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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 15th, 2023

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  • There’s a store in my town that either had a bad receipt printer, or had their number wrong on it (my number differs from theirs by one digit). Either way, I get a call for them every few months. I don’t really mind.

    I don’t get that many spam calls anymore, and the ones I do get, I just have fun with them (practice my very rough French, try out a new accent, or just wait about 10 seconds and burst into song). Unfortunately most of the junk calls these days are bots :(


  • I’ve used Debian, Ubuntu, Mint, and Manjaro. All viable options. I’m currently using Mint on my daily driver, Ubuntu on my HTPCs, and Debian on my servers.

    I liked the rolling release aspect of Manjaro, but I missed having a system that works with DEB files. I’m not a fan of flatpak/snap/appimage due to the size (I’ve often had to use slower internet connections). I settled on Mint for my daily driver because it has great and easy compatibility for my hardware (specifically an Nvidia GPU). It worked okay on Manjaro as well, but I’ve found it easier to select and switch between GPU drivers on Mint. And Cinnamon is my favorite DE, and that’s sort of “native” to Mint.

    I’m using vanilla Ubuntu on my HTPCs because I have Proton VPN on them, and it’s the only setup I’ve found that doesn’t have issues with the stupid keyring thing. And Proton VPN’s app only really natively supports Ubuntu. The computers only ever use a web browser, so the distro otherwise doesn’t matter that much.

    I’m using Debian on my servers because it’s the distro I’m most familiar with, especially without a GUI. Plus it’ll run until the hardware fails, maybe a little longer.





  • Don’t be sorry! These are great questions.

    One thing to note about anger: anger itself isn’t a sin. We’re told to be “slow to anger,” that is, patient. But there are things that can and should make us angry, just as Jesus was at certain points. Even killing itself isn’t strictly a sin, the ten commandments specifically condemn murder (unjust killing). Though unlike anger, I don’t think Jesus ever condoned killing anyone.

    In terms of the OT fire-and-brimstone and genocide, there are a few lines of thought among Christians that I know. One line of thought is that God has the ultimate authority to destroy what he has created if he sees fit–he is the only one who has the authority to decide these things (thus when humans decide on their own to kill people, it’s not justified). The other lines of thought suggest that God himself wasn’t the one summoning fire and brimstone, but cities like Sodom wouldn’t listen to him and were destroyed because of it (this is a more liberal interpretation of the biblical accounts).

    Generally speaking, since Jesus came to earth, God hasn’t resorted to directly or indirectly killing people, so I don’t see any justification for that today. But anger is still very much justified, we just need to be careful to direct it properly. Instead of directing our anger at people (who are fellow creations made in God’s image and who God wants to redeem), direct it at the brokenness and unjust systems that are the root of it all.