Refugee from another, less-friendly instance. Please forgive the youth of my account— I’ve actually been around here for a while. Still, glad to be here!

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  • 26 Comments
Joined 4 months ago
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Cake day: June 3rd, 2024

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  • There’s a back button on every page in the exact same spot system-wide (upper left corner). How is that confusing?

    What “missing” options?

    What “issues” with browsers?

    There’s a toggle for Bluetooth that just turns it off that, since Bluetooth was added to the iPhone, has never given me an issue. I don’t know what you mean here.

    Your complaints are so vague, it don’t really know what you mean. It sounds like you’re just getting used to a different interface, not that anything is actually “rough edges”.










  • For instance, I dance a lot. I have even started ballet dancing. And in the past I had an eating disorder. Now I know this may sound a kind of bigoted or stereotypical. But I don’t mean it that way, this is purely based on statistics.

    these things do make not a person LGBTQ+

    However I feel in no way that I am in the wrong body. I like being a man, I like the idea of masculinity

    this seems to be pretty much the qualifying criterion, and, to this, I’d ay no, you’re (very probably) not trans.

    But it makes me “worried” if I do end up tran

    people are born LGBTQ+ and typically know it all their lives. From you descriptions, it seems like you might just be Bi. Enjoying “non-masculine” activities doesn’t really mean anything in and of itself. Being LGBTQ+ isn’t something one “ends up as”-- it’s something we always have been.

    when I already have a wife and children

    and so what? sure, there may be some adjustments for them to make, but, unless they’re transphobes, it shouldn’t be a problem.







  • while it’s probably true that the IRS is more interested in you paying your taxes than prosecuting you because that income may have been “illegitimate,” that doesn’t mean that other agencies might not be interested in the information you provide to the IRS. The FBI/DEA/DHS could easily get a hold of those records and use them to pursue an investigation.

    and, yes, your tax returns can be used as evidence in court.

    this is why money laundering (obfuscating the origin of illegitimate earnings to make them appear legitimate, esp for tax purposes) is such a lucrative trade.

    my advice: never volunteer information which could later be used against you.