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27

A slight change in culture.

submitted by deleted to NYC 3 monthsJan 5, 2025 23:46:27 ago (+28/-1)     (NYC)

deleted


21 comments block


[ - ] TheNoticing 1 point 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 17:42:31 ago (+1/-0)

Total nigger death is the only solution.

[ - ] SundayMatinee 2 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 15:39:43 ago (+2/-0)

A few Japs kill themselves by train and 90 percent of statikns in Tokyo get outfitted with suicide prevention walls. Meanwhile in America...

[ - ] Reawakened 2 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 09:43:26 ago (+2/-0)

Thank a nigger!

[ - ] Empire_of_the_Mind 4 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 06:21:15 ago (+4/-0)

In my time in NYC people have gotten shoved onto the tracks regularly, about every two years or so. Whenever it happens everyone acts like this for a few weeks after and it's nice because there's more room and order on the platforms.

The problems are definitely getting worse but it's not because nutters doing weird shit on the trains is new. It's because there is no longer any sense that the organization running the subway, the city, and the state authorities are on top of the problem. As the institutional structures breakdown people feel more need to take things into their own hands.

The NYC subway was famously awful in the 1970's and 80's - like what you read about now but totally worse. Eventually some jew just point-blank shot a group of niggers who tried to rob him and the entire city cheered because they were sick of the bullshit. This was around 1986ish. Any way that's how the city got cleaned up in the 1990's. It appears we are at that moment again now. The NYC shitlibs have lost all authority with the large majority of the population, who swung HARD for Trump in the recent election. The Manhattan jews and rich assholes know they're surrounded.

[ - ] PotatoWhisperer2 1 point 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 10:58:11 ago (+1/-0)

As the institutional structures breakdown people feel more need to take things into their own hands.

Good.

[ - ] TheNoticing 1 point 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 17:44:58 ago (+1/-0)

Bernie Goetz

[ - ] BloodyComet 0 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 12:37:59 ago (+0/-0)

How long do you think before they go back to standing right at the edge of the platform? A few weeks? "Nobody pushed me in the last few weeks, so surely, no one will try to do so now." ~The final thoughts of a dead man/woman.

[ - ] TheBigGuyFromQueens 2 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 05:17:44 ago (+2/-0)

That's 51st and Lexington in Manhattan. This is how everyone stands for many years now if they're smart. These subway pushings have been happening since at least the 1980's but they have just become a lot more frequent these days.

[ - ] Empire_of_the_Mind 1 point 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 06:23:11 ago (+1/-0)

the 6 line stations have the narrowest fucking platforms. This is spacious and serene compared to many.

[ - ] GreatSatan 0 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 06:35:39 ago (+0/-0)

You would think with all the safety regulations these days they would have a railing there by now. What gives?

[ - ] Looneyskiprooney 0 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 16:50:49 ago (+0/-0)

Railings in the subway right up on the tracks in NYC. Pausing for a moment.

[ - ] BloodyComet 0 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 12:46:32 ago (+0/-0)

How long till they go back to standing at the edge of the platform, as if they're NOT living in a city filled with absolute psychopaths? A few weeks?

[ - ] Empire_of_the_Mind 0 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 15:03:45 ago (+0/-0)

yeah 3-4 weeks later after no one else has shoved someone onto the tracks people relax a bit. mathematically speaking there's very low odds of encountering someone in a push-someone-random-in-front-of-a-train. There are 472 subway stations in New York.

[ - ] Sector2 5 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 03:01:54 ago (+5/-0)

If people want to live in places where they need to worry about being killed at any moment, let them.

[ - ] Empire_of_the_Mind 1 point 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 06:25:06 ago (+1/-0)

the truth about life is that it can end for any of us at any time. false security is worse for you than occasional reminders that shit is real. too much chaos and danger wears one down, but a nice balance is healthy. this is why the white-flight suburbanites have failed to do anything but go off the deep end by isolating. life will find you wherever. the cleanest, nicest, most orderly parts of the world on the outside are full of degenerate weirdos and and neurotics behind the walls. New Yorkers like having reality and some edge visible and present, it's part of the spice of life. When it starts getting out of balance in the other direction, as it has since 2020, people shift and start pushing back. That's been the story for the past year and is promising.

[ - ] Clubberlang 0 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 12:17:37 ago (+0/-0)

Aka Overton window.

[ - ] BMN003 0 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 16:55:50 ago (+0/-0)

No, Overton's thesis was that at any given time there is a limited range of political ideas considered "acceptable" by most people, and to change what that range is one has to "get out and push," i.e. publicly express support for things currently considered "fringe," "radical" or "extreme." What we're seeing here is people experiencing anxiety and unease as they realize how broken the system has really become, and that they have to take more responsibility for their own safety than they thought they did.

Now, if some normies start saying "hey, maybe the mentally ill criminals should go to prison instead of being let off by leftist DAs," and other normies go "huh, maybe so" instead of a knee-jerk "racist!", then we'd be looking at a shift in the Overton Window. But unless and until this behavior translates into altered "acceptable" political discussion, ol' Joseph ain't got nothin' to do with it.

[ - ] Sector2 0 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 17:15:40 ago (+0/-0)

Conditions are not equally distributed, and neither are preferences. I like living in the most unaffordable city/county in the US because it's beautiful, has the best climate, and is generally non-violent. This, despite a disproportionate number of weirdos and degenerates. "Keep [town] weird" has been the motto for decades.

Even so, I was 5 to 10 minutes from being completely dead a few years back. Lost consciousness just as they arrived and found my body. I had parked it outside to make it easier to find.

It's not hard to see reality from here, especially with the perspective near death can imbue. I believe it's a defect, but am fine with people wanting to be destroyed by tornadoes, hurricanes, niggers, and poor conditions of any type.

[ - ] boekanier 1 point 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 02:26:26 ago (+1/-0)

it took a long time for them to get onto that

[ - ] Nosferatjew 3 points 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 01:40:06 ago (+3/-0)*

Someone get pushed onto the tracks and die? Again?

Edit: I looked it up. Apparently the guy survived, barely I'm sure. Dude relaxed. You can never relax.

[ - ] bobdole9 1 point 3 monthsJan 6, 2025 08:50:05 ago (+1/-0)

In Wisconsin, auto accidents are at best judged 90% at fault. Never understood why a minimum 10% went to the victim "just for being there."

I get it now.