Spyke
piefed.blahaj.zone

I have autistic kindergarteners that picked it up and it's become one of their favorite scripts. Kind of annoying but I didn't really care that much. Knowing it annoys this little freak though? Gotta say I'm warming up to it.

10
piefed.blahaj.zone

I'm sorry I'm confused. I mean script as in scripting as in the form of Delayed Echolalia where an autistic person will like repeat a phrase they've heard before usually entirely divorced from the context or use of the original. They heard the phrase "6 7" and it's become something they just repeat randomly. Not like a font.

4
clifreply
lemmy.world

Get them to use calibri since that font is too woke for the government.

Maybe that's what the person above was alluding to? I don't know, that's the best guess I've got. I didn't catch anything font related from your original comment but it could be a language thing.

Edit: or an autocorrect ;)

1

Oh thank you for reminding me about the Calibri thing. My teenager will be thrilled to learn that and incorporate it into every one of cleverly disguised shitposts he calls school assignments for the sole reason that it would bother the Chuds that currently occupy the Federal Government.

2
sh.itjust.works

Nobody has to take shit from a furniture fucker with a orange mustache stain.

64
lemmy.world

And 6x7 is 42, so now every generation can be happy.

47

Makes even more sense when you consider how they say it as "six seven" not "sixty seven" so it would imply notational (6)(7).

4
lemmy.ml

To day I learned that 6 7 is the police code for non-consensual sex with a couch.

46

This just in: adults don’t get kids’ memes. More news at 11.

I think it’s all fascinating, how adults flip out over kids’ trends every generation, without fail, without ever recalling that they followed silly fads/memes when they were kids, too. Like the “cool S” from the 90s.

I remember adults coming up with all sorts of absurd ideas, straining to connect it to something meaningful, failing to acknowledge that… it’s just a fun thing to draw. And if it’s fun, that’s all kids need. It didn’t mean we were in a cult, or that it’s a gang symbol, or any other ridiculous narrative. Some teachers got so annoyed or suspicious as to ban it from their classrooms, too.

I’m not bothered by 6-7. I’m not excited by it like kids are, but I get that it’s fun for them in a way that it isn’t for adults. One of the kids I work with said it the other day. I just laughed and told him, “Congrats on learning your first meme.”

If it wasn’t 6-7, it would’ve been something else. There’s no point in fighting it - just as other fads and memes have come and gone, this too will fade someday. Possibly to be replaced with something more obnoxious. We’ll have to wait and see.

34

Exactly. Do I find it annoying? No, but if I interacted with children much I probably would. Kids are annoying, but stuff like this is culturally valuable because it's them practicing growing and changing culture. Things that annoy the old people like us are also part of how teenagers get us to leave them alone so they can grow up in peace. From there younger and younger kids copy older kids because that's how kids work. Then eventually the parents and teachers that understand kids will get in on it poorly when they're well and truly sick of it.

Hell, every once in a while the kids get into something good, though it's usually music or books.

8

When we were kids all of our viral trends at least had an origin story.

Like that one where Marilyn manson removed some ribs so he could fuck his couch better.

23

That's alright he's trading down to Erica "sex is only for reproduction" Kirk. So he'll just have to 69 the couch.

2

It's the best meme I've ever heard now. Watch me put it 6 7 times in every comment.

... Wait no. I can't if you're watching.

17

Funny. I'm from the seventies and when we were daydreaming back then about the year 2025.... we saw people flying around in transparent bubbles, living in full harmony in futuristic scifi buildings... Who could have thought we would be thrown back in time almost perfectly similar to the nazi regime of the Germans and dangerous idiots like that Orange Satan and its dog Fence being "chosen" as the most important people of a country... It's devolution.

I vote for recolonisation. This one has failed.

16
lemmy.world

So Americans should now count 65, 66, 68, 69? At least this is in line with measuring things with non-metric units.

14

"Oh no, a number, that's threatening the greatness of the US and we must act immediately!"

  • Some couch fucker, probably
13

Why do we care what the vice president thinks? Shouldn't he be meeting with a ladies book club or attending a donor's funeral somewhere? Is he just spouting crap and waiting and hoping for someone's death?

10

I am speechless, how can it all be so absurd. How do they come up with even more stupid ideas than before every single day.

