seahorse

joined 4 years ago
MODERATOR OF
 

Like, I know people who look like this

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 2 points 2 days ago

Yeah, me, the leftist owner of this instance, is a chud for not praising a shitlib like Obama.

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 3 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

Is this a meme or are you actually praising Obama?

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 3 points 3 days ago

This right here

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 1 points 3 days ago

Not sure. Whatever digital ocean runs

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 1 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

https://join-lemmy.org/news/2024-06-07_-_Lemmy_Release_v0.19.4_-_Image_Proxying_and_Federation_improvements

I think it was a privacy enhancement. Pretty sure I had it enabled for a while but maybe I'm mistaken

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 14 points 1 week ago

Once again, not a drag queen

 

Hey everyone,

I just wanted to take a second and thank all of you who use the site.

A little history of the site:

The VPS this site runs on was originally created so I could do the Linux Upskill Challenge years ago as I was just starting to get into Linux and FOSS at the time. Not too long after that I discovered Lemmy which was in its infancy. I joined lemmy.ml and after a year or so decided the software was mature enough that I felt like I could take a stab at starting my own instance. There were still only maybe 100 or so users on the few lemmy instances out there. I wanted a region-themed instance and eventually decided on midwest.social as the domain. I actually had another server for Ohio (where I live) but it wasn't used a ton and I didn't like paying for 2 VPS's so I shut that one down after a while.

Eventually, reddit went public and made a bunch of their users mad and lots of people started jumping ship to Lemmy, and that's when my userbase (as well as other servers' userbases) increased drastically. I remember suddenly one day I just started getting email, after email, after email of people applying to join the site.

Nowadays, the stats say there are around 2.5k users on midwest.social. I'm not sure how many of those are active but it's still kinda nuts for me. I think the thing I'm most shocked about is just how nice almost everyone is that has joined. Even when there are technical issues they're not ripping my head off.

It's a unique experience to see so many people using a website you started in your spare time. I never get tired of it, although I do tend to forget there are more of you than I realize lol. Some days I'm like, "there's gotta be only like 15 people using my site" only to be reminded that it's definitely larger than that.

Anyways, thank you to everyone who uses the site and thank you to all who donate as well!

 

Most christian, pro-life president ever /s

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 5 points 1 week ago

Chuck Mangione also died today

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

You can get to it on Jerboa by tapping the 3 vertical dots in the upper right corner and going to "site info". Either way, this is the link on it: https://liberapay.com/seahorse

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 3 points 1 week ago

Yeah there's object storage I use for photos.

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 4 points 1 week ago (3 children)

No, wasn't overnight. Not sure what that was about but CPU was at 100% for most of it. That's when I decided to upgrade the resources.

There's a liberapay link in the sidebar if you're so inclined.

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 3 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Nothing terribly impressive. 4 vCPUs and 8 GB RAM on a 120 GB ssd.

 

Hello everyone,

I made a long overdue upgrade to the CPU and memory of the server by doubling both. Hope that helps some of the slow load times. I sometimes forget how many active users this server has and that number has only grown in the past year.

Thanks!

[–] seahorse@midwest.social 1 points 3 weeks ago

Very important business.

 

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio, July 9 (Reuters) - Accompanied by their newborn son, Michelet and his wife arrived at the St. Vincent de Paul Community Center in Springfield, Ohio, last week looking for help from the non-profit's volunteers. They wanted to apply for a valuable document for the infant that for now seems out of reach for them as Haitian immigrants: a U.S. passport. With their own legal status precarious, Michelet and his wife see the passport as crucial proof that their U.S.-born son is an American citizen. But they know that their son's citizenship will do nothing to stop the Trump administration from following through on its goal of deporting them - and hundreds of thousands of other Haitian immigrants - back to the violence-racked Caribbean island nation.

