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Chris Remington, remington@beehaw.org

Instance: beehaw.org (Admin)
Joined: 4 years ago
Posts: 121
Comments: 19

Volunteer amateur systems administrator for Beehaw. Stay-at-home dad. Outdoor enthusiast.

Bluesky: @beehaw.org

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Posts and Comments by Chris Remington, remington@beehaw.org

Thanks for sharing and I hope things turn around for you soon.



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Posts by Chris Remington, remington@beehaw.org

Comments by Chris Remington, remington@beehaw.org

Thanks for sharing and I hope things turn around for you soon.



I’m sorry to hear about your struggles. Keep your head held high and know things are going to get better.


It’s good to hear that you are making moves to better your life. I know you will find many happy days ahead. Take care.


I suspect a continuation of a blue wave and it makes me feel warm and fuzzy inside.


I think beehaw was considering migrating to it at one point.

We are going to be testing Piefed soon. If we believe it to be a better option than Lemmy, then we will migrate to it.

Welcome back!


For so many months the actions of ICE have completely baffled me since I’ve never seen government officials behave this way. And then I watched a video by Max Fisher that explained all of it so well…better than any journalist so far.

Max Fisher is a veteran journalist who has reported from over 20 countries. His show, The Bigger Picture, illuminates our world by exploring how it really works, from the sweep of geopolitics to the deepest recesses of our minds. Before going independent, Max was a staff writer at The Atlantic and The Washington Post, a founding editor of Vox, and a long-time foreign correspondent and columnist for The New York Times, where he was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. His book, The Chaos Machine: The Inside Story of How Social Media Rewired Our Minds and Our World, was an NPR and New Yorker best book of 2022.



Why would you want to delete your post? My self and other mods will monitor for bad actors.


I haven’t heard a word out of his mouth for over a year and I’m keeping it that way.






That’s why I said “set in stone” time. Like how most people envision time as a clock.




I took advanced physics in college. An easy way to understand time as only a human construct is the following. Time is a measure of distance between objects. Those distances are always changing so there is no “set in stone” type of time in reality.