9
Deebsterreply
programming.dev

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=laZpTO7IFtA is worth the 15 minutes, but the TL;DW is that the kids are just using it as an in-joke marker (i.e. the phrase is a shibboleth), but its origin is in lyrics* by the rapper Skrilla referring to police codes for a dead body.

* are rapped words lyrics?

18
Fondotsreply
lemmy.world

Just as an aside, most police codes aren't really standardized across different agencies.

There's a handful of 10-codes that are pretty much universal, like "10-4"

67 isn't one of those codes. A lot of departments do use it for a report of a death

But it's also commonly used to advise of an important incoming message

And other agencies may have other uses for it

And other agencies use other systems besides 10 codes, I believe some departments in CA have been known to use penal code numbers

But so because of that, there's been a big movement in emergency service to use plain language over codes for the last decade or two, mostly since Katrina since different agencies using different codes lead to a lot of miscommunication there.

I work in 911 dispatch, at my agency and pretty much everywhere around me it's all plain language. One or two 10-codes linger around, more as informal slang than anything that gets official use. 10-4 sometimes gets used, but that's practically just part of the English language now.

10-96 also kind of lingers around in my agency, which in the set of 10-codes they used before I started was for a subject with mental health issues. We're not really supposed to use it but no one has really come up with a better shorthand for it so it still pops up from time to time, mostly from our officers.

9
Deebsterreply
programming.dev

Interesting stuff, thanks for writing it up.

I did know that US codes weren't standardised, partially because the video covers it - perhaps I should have phrased it as "a police code" to be more technically correct. Edit: or bothered to check the video so could have written "Philadelphia police code" - but then I would have missed out on your reply.

4
Fondotsreply
lemmy.world

Funnily enough, I actually work in an agency that's very close to Philly and deal with my counterparts in the city fairly regularly.

I don't get (or want) to listen to a whole lot of PPD radio chatter, we have plenty in our own county to keep us busy, so I don't know for certain if they're actually still using 10-codes or any other similar system or not. I can't think of any time I've heard a Philly officer or dispatcher use one with me, but it's certainly possible that they're still in use there internally.

Also even though we're using plain language, there's still some weird miscommunication that happens.

I remember one time needing to advise Philly of a report of gunshots we received that might have been relevant to them, it was near their border.

So I called over to their dispatch and advised them that "we received a report of shots fired in the area of..."

Which kind of sent their dispatcher into a bit of a tizzy because in Philly dispatch lingo "shots fire" basically means an officer has fired their gun, but to us it's just any report of gunshots (which, more often than not, means fireworks or something that the caller mistook for gunshots)

4

It is and it isn't

Certain things absolutely need to be standardized

But in other cases it can just kind of bog things down.

I remember one training thing we had to do to keep our certifications up to date, part of it had to do with fire dispatch.

And at the beginning of that, our instructor basically said "Almost nothing in this course is at all relevant to us. But it's a national standard and we have to teach this to you"

It had a lot to do with wildland firefighting and some other specific situations that have nothing to do with how things operate in our area or with the kinds of situations we deal with.

It was interesting, I learned some fun facts, but I haven't yet had any reason to use any of the knowledge I picked up from that training.

And that time could have probably been better spent doing something else.

2
ragebuttreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

In Philly (where the song 6-7 originated comes from and the code being referenced) a 72 hour involuntary mental health hold is a 302 (and then 303/304 if the hold is extended beyond 72hrs). 5150 is a California code, I think, but it’s def not national

1
Fondotsreply
lemmy.world

A 302 can actually be up to 120 hours

303 is up to 20 days

304 is 90

There's also a 305, which I believe is up to 180

And technically a 306, but that has to do with transferring involuntary commitment patients to another facility or something.

Like I said in another comment I work in PA and my wife happens to work at a psych hospital so I get to hear all about this stuff.

2
ragebuttreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Well I’ll be damned.

I also work in pa and while I do outpatient now I worked in inpatient for years. Whoops! To be fair it’s been years since I did hospital stuff and admissions was never my deal. I couldn’t remember the longer ones for the life of me. I could’ve sworn 302 was 72, but you’re definitely right

1

All good, I always feel like it's 72 hours, and I think the equivalent in most states is only 72 I think we're the odd one out on that, and I feel like in most cases patients managed to get stabilized enough to be discharged after the 72 hours.

