ArchsageRamases

joined 6 days ago
[–] ArchsageRamases@lemmy.world 1 points 57 minutes ago

Yes 100% Join us.

[–] ArchsageRamases@lemmy.world 2 points 1 hour ago (1 children)

Just found out they use Ai to code 🙄 so no womder it crashes. Yeah it crashed for me but seems fine now.

[–] ArchsageRamases@lemmy.world 1 points 1 hour ago

No I'm using brave I only use firefox tor browser

 

Fauxx is an open-source Android privacy tool that poisons data broker and ad-tech profiles by generating continuous, plausible, off-demographic synthetic activity from your device. The goal is simple: make your real behavioral signal statistically indistinguishable from noise.

https://github.com/digital-grease/fauxx

[–] ArchsageRamases@lemmy.world 2 points 3 days ago

I used it until it started breaking websights and firefox is slow on android.

 

If you expected:

instant signs visible energy guaranteed manifestation dramatic entity contact

…you’re not alone. A lot of books oversell certainty.

[–] ArchsageRamases@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

I want to go back in time with knowledge and tech and be liie i'm a wizard.

 

This is making me hate spirituality as most do this. Spiritual bypassing is using spiritual beliefs or practices to avoid dealing with painful emotions, unresolved trauma, or difficult life issues. Coined by psychologist John Welwood, it's the act of trying to "rise above" human struggles—like anger, grief, or conflict—before fully processing them.

Examples include:

Saying "everything happens for a reason" to dismiss someone's grief. Using meditation to numb emotions instead of feeling them. Claiming "we're all one" to avoid addressing injustice or personal accountability. While it may offer temporary relief, spiritual bypassing can lead to emotional stagnation, dissociation, or even spiritual narcissism. True growth comes from facing our pain with compassion, not bypassing it Added by me: "Love and light" only people who fear/attack darkness and ego and don't integrate and use them.

 

Collective resistance is incredibly difficult, often failing because of the collective action problem: individuals have conflicting interests, fear of repression, and a tendency to "free ride," assuming others will act. Large groups are fragmented by power imbalances, distrust, and competing identities, making unified action rare.

People are too busy fighting each other is a core reason why these movements struggle. Overcoming this requires building social trust and civic institutions that can create a shared vision and provide a structure for cooperation, which is a massive, long-term challenge when people are divided and suffering. So what do we do?

view more: next ›