Michelet, who only provided his first name for fear of drawing attention from immigration agents, said he was not interested in migrating to a third country and sees his pending asylum claim as the best option for staying in the U.S. "Moving to Canada or another country would mean starting over," said the 35-year-old, who works for a local auto parts company and came to Springfield via Chile more than two years ago. "I'm already here. I have a job and experience here." Some migrants began exploring such contingency plans after the Department of Homeland Security said on June 27 that it would terminate the Temporary Protected Status providing legal status for half a million Haitians, effective September 2. On July 1, a federal judge in New York blocked that DHS effort, but the Trump administration is expected to appeal. The Supreme Court already allowed a similar move to go ahead, ruling in May that the administration could end TPS protections for Venezuelans in the United States. Initially granted to Haitians after a devastating 2010 earthquake, TPS has been extended numerous times, most recently due to gang violence and unrest that persists to this day. White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement that the earthquake no longer posed a risk and that ending TPS showed Trump was "keeping his promise to restore sanity to our immigration system." Eligible Haitians could pursue legal status through other means, she said.

'JESUS PUT ME HERE'

Springfield is home to an estimated 10,000 to 15,000 Haitian nationals. Working at Amazon warehouses and auto suppliers, they help drive the local economy. Predominantly Christian, many lean on their faith when talking through their deportation fears. "I'm going to stay here. I'm not afraid," said Jean Marc, a warehouse worker in his 20s. "Jesus put me here." Michelet's and Jean Marc's stories were typical of the dozen Haitian nationals interviewed by Reuters in Springfield last week. Of the total, eight said they were banking on asylum claims for a shot at staying in the United States. All said a third country was an unrealistic option for them. Still, a number of migrants with pending asylum claims have been swept up in the immigration crackdown around the country and are now in detention awaiting court hearings. The Haitians interviewed by Reuters said they remain committed to staying despite facing a torrent of threats and online hate last year triggered by false rumors on social media that Haitian nationals were eating local pets. Those claims were then repeated by Trump on the campaign trail. Some Haitians find it hard to believe that Trump, as a former businessman, would want to deport hardworking members of society contributing to economic growth, said Casey Rollins, executive director at St. Vincent in Springfield. "They have been in such denial about this," she said, adding that some Haitians leaned into a belief that God would take care of them or that the administration would somehow change its thinking and let them stay. "They have this ultimate faith thing," she said. I DON'T HAVE ANYWHERE ELSE TO GO During an interview at the Haitian Community Help and Support Center just outside downtown Springfield, a Haitian man in his 50s lifted his collared shirt to reveal the scar from a hot iron pressed to his chest six years ago. M.B., who only gave his initials because he was afraid of being singled out by ICE, said he did not know the men who tortured him, but believes the attack was likely related to his work for a political party out of power in Haiti at the time. M.B., who is permitted to work for a local manufacturer under the TPS program, said he and his wife are consulting with a lawyer about their asylum claims. In his 50s, he said he did not want to uproot to somewhere else. "This is the only other country that we have lived in besides Haiti," he said. "I don't have anywhere else to go." Rampant gang violence in Haiti has displaced some 1.3 million people from their homes, fueling hunger and insecurity, while hospitals have shut their doors, and much of the economy, judicial system and government remain paralyzed. I.M., a Haitian man in his 20s and a brain cancer survivor, worries he would not be able to get medications needed to sustain his life in Haiti. But he said he will not flee to a third country and would self-deport to avoid detention. I.M. also asked to be identified by his initials, citing concerns he could be targeted by ICE. He laughed when asked about the DHS assertion that Haiti was now stable and safe enough for Haitian migrants to return, pointing to the U.S. State Department advisory warning Americans against traveling there due to "kidnapping, crime, civil unrest, and limited health care." "If they tell me to go September the 2nd, I will go before that just not to let people put me in handcuffs and treat me like a criminal," he told Reuters, referring to how migrants deported from the United States are often transported shackled. Viles Dorsainvil, director at the Haitian Community Help and Support Center, said most Haitians faced limited options, without the family ties or financial resources needed to get to a third country like Canada or Brazil. "It's like a Catch-22," he said. "It's so sad."

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