I kind of feel like the extra two days are mostly so there's time to get everything set up for a 303 in case the patient tries to fight it and it goes to court. I had to be a witness for that over a call I took once, I only got like a day or two's notice because it all has to happen on such a condensed timeline

1

@Fondots Looking at the recommended APCO codeset, 10-67 is a net-messaging signal, of little or no use to police. My guess is that it got repurposed by some dept, and others picked it up. In the Project 2 (1967) version, though, -96 did mean 'mental subject', and has not been changed.

As you said, variant use and expanding and gradually over-lapping use has led to them being abandoned in favour of plain language. This is enabled also by clearer-sounding radio than what was around 50 ya.

0

@Fondots I don't know if they were first with it, but one source I found claims that Chicago PD still uses a 10-code system, in which -67 does mean 'report of death'. I would not consider that source good, but a better one gives the same for Winston-Salem (NC) PD.

So it appears to be out there for some PD's, but who knows how it started.

0

@Lost_My_Mind It's a police code that was used in some rap song (I've heard it, but forget the details because don't care), and kids just picked up on it somehow. They don't really know what it means, either. It doesn't actually make sense to them, either. But a lot of kid stuff is like that. I'm sure I yelled stupid, senseless shit when I was a kid, too, and it also annoyed adults. More than I do now, I mean. I hope.

0
feddit.uk

Genuinely have no idea what 67 means and if I wait a year until they tire of it then I won't have to learn.

7
lemmy.world

I think it started as a sports thing. But you're right. It's gonna burn itself out quickly.

4

It's a meme of a meme of a meme. Some guy was making YouTube shorts about a rap song about a basketball player that plays like he's 6'7" even though he's 6'2".

The kids do it just because of the short and it being goofy shit with the hand movements and funny looking characters. The YouTuber was memeing because the song was about one of the Ball brothers.

It literally means nothing. Just kids being silly.

3

Thats right, were moving to an octal system. Skip from 5 straight to 8 from now on!

5
lemmy.world

Party of personal freedom and free speech y'all

I for one believe people should have the freedom to be annoying.

5
lemmy.today

Man seriously. Kids are always going to have some inside joke/nonsense they'll use as a way to separate themselves. 67 I believe is on the nonsense side after watching a language Jones video about it. But let kids be kids. I'm sure we had some dumb shit we did back then. Just there weren't cameras everywhere live streaming us being idiots.

2

Hell I'm young enough my generation's stupid shit was posted to the internet. We yoloed and had rage comics about le epic bacon, as we asked what the fox says and sang about Friday and calling us maybe, and now it's cringe but it's also good memories of our youth. Hell that doesn't even touch on the hell that was the homestuck kids (who are now adults, many even have ok taste now). And it all happened right here on the devil's own internet. It's still up as Tumblr likes to dredge up from time to time.

Someday 67 will be that for the kids these days. And more will come. Some may be like rickrolling and become classic, but in a less omnipresent form, while others will be like homestuck and be weirdly influential on future culture when you look at how terrible it is in retrospect. But it's theirs to do.

3
Neo
lemmy.sdf.org

Is no one going to point out that he's clearly joking?

4
mastodon.social

@return2ozma More than a few people in this thread either don't get that Dunce is joking, or are pretending they don't know. I get it, conservatives are not funny, and that can make it hard to tell when when they're trying to be. But he really is joking. Or, well, trying to.

3

When a joke jokes it's hard to tell they're joking.

That, friends, is why credibility is important.

7

If people can't tell if a joke is a joke, especially when you unironically say shit as dumb as this, you don't really get a pass for going 'I wAs JuSt JoKiNg U gUiZ' after the fact.

These people say their real beliefs as 'jokes' until there's enough buy in that its not a joke anymore.

2

The only thing lefties find funny is any joke not made by republicans.

-4

Why don't you guys get some meaningful fucking work done improving the lives of your constituents instead of hating on memes for kids?

2

This man has zero chin. He had to grown that stupid beard to make his face distinct from his neck. Why is Thiele obsessed with funding this dumbass? Like, if you're going to raise up a minion to do your bidding, find a half way intelligent one

2

Man and I thought imperial was nonsensical before. Octals gonna be really hard to explain in the future.

2

I think more people would like to ban 67 than this article realizes... it truly is insufferable at times.

1

He can always move to Mars if he dislikes it. Actually, we should just deport him to Mars.

1

At least he’s living in this century, as opposed to Trump, who is still stuck in the 80s watching cable TV and talking about his “ratings.”

1