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At the beginning of Covid, all the media was saying this is “the new normal”, and the sub r/NoNewNormal was created to combat that. Reddit eventually banned the sub.
I *hate* what "Covid" did to "normal standards" for businesses. 6 years on, and the change is permanent. Everyone thinks it's "just normal, you know?" now like nothing is different. Where I live in New England, *all* 24 hour stores are no longer 24 hours. Not Walmart. Not the grocery. Not a single one of the eight or so convenience/gas stores. At least four used to stay open. None do now. The restaurants on Main St in a tourist town? 9 pm closing on Fridays and Saturdays. The entire town, and the surrounding area, closes down at 9 pm. Even on weekends. Even with tourists in town. The one grocery store in town? Used to close at midnight. Then it went back to 11 pm with hand drawn signs "sorry no staffing heart emoji". Then 10. Now it's down to 9 pm. Now that's normal. Even on Friday or Saturday. "Covid", somehow, I don't understand how it could still be this way, is the demarcator line. Somehow, 6 years later, businesses are still struggling to find staff. No business I've patronized has been fully staffed in six years-I'm serious. What is going on? How did all these people, who still exist and still have bills to pay, manage to find a way to not work, and they're still paying their bills? Better hope you never actually need anything in an emergency. -J
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RIP NoNewNormal
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Vicky 🎀 retweeted
r/NoNewNormal was the fastest growing subreddit in history. Focused on resisting covid response tyranny. And of course it got banned.
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Replying to @sanchezcastejon
Vind je het nog steeds een toeval dat de VN-top zich bezighoudt met één schip?" Dit gaat niet om levens beschermen, dit gaat om het installeren van de commandostructuur voor de volgende lockdown. De VN heeft de leiding genomen over je gezondheid. Ben je al voorbereid op de gedeelde waarden van de digitale gevangenis? 🧱🔨 #NoNewNormal #UNAgenda #TheGreatReset
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Replying to @DiedSuddenly_
You know what? Fuck him very much. Way back in 2021, NoNewNormal was bringing questions and facts forward for anyone to see. But these doctors that made money, and lots of it, for jabbing people, are now all 'teary eyed' can go fuck themselves. I knew better, but they didn't?🍕💩
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Replying to @Awk20000
I was banned so much on reddit during the scamdemic for debating with covidiots. Anyone remember /Nonewnormal ?
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Replying to @Pirat_Nation
Wow maybe they shoulda done this in 2021 when myself and everyone in r/nonewnormal were getting banned from everything for telling the truth about covid
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"Banning r/NoNewNormal was just like Avengers: Endgame™"
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Replying to @reddit_lies
Got banned from a bunch of subreddits that I never even went to for commenting in subreddit “NoNewNormal” It was pretty retarded
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Replying to @reddit_lies
r/NoNewNormal did not die in vain
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Counterpoint: what happened to r/thedonald or nonewnormal or all the sub(s) about mRNA injuries that weren't even political? Not banned by sub mods. Maybe they'll let you say what you want as long as they know no one's reading it
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I was kicked off a bunch of subreddits because I was on the /NoNewNormal (anti-covid authoritarian) subreddit. I’ll never use that trash ass site/app again.
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Yeah, during convid #Reddit just banned #NoNewNormal, a bastion of sanity in a world gone crazy with an illusionary virus, that had 120.000 subscribers.
Replying to @DaysOfNoahh @Reddit
reddit is one of the worst censuring platforms ever !
