What made me unhappy today ?

Aside from the tens of millions of dead young men in WWI, the power vacuum of disposed monarchies, the complete collapse of the global economy, and the lack of centuries of liberalism and representative government that proceeded it... there's really no comparison at all. In times like these, I find my history degree more comforting than a million hugs. Imagine if they had doom-scrolling in 1933? That would have been some shit.
I get it. No history matches 1:1, but I am seeing some similarities. History can be similar, but not the exact same. And yeah, I know...history can be very comforting as it tells you that nothing lasts forever and nothing remains the same. OMG, yeah, that would have been a disaster. I can only imagine the doomscrolling headlines for 1933.

"Hindenburg to blame for Germany's Situation."

Then people get confused about WHICH Hindenburg and then there's a widely circulated conspiracy about the Hindenberg.

(I'll leave it at that and thanks for the laugh.)
 
Outside of forums, I'm on a couple of social media platforms just so my family knows I'm not dead in a ditch somewhere. (I'm an introvert, I hate phone calls. Text or email...preferably email.) Anywho because I usually don't post anything other than sarcasm and things about my boys (Basse and Marlowe) I get a lot of dog related social media,

There was an account with a sizable following that made a post featuring their GSD known for its outrageous behaviour wearing a 'service' dog vest. As a service dog handler myself, (Marlowe, medical alert 2+ years of training), people passing off ESAs as 'service' dogs is something we encounter on a regular basis. It's aggregating, but you have to learn to deal with the ignorance and stupidity of the general public in a reasonable manner.

Where I really got just irritated was the fact that this account was being 'satirical', but marched out every entitled ESA Karen reply in the book. The post was bad enough, what was worse was the comment section. People honestly thought the behavior was funny. It wasn't. It was ignorance that has the potential to adversely affect service dog teams because people being people will take that post at face value and assume that by spending the $49.99 they are now entitled to call their untrained pet a 'service' dog and take it everywhere. Real service animals usually have a minimum of two years of intensive training and are conditioned to work in a variety of situations, we're talking hundreds of hours of work with these dogs. For many, their dogs are more reliable than any tech out there and are usually significantly ahead of the curve when monitoring their owners. (Marlowe does cardiac function and has autodiatically picked up on when I get low blood sugar). They alert to seizures, cardiac episodes, blood sugar shifts, help their handlers determine when something is real or a hallucination, ground someone during a panic attack, etc...The list goes on. Service dogs are a different calibre of animal than a pet. They literally save lives and prevent injury. Yet they were treated as a joke and knowing the average understanding of the general public (US) at least 15% of the people who saw that post will take it at face value.

I did something I don't generally do. I said something on a social media platform. I was polite, but good grief, why do something so tactless. It is like allowing your kid to try and pet an on duty service animal or play with someone else's mobility aid. It wasn't funny. It was just plain stupidity and no one said anything. When something can negatively impact another demographic because people don't 'get' the joke, it stops being funny. That is bullying. It is ignorance at its finest.

Put a face to it: Say someone sees the post and buys the vest for their reactive GSD, which they then take to Voldemart on a busy Saturday afternoon. A mom is out running errands with her little boy (5). The little boy has Type 1 Diabetes. He has a task trained service dog to alert when his sugars go high or drop too low. The dog is always at least fifteen to twenty minutes faster than the boy's monitoring tech and more accurate. The dog is this little boy's lifeline. They walk down the Lego aisle to look at the Star Wars sets. The person with the GSD also wants to look at the Lego sets. The GSD sees the service spaniel and lunges. GSD's owner is taken unaware and doesn't control their dog. The shepherd attacks the spaniel and there is damage. The spaniel needs a vet ASAP.

While mom is trying to get their dog help and calm her hysterical child, the incapacitated dog misses an alert and the little boy into acute ketoacidosis. Due to the 'joke' of someone with a sizable platform a child and his service dog are now in a battle to survive because someone said a vest automatically qualifies your dog to be a 'service' dog. What is really sad, is that while my example is hypothetical it has happened before and will likely happen again because of crap like this. People need to do better.

A vest doesn't make anyone's dog a service dog, any more than a red hat makes me a firefighter. What a ridiculous thing to say. :(

I hope the people on that social media platform (whichever it is) understood how horrifying the spread of false information is, and didn't double down.

I'm sure at least one or two of them probably did double down, but I hope not everyone did.

Oh, just my history class made me sad, because we hit WWII and we had a few sad readings for the class. I am glad that this teacher is assigning the readings, but it's also just really sad. :(

I think the next two weeks are going to be hard, too. Because we continue with WWII and then have a whole unit on the Holocaust. Which is also depressing. I think that for me, reading HOW Germany and Italy declined in to Nationalistic Fascism was hard, because of modern times. The good thing about all of this is that we ARE learning about it and learning about the horrors of the Holocaust.

IIRC, my mother's parents (and their family) grew up in Romania just after WW1 ended. When WW2 started and the Nazis invaded, my grandparents' family was caught between the Nazis and the Soviets.

Hitler or Stalin. What a choice for a Jewish family to make!

My maternal grandfather fought in the battle of Stalingrad. Unfortunately, some members of his family were taken by the Nazis, and others succumbed to Stalin's paranoia after the war. He and my maternal grandmother were the only grandparents I knew.

When my father was 7 or 8, his mother's neighbours 'told' on her that she listened to someone tell a joke about Stalin. The KGB took her to a work camp. He never saw her again until she was released in the mid-1960s. Six months later, she was dead.

Is it any wonder that my parents didn't want their children growing up in a country like Russia, or that I never wanted to visit it?
 
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