• Drunemeton
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    301 year ago

    For the staff at Lemmy & Mastodon World’s for keeping the social media platforms I use the most Ad Free!

    🫶🏻

  • CALIGVLA
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    221 year ago

    Brazil commemorates Thanksgiving? In what bizarro world? I’ve never met a single person here who ever did that, in fact the vast majority of people have absolutely no clue what Thanksgiving is or that it even exists.

    The author is just pulling this shit out of their asses lol.

    • Lupec
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      91 year ago

      I was going to say lol, I’d struggle to find anyone who is even aware of it in real life

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      It is a wishful-thinking style article on the web where some yank once met some yank who lived in Brazil and thus decided from this that every person in Brazil celebrated the USian holiday. Same in Japan, who definitely do not celebrate thanksgiving any more than Brazil does. But the yanks all think the world revolves around them.

      • @Stovetop
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        11 year ago

        Labor Thanksgiving Day is a thing in Japan, though. It’s the equivalent of Labor Day.

          • @Stovetop
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            1 year ago

            Certainly not, but it is at least a holiday that is recognized in an official capacity and a lot of people get the day off from work or get out early. From what I’m hearing in the other comments, Brazil doesn’t really do anything at all, so it’s more of a holiday in Japan than it is in Brazil.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              If other countries had a public holiday on January First, would that mean they celebrate Federation Day? If they had a public holiday later on in January, then are they celebrating my countries Invasion Day?

              Yes, it is the same day as one in America. No, that doesn’t mean the Japanese are all celebrating a US thanksgiving.

              • @Stovetop
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                11 year ago

                It’s not always the same day, this year is just coincidental.

                Being a holiday established during the post-war US occupation of Japan, though, I wouldn’t say it is entirely disconnected from the US holiday. It was willed into existence by Americans based on the fact that the US also celebrates a holiday around that time of year, and so the name is not coincidental.

                I’d consider them as related as Christmas and Yule, at least.

    • @lordxakio
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      21 year ago

      Didn’t a lot of people (confederate) move to South America, mostly Mexico, Brazil, and Argentina after the civil war?

      • CALIGVLA
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        61 year ago

        6000 to Brazil more especifically, somewhat insignificant number if you ask me considering the number of germans, italians, japanese and arabs that immigrated here.

        • @lordxakio
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          21 year ago

          I meant in the context of celebrating thanksgiving.

          • CALIGVLA
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            1 year ago

            I know, 6000 people mostly concetrated in the town of Americana with roughly 250k citizens (not all American descendants obviously), so if there’s a place that might celebrate Thanksgiving in Brazil, it’s there.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              Isn’t that the town Ford had built to make rubber so they could practice"vertical integration?" (Thanks stuff you should know podcast!) Lol

              Edit: thanks Wikipedia and Caligvla, NO thanks to stuff you should know! Interesting history there lol

      • CALIGVLA
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        1 year ago

        Maybe, but that’s like 0.1% of the population, there aren’t many American communities in Brazil. Maybe it’s a thing in Americana (a town founded by ex-confederates, I shit you not), but otherwise…

    • @[email protected]OP
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      01 year ago

      This article in Wikipedia mentions Brazil under “Observance.” Apparently there are a couple of Brazilian laws that establish Thanksgiving as a holiday and set its date as the fourth Thursday in November.

      So maybe edit Wikipedia? Note to them that it isn’t known or celebrated?

      I really wish I hadn’t mentioned Brazil or Japan. I was just interested in what people were thankful for. I’m truly sorry if I offended Brazilian or Japanese people.

  • Ensign Rick
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    1 year ago

    For Lemmy. Moving from the alien site to here has been fantastic.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I wanted to say that too. Of course, family is great too, but I’m always grateful for that. Today it’s Lemmy’s turn.

  • @ieatmeat
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    111 year ago

    I am thankful for being born and living in Europe 🇪🇺

  • NataliePortland
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    91 year ago

    Thankful for my union fighting hours on hours to negotiate a better job for me. The other day they negotiated until 3 am!

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    I’m thankful for key lime pie. I may not have it as much as I want, but the idea alone of having another bite some day really keeps me going.

  • @spittingimage
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    1 year ago

    My Pathfinder group, who agree with me that to (fictionally) run screaming at people with a lit black powder bomb in my hands is the right thing to do.