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Replying to @kangminlee
R/NoNewNormal gang rise up
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Replying to @reddit_lies
One of the powermods N8theGr8 back in 2021 literally led a campaign to get NoNewNormal (a subreddit for those skeptical of the COVID thing) and similar subreddits shut down The posts for this campaign were made by him on the hundreds of subreddits he modded as it was astroturfed
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Online Hate Speech Resembles Mental Health Disorder Language | Neuroscience News Key Questions Answered Q: What did this study find about hate speech and psychiatric disorders? A: Posts in online hate speech communities show speech-pattern similarities to posts in communities for personality disorders like borderline, narcissistic, and antisocial personality disorder. Q: Does this mean people with psychiatric disorders are more hateful? A: No. The researchers emphasize that they cannot know if users had actual diagnoses—only that the language patterns were similar, possibly due to shared traits like low empathy or emotional dysregulation. Q: Why does this matter for online safety and mental health? A: Understanding that hate speech mirrors certain psychological speech styles could help develop therapeutic or community-based strategies to combat toxic online behavior. Summary: A new study using AI tools found that posts in online hate speech communities closely resemble the speech patterns seen in forums for certain personality disorders. While it doesn’t imply that people with psychiatric diagnoses are more prone to hate, the overlap suggests that online hate speech may cultivate traits like low empathy and emotional instability. Posts from communities for personality disorders had the most linguistic similarity to hate speech groups. These findings may inform future interventions by adapting therapeutic strategies typically used for managing such disorders. Key Facts: - Speech Overlap: Hate speech communities shared linguistic traits with Cluster B personality disorder communities. - No Diagnostic Link: The study does not claim individuals with mental illness are more hateful—only that language patterns are similar. - Therapeutic Potential: Insights could guide new strategies for countering hate speech using mental health approaches. --- A new analysis suggests that posts in hate speech communities on the social media website Reddit share speech-pattern similarities with posts in Reddit communities for certain psychiatric disorders. Dr. Andrew William Alexander and Dr. Hongbin Wang of Texas A&M University, U.S., present these findings July 29th in the open-access journal PLOS Digital Health. The ubiquity of social media has raised concerns about its role in spreading hate speech and misinformation, potentially contributing to prejudice, discrimination and real-world violence. Prior research has uncovered associations between certain personality traits and the act of posting online hate speech or misinformation. However, whether any associations exist between psychological wellbeing and online hate speech or misinformation has been unclear. To help clarify, Alexander and Wang used artificial intelligence tools to analyze posts from 54 Reddit communities relevant to hate speech, misinformation, psychiatric disorders, or, for neutral comparison, none of those categories. Selected groups included r/ADHD, a community for discussing attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, r/NoNewNormal, dedicated to COVID-19 misinformation, and r/Incels, a community banned for hate speech. The researchers used the large-language model GPT3 to convert thousands of posts from these communities into numerical representations capturing the posts’ underlying speech patterns. These representations, or “embeddings,” could then be analyzed through machine-learning techniques and a mathematical approach known as topological data analysis. This analysis showed that speech patterns in hate speech communities were similar to speech patterns in communities for complex post-traumatic stress disorder, and borderline, narcissistic and antisocial personality disorders. Links between misinformation and psychiatric disorders were less clear, but with some connections to anxiety disorders. Importantly, these findings do not at all suggest that people with psychiatric disorders are more prone to hate speech or misinformation. For one, there was no way of knowing if the analyzed posts were made by people actually diagnosed with disorders. More research is needed to understand the links and explore such possibilities as hate speech communities mimicking speech patterns seen in psychiatric disorders. The authors suggest their findings could help inform new strategies to combat online hate speech and misinformation, such as treating them using elements of therapy developed for psychiatric disorders. The authors add, “Our results show that the speech patterns of those participating in hate speech online have strong underlying similarities with those participating in communities for individuals with certain psychiatric disorders. “Chief among these are the Cluster B personality disorders: Narcissistic Personality Disorder, Antisocial Personality Disorder, and Borderline Personality Disorder. These disorders are generally known for either lack of empathy/regard towards the wellbeing of others, or difficulties managing anger and relationships with others.” Alexander notes, “While we looked for similarities between misinformation and psychiatric disorder speech patterns as well, the connections we found were far weaker. Besides a potential anxiety component, I think it is safe to say at this point in time that most people buying into or spreading misinformation are actually quite healthy from a psychiatric standpoint.” Alexander concludes, “I want to emphasize that these results do not mean that individuals with psychiatric conditions are more likely to engage in hate speech. Instead, it suggests that people who engage in hate speech online tend to have similar speech patterns to those with cluster B personality disorders. “It could be that the lack of empathy for others fostered by hate speech influences people over time and causes them to exhibit traits similar to those seen in Cluster B personality disorders, at least with regards to the target of their hate speech. “While further studies would be needed to confirm this, I think it is a good indicator that exposing ourselves to these types of communities for long periods of time is not healthy and can make us less empathetic towards others.” Read more: neurosciencenews.com/online-…
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Nonewnormal was the best. I never was a reddit user and somehow found that subreddit in the early dark dystopia of Covid and it kept me grounded and sane. They tried to recreate it with their own website but it wasn't the same
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Nah but thanks for the reply. I think I remembered the one I was thinking of. It was something like r/nonewnormal
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