• @FrowingFostek
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    22 hours ago

    I loved the film Do The Right Thing as a kid. It was one of my favorite Spike Lee joints.

    Radio Raheem was an icon to me. The sound of hip hop in the street. It makes me sad how many people no longer want to interact with others in public.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      51 hour ago

      I don’t mind interacting with others in public, but I very much dislike inconsiderate people who decide to monopolize public spaces at the expense of others being able to enjoy them in their own way. I don’t care about someone listening to the radio with their friends at a reasonable volume while they chill and talk. The reality is more often rival clusters of people with massive speakers, each turning their stuff higher because they can’t hear their crappy music over the other people doing the same thing up and down the block. Me being unable to sleep at 4AM on a Wednesday because I can hear your terrible choice in Dembow and Rap that you choose to accompany your domino games and hookah sessions from my apartment on the seventh floor isn’t us having an interaction, it’s you being a nuisance.

      • @FrowingFostek
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        241 minutes ago

        I hear you. I agree with you, it’s just hard for me to condemn the loud music and domino games because, from my perspective its people practicing their culture.

        I understand that it’s inconsiderate and a nuisance to most. I just have really good memories of that kind of culture at that volume. I’m bias.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          222 minutes ago

          its people practicing their culture.

          Personally, I hate this line, because I only ever hear it trotted out to excuse bad behavior that people know they shouldn’t. Saying that being a loud nuisance in public is people practicing their culture is just as absurd as saying Irish men getting drunk and beating their wives is practicing Irish culture. It might be a negative cultural stereotype some of them actually live up to, be it doesn’t mean it should be tolerated.

          Even if you want to accept that it’s a valid argument, one’s right to practice their culture ends where it limits the rights of others to do the same. People don’t get carte blanche to make everyone else change their lives to accommodate a culture with no sense of appropriate volume or consideration for others.

          • @FrowingFostek
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            116 minutes ago

            Sure, I guess more social friction will solve the issue.

            I’d say getting drunk could also be a cultural thing.

            Beating your wife? I could not see as a cultural thing.

    • @P00ptart
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      41 hour ago

      It’s incredibly rare that I’ve had positive interactions with random people. Sure there’s a “thanks” for opening the door or whatever but I wouldn’t count that. I mean prolonged engagement though even short conversations can turn on fight or flight. Especially at night, or at a liquor store gas station. “Hey brother…” “Yeah nope”