Avatar

MidnightPocket [comrade/them]

MidnightPocket@hexbear.net
Joined
15 posts • 551 comments
Direct message

I have not contemplated how vegan friendly they are, tbh. Sorry for the oversight. From my experience I’m confident that a vegetarian would be alright; for full veganism I’d encourage you to reach out to their contact #.

It’s not utopia but it is uniquely different from selling individual labor-power on a market.

permalink
report
parent
reply

We can talk about whatever you want. I specialize in IT but I can talk compsci a bit; I was going down that road for a minute - would love to save you some misery where I can.

permalink
report
parent
reply

It’s relative to you, I’m afraid. I felt like I “missed the boat” when I enrolled at 30, but I will tell you straight that there were people from 20-60 enrolling in the program.

It’s just due to the seniority aspect that I mention “the younger the better”.

But, if you need work and are willing to do it - no matter the age, I’d enroll.

permalink
report
parent
reply

Typical union style seniority pay (some exceptions, like if you can get security clearance you will get higher paying contracts, etc)

You can go into:

-Navigation (deck-hand to captain)

-Stewards (kitchen to chef to quartermaster)

-Engine (Jr Engineer to Sr Engineer); the initial apprenticeship program rotates you through all three

As the union is predicated on keeping sailing jobs occupied by US sailors you do have to swear an oath of loyalty to the US - but i mean it’s just words really. The training programs also have some quasi-military style structure. You kind of start off in a boot-camp scenario but it’s mostly to weed people out.

The only real catch is double-edged: You will be away from family and friends for long periods of time; so great if you don’t really care for your family and don’t have super close IRL friends. While you are in the training program and while you are at sea you have no expenses - this is why you only have to worry about rent for part of the year while you aren’t working contracts. So, if I were doing the program I’d be looking for a situation where I either live family while I’m not at sea or find a person will to rent to me month-to-month. Paying rent for a residence you aren’t living in for the majority of the year would be silly unless you are like the head of a family that at least gets to use it while you are away or something.

https://www.seafarers.org/training-and-careers/jobs/entry-program/

It’s a bit of a rugged life-style but some people like that. Makes you feel alive and all. For the women comrades FYI: about 25% of the people enrolled while I was there were women and they seemed to be treated very well by staff and other people enlisted in the program. Felt very safe for everyone and everyone was pretty cool/chill (except the Commandant, he was cool but definitely not chill lol).

While the lifestyle is a bit rugged, the food is fucking amazing - no joke. People at sea eat like kings (for free apparently).

One of the cool things is that they have political education classes where they give you some union history (watered down, they aren’t revolutionaries) and teach the power of unions to their members. Self-serving sure, but it is literally the only time I’ve seen institutionalized political education in action in the US, was pretty wild.

Honestly I’d recommend it to anyone who is:

-Is young and directionless

-Wants to be in a unionized sector

-Loves the open sea / wants to travel in a non-tourist way

-Is economically vulnerable

Don’t apply if any of these describe you though:

-Unwilling to work on your drug habits/addictions

-Unwilling to work on your fitness/health generally

-Unwilling to tolerate any forms of authority/discipline

-Unwilling to to complete a 3 month training program where you live expense-free but have no income and are essentially chaperoned.

FYI, though: they will not tolerate drugs or alcohol while in their training program and if you get caught inebriated while working a contract they will come down hard on you (they have a rehab clinic they’d force you to attend).

But for real, if you are someone who just cannot find any economic traction and are living a meek existence - please apply for this program - you’ll actually get to start living your life.

Of course if you don’t like the sea/ocean then probably not for you.

Before anyone asks why I left the program, it was because of family shit - turns out mine falls apart without me around.

If any one does go through with an application my advise is to convince them why the program suits your particular life. Just like most jobs they are going to turn away applicants who seem to be applying on a whim who they might have a bad ROI on.

permalink
report
parent
reply

My three step plan for you:

  1. Get a remote IT support job; lots of those and they should pay enough to make them worth the time.
  2. If you can’t start at a company in your M.E. field initially as IT support, pivot to one once you’ve got your IT support claws sharpened.
  3. Either via networking within that company or some resume tomfoolery, pivot to a job in your field from that field-adjacent position.

Optional fourth step:

  1. Realize that you pine for a life at sea and enlist in the Merchant Marines for a somewhat alternative life where you don’t have to pay rent anywhere for most of the year and you’ll never need to think about a resume again.
permalink
report
reply

Go to a Merkfolk concert

or generally find any sort of Slavic folk music. Slavic music is awesome.

Siemka means “hello” I think

permalink
report
reply

Yes, Your Grace.

The name made me fearful that this game would be cringe. However, the trailer assured me that it would be awesome. It’s very story-driven, and while the narrative is pretty set on rails/linear you do have “importance” of choices when it comes to resource management.

The game has a lot of great humor and music throughout. It even will K.O. punch you right in the feels.

The game also “respects your time” which is great these days…

permalink
report
reply

Hopefully it’s just a non-critical tooth that needs an extraction.

I think my tooth extraction was like $35 - obviously they’ll take on some other fees but the process itself could be quickly fundraised.

The main problem is you might get mis-diagnosed a few times - especially if the professionals are trying to “save the tooth”. I was about to get a full root canal when the endodontist finally discovered that the tooth was cracked all the way through the roots and required extraction. Dude, saved me a ton of time and money and that was after like 3 mis-diagnoses.

Sorry you are going through this, tooth pain is miserable.

permalink
report
reply