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Joined 3 months ago
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Cake day: August 2nd, 2024

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  • No idea how it is in the US, but I imagine it’s the most car centric country in the world. I know from reddit that there’s a lot of people living in cars there.

    How was it on the bicycle? I want to do that… did you stay in cities or wild? How do you do with all the water that needs to be carried? I wouldn’t do it on a city though. Staying on a tent in a city is too exposed for me. But I love the idea of even more freedom, not having to worry about car registration, fuel and fines.

    So you have toilet in the car? My basically just have waste water from brushing my teeth, so it just goes straight to the street. Isn’t it too much issue to handle that? Though it must be nice to not have to look for toilet…

    And your power is not solar?

    Ordering things online, or anything that needs an address is still a big challenge for me. I’m trying for the first time ordering something to a post office and I’ll go get it to see if it works. I don’t think there amazon dropboxes here, but even if there were I would never buy something from amazon…


  • Sydney is not the worst. The worst one is Byron bay by far. I’ve never seen a more hostile place. But I certainly hope never to come back to Sydney either. NSW in general is pretty bad, with Queensland much more open to people living in cars.

    I don’t like doing stuff in the van. I do kind of well too, but the other person has to host. I don’t feel well with random people coming in my van. But I know a lot of people are very social and do that. As long as they are quite… Party people destroy van life for everyone and end up making the councils hunt us. I imagine it’s what happened in Byron bay.

    Diet is an issue… I would still like to know how to fix that other than eating out, which is pretty expensive. I certainly eat better when I have a place to stay.



  • I’m not sure if it’s influence of propaganda. I used to be very active against israel and US some 15 years ago. I was sacrificing my life for it and I realized nothing would change but I was hurting myself. 15 years later nothing changed. It didn’t change 15 years before I started either. So a long period of time will mean I won’t live to see it.

    I stopped getting involved and tried to just not know about it. The result is the same but I don’t suffer. But living here it’s impossible to ignore and I’m part of the problem. It won’t change, but I’m helping to make it worse here

    But yes, I’ll do what you and jaek suggested until I figure out what to do. To me it’s much more important to not help israel than it is to help those they destroy. And that’s the main thing I want to do, not help them.


  • I’m in a small town, so not much going on here. And while the protests should continue and I’m happy with their numbers, the media actually manage to turn it against the cause and increase the general population support for this kind of atrocity. When I see the news on the tv covering protest I’m afraid, because I know exactly what it will show and I’m always right. They usually don’t even mention what the protest is about and the few people they give voice and the morons they interview are always just talking about how dangerous the protesters are, how “against peace”, how pro terrorists, how they damage the economy and how they will eat your dog and rape your kids. Basically inciting the population to protest against the protesters.

    I have never seen such biased and clearly controlled media as here, except for the US. It’s amazing how powerful they are. I know that in most countries they usually just show the israeli side and just “forget” to show the other one. But here it’s a clear propaganda and manipulation. So if anything the average person who doesn’t look for more info will just defend the war point of view more with the protests being shown on tv.

    And it shows. Even here, where people are more “leftists” (whatever that means) I see many “fox news” points of view. On reddit it’s a lost cause. And talking to the average people it’s the same. Everyone just knows that “israel is fighting terrorists”.

    It’s what I complained about on my other posts regarding the military monuments. It’s a fundamental part of australian culture and I see little hope of that changing. The countries that show some courage against israel have a whole history of not admiring the military and not being dogs of the US that often. Or being muslim based countries.

    So I don’t see how that can change any time soon but that doesn’t change that I am being part of the problem being here, and that people are being murdered with my support.

    Supporting help for palestinians is good and should happen, like the protests. But that won’t fix anything and will just have to be something that needs to be done forever. Or until there is no Palestine left.


  • And I am complicit with this, and all the support Australia gives to US and israel by paying my taxes. As some @#$!#$ from the government said when censoring the protests, “Australia is a peace loving country”.

    Is there anything I can do other than just leave? I love living here, but this military fetish gives me constant guilt and anxiety of being here because I know I’m supporting that, and who knows how many people were killed using my work, to then later on get a monument erected praising the fact…



  • There are many issues (with my social phobia, people being 90% of them), but I like it a lot for one thing only, freedom.

    Only recently I traveled for some months, which was awesome, mostly because of the outback. Otherwise most of the time it was staying close to work, but I still loved it so much always be close to the beach which I would never be able to afford otherwise. And over time I learned the safe places to stay, so I didn’t have much issue with not being able to sleep because of noise.

    But it’s certainly not for everyone. Most of the problems don’t bother me at all, when I can have so much freedom. But for most people it would be too high of a price to pay, or they don’t enjoy the benefits that much.

    I do miss having a house though, specially one with lawn and trees. But the cost is more than the benefits, specially since it means I have to slave my life away to pay for it. If I was super rich and could buy something in a nice place I would though.

    Edit: I wouldn’t mind if I could solve the issue of having to find a toilet every morning, which some times is quite urgent. But that’s a city problem. In the outback it’s… sort of a lot easier. If you ignore the cold and mosquitos when you do your business or having to find a place and dig and then bury it. But it’s better because you always know you will find the place and it won’t take too long.







  • The thing is, as someone who worked with photoshop most of my life, Krita is a much more capable image manipulation software than Gimp, really comparable to photoshop. While Gimp is, to me, really more like a toy. It’s entirely capable if you just need to do something basic but it will quickly show it’s limitations if you need to do professional work.

    I guess that may be the issue, that Krita got the stigma of being only for drawing and art. Or, what I think, is just that Gimp is more famous. And since most people don’t need a professional tool, they only try that and recommend it, not even knowing that there is something better.

    And finally, almost every professional uses photoshop so they don’t even know about either Krita or Gimp (and the ones who tried Gimp will give up on open source alternatives quickly). While 3D had a reasonable amount of options before Blender, so people were more willing to try something else.

    Just my guess… I hope Krita gets the support Blender got, because they could change the industry in my opinion if they get more funding.






  • guismo@aussie.zoneOPtoAustralia@aussie.zoneQuestion about Australian towns
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    3 months ago

    Thanks for respectfully disagreeing. Yes, as I said on other post, the term I use is not quite right, but it’s how I see it. I just fundamentally see these things in a different way. What you guys see as mourning I see as celebration. But I do understand the intention.

    I believe I will learn to see past it (though for 10 years I haven’t yet). But if I found my objective it would be a nice bonus.

    And thanks, it is genuine. I traveled dozens of thousands of km looking for my ideal town, which I still hope to find!