There’s already been a vetting process to weed out some resolutions, but this one made it through, which suggests “someone in the party thinks that this is worth debating,” Young said.

“I think this reminds us that the base of the UCP is host to a pretty substantial group of people who do not believe that climate change is real, or they don’t believe that it is driven by human activity, and they think that any actions taken to transition away from fossil fuels are unnecessary.”

  • setVeryLoud(true);@lemmy.ca
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    29 days ago

    In all seriousness though, you appear to have hyperlexia, I do too and I shared your frustration for many years until I understood that fact and, as a result, sympathized a bit more with those who don’t.

    I can find double spaces anywhere in text, I know a word or sentence looks “wrong” just by looking at it without necessarily being able to explain the grammar rule behind it, and my brain stops reading at misspelled words as it can’t comprehend them, it can be frustrating at times. It’s usually comorbid with neuro-divergence.

    You should probably be nicer to those who aren’t blessed with it, the poster above might even be dyslexic and have great difficulty with reading and writing as a result. If that’s the case, we should celebrate the fact that most of the words are correct! 🎉

    • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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      29 days ago

      Possibly! Though really I think it more comes from my general dismay at the dumbing down of culture in general. Every day feels closer to idiocracy and missing you/you’re seems like a symptom.

      But maybe I’ll try thinking of the internet as a sea of dyslexics, just in case…

      • setVeryLoud(true);@lemmy.ca
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        29 days ago

        Take solace in knowing that literacy rates are the highest they’ve ever been in history, the fact that most words are correct is an incredible feat.

        Most people think how they speak rather than how they write, which means homophones are quite difficult for the average person, and near impossible without thinking about it hard and remembering the rule every time if you’re dyslexic.

        • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          Global literacy, probably. But I think functional reading/literacy has been falling behind in most Western democracies, especially America.

          • setVeryLoud(true);@lemmy.ca
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            28 days ago

            And that’s not the fault of individuals, but of a failing education system.

            Blaming individuals for what is a systemic failure could make them less receptive to change.

            • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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              28 days ago

              Blaming individuals for what is a systemic failure could make them less receptive to change.

              Ironically, that’s almost exactly how I feel about trump/conservative voters.

              Were I trying to actually change people’s future grammar, I’d totally agree.

              But to elaborate on what I said earlier, if someone is going to come flying in from the top rope with some childish/boring “everyone with whom I disagree is a stupid/racist/evil” well, I don’t particularly care about the convo anymore, I’ll tag them as a waste, let myself correct their grammar, respond however and move on, ignoring their comments when I see them in other threads.

              I generally don’t correct grammar until I’m already annoyed. But once someone is a silly, well, as the Emperor urged, I give into my anger.

              Lemmy has interesting folks like yourself but also a lot of not particularly interesting children.