there yet, and I have
not) how am I going<br>
>> to communicate this to people?<br>
<br>
>> How will I be able to master anything technical
anymore? Should I just<br>
>> stop trying?<br>
<br>
<br>
>> Thesaurus.com suggests that one could call one type
of DNS server the<br>
>> "crackerjack" server instead. I guess that's an
improvement over<br>
>> "cracked". "Ace" server is a suggested alternative
too, and it's<br>
>> nicely terse.<br>
<br>
</b></span></span><a style=" font-family:'courier new';
font-size: 9pt;"
href="https://www.thesaurus.com/browse/master?s=t"
moz-do-not-send="true">>>
https://www.thesaurus.com/browse/master?s=t</a><br>
<br>
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<div class="moz-signature">-- <br>
Met vriendelijke groet / Best regards,<br>
Michael De Roover</div>
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