@Knitting_Kninja Yeah, actually, yes. What happened to him?
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En réponse à @sarahjeong
@sarahjeong Because people acted like the solution to the problems that led to his homelessness were fixable by discovery.1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @KHandozo
@Knitting_Kninja TBF sometimes homelessness might be fixable by discovery? That makes the whole mindset even more dangerous tho2 réponses 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
@Knitting_Kninja Like if this one guy makes $ and stays employed, then we all cheer, we fixed the ONE guy who's unjustly homeless3 réponses 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
@sarahjeong But it's just...we get really caught up in individual stories, which are good, but never truly individual.1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @KHandozo
@Knitting_Kninja Also, by intervening, we change the course of the story, and so by focusing on these memes we hide the truth from ourselves2 réponses 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
@Knitting_Kninja Homeless coder visits Google offices. He is Known. Something other homeless will never have, learn to code or no.1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
@sarahjeong It also allows us to avoid looking at systemic problems and systemic solutions.1 réponse 0 Retweet 1 j'aime -
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En réponse à @sarahjeong
@sarahjeong That article wanted us to think, "Now this guy is fine, and the Learn to Code guy is so generous and that's ALL it takes!"1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime
@Knitting_Kninja let them eat code
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