Hello OFMD friends. It’s finally time. I have returned to your loving arms.
I will now be watching #ofmds2 for the first time. I’ve had almost no spoilers so I have fresh eyes to everything.
Follow along or mute me as I descend into madness:
See you just have to play your own decision paralysis against yourself. Do you want to decide what to have for dinner, and then do the many steps of making it + cleaning up?
Or let yourself hyper focus on whatever task until you get hungry enough that fastest meal = best meal
Meal prepping is the wildest thing you could suggest to someone with ADHD because as soon as I'm done making a week's worth of lasagna, I guarentee you the last thing I wanna eat is a single spoonful of motherfuckin lasagna.
Here’s the roll call of members of Congress who betrayed the Constitution and the American people by voting yes on the KIDS Act.
The sickest part is that these people used “protecting kids” as an excuse to further insert government between parents and their children—all while establishing a surveillance infrastructure to monitor and control Americans of all ages.
If you thought Flock license plate readers were bad, this is next-level surveillance state territory.
A defense contractor called Leonardo is rolling out a system called SignalTrace. It bolts sensors onto the license plate readers already mounted across America, the same Flock-style cameras on poles, overpasses, and police cars.
It doesn’t just read your plate. It vacuums up the Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and wireless signals from every smart device in your car. Your phone, your AirPods, your smartwatch, your fitness tracker, your tire pressure sensors, your key fobs. All of it.
Those unique device IDs get tied straight to your license plate. Once they’ve made the link, they can track you without ever scanning your plate again. It even flags who’s riding with you. A friend hops in once and their devices get logged to your file.
This is being sold to law enforcement, military, and intelligence agencies. It turns roadside cameras into people-tracking nodes that build a persistent “electronic fingerprint” of every driver and passenger who rolls past.
There’s no federal law covering it. No opt-out. No warrant required.
The surveillance state isn’t coming. It’s already bolted to the street.
People with children should be louder about Meta glasses. Do y’all understand that anyone could be recording your child without you knowing? And that footage could end up anywhere?
Patent number US20250104469A1.
This is a biometric system that scans people, compares against law enforcement/security databases, and alerts authorized personnel when a match is found.
Patent: https://t.co/HxokSZcSrx
By @Ford
I also leave small tasks to do while waiting if I arrive early. Then early doesn’t feel like a waste. I needed to order that replacement part, or answer that email.
If that stresses you out, bring a project like a book or cross-stitch so you feel like you used that 10 min well
There’s so much discourse and people yelling “just set alarms!” Leave early! But that’s like saying “just eat less” to a fat person.
As both a fat person (lost 55 lbs so far) and an ADHD person who struggles with time management, here are some things that helped me:
I'm so tired of lateness being viewed as a moral failing. I've been shamed for it my whole life because it's framed as "disrespect" (and no, it hasn't helped me be more punctual) and if I lost out on a major life opportunity because of it I don't think I could have ever recovered
Or if you need it more disincentivized, running late doesn’t mean leaving the house late, it means leaving the house without lunch, or without my coffee, or without makeup on.
The person who suffers is me, not the person I’m meeting
more people should take note of what happened here. They’ve set a legal precedent for criminalizing organizing by criminalizing literature.
You can get 30 years for a box of zines or pamphlets
Hear me out:
24/7 public livestreams of the homes of politicians who vote for mass surveillance.
Just need neighbors to let us put up and point a camera. Nothing to hide, nothing to fear! Right? 💁♂️
If this doesn't make your blood boil, you don't believe in liberty. Border Patrol agents smashed down a business's locked doors and arrested two employees, and when the owner demanded to see a warrant, they smugly said, "We don't need one." Absolutely criminal. Straight to jail