  • SirStumps
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    61 year ago

    I’m thankful for my wife and family. Also overcoming my years of struggle with depression.

  • firecat
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    51 year ago

    No one in Japan celebrating a fake holiday you Americans came up with.

    It’s called Labor Thanksgiving Day (kinro kansha no hi):
    A national holiday for honoring labour.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      121 year ago

      I mean, all holidays are kind of fake. They aren’t self-evident, even kinro kansha no hi.

      But happy Kinro Kansha No Hi!

      • firecat
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        -171 year ago

        Well no, the Americans holidays are 99% fake. Thanksgiving wasn’t a thing until presidents proclaimed it.

        Christmas is fake because 1) the religious conflict with April and 2) Corporate wanting people to buy stuff during December.

        Valentine’s day is another corporate scam to sell stuff that it soon became a thing in Japan too ( but we added white day).

        Halloween is the false narrative name for Allhallowtide and lost the original meaning of respect for the dead.

        I don’t know any actual holiday Americans ever created that isn’t a national thing or international event.

        • @Rachelhazideas
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          151 year ago

          I hate to break it you but all holidays, like the rest of human customs and traditions, are made up by humans.

          • firecat
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            -71 year ago

            Yes but they were original and had history or something. American? Nothing but profit and cheap propaganda.

            • @Rachelhazideas
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              41 year ago

              Something can have historical significance and also be rampantly commercialized at the same time. These are not mutually exclusive things.

              Imagine yourself as a historian from a 1000 years from now. When you look back at the coca cola bottles, the Walmart signs, the oversized trucks all unearthed from the forgotten sands of time, you won’t see it and say ‘there is no culture or historical significance to be found here’. Instead, you will contemplate on what crises this century was going through that turned so many to overconsumption and yet still feel dead on the inside.

              Your so called ‘lack of culture’ in holidays that are filled with superficial excuses from corporations to spend is history and culture in the making. This isn’t an assessment on whether this is good or bad, this is history regardless of what you may think of it. The sooner you realize this, the sooner you realize that maybe Americans are not the homogeneous entity you thought it was. Maybe when you look beyond the glamorous decorations and lavish spending, you will see there are families struggling to feed their 5 five kids and yet still do their best to bring the holiday spirit to the table.

              I’m not an American, so I don’t have any stakes in this. I’ve lived in 5 countries, USA included, and I’m tired of people abroad complaining about the lack of culture in the US while gleefully importing American movies, music, franchises, movies, holidays, spending habits, slangs, etc. You can’t have it both ways. Either the US doesn’t have culture, or it does and it’s being exported. Pick one.

              • firecat
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                -21 year ago

                That’s the most odd thing anyone said about culture and history of civilization. Events should be fun, it should let future generations learn, it should become better and should bring new ideas.

                The American culture gives nothing fun, there’s no generation learning because they block it, it doesn’t become better because things like concerts cost $200 or a walk to the park cost federal money to enter. Zero ideas instead they are killing all ideas including their own like Rock and Roll.

                When people say America has no culture, it absolutely does mean they don’t have culture.

  • @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    TIL that Brazil has a Thanksgiving day… But we do not celebrate it, and -unfortunately- it’s not a holiday.

    Anyway, I’m glad of the friendships that I have and had.

  • laxu
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    31 year ago

    It’s been a rough year and I came very close to being furloughed. Managed to get a new client just at the right time and now I’m thriving again. I’m thankful for having frankly a lot of luck over the years which has put me where I am today. I’m not saying hard work wasn’t important too, but sheer luck has been helpful too.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      11 year ago

      So many things are, frankly, out of our control, and we act like they aren’t sometimes. I think being thankful is a way of acknowledging that the lines fell out in pleasant places.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      41 year ago

      Oh man, that is so good. So many people living with chronic pain would love one single day of “nothing.” Children and others suffering constant abuse would be so grateful for a day of “nothing.” In war, what is a cease-fire but some “nothing” for a change?

      Thankful for nothing. Yes. Very good 👍

  • @Smokeydope
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    21 year ago

    I’m thankful for the shelter, heat, and electrical power I worked hard to have this year, that I am debt free and have enough in the bank to make it at least to spring without working if I wanted to. I’m thankful that my family members are still all alive and that the future still has hope.