MinmiTheDino
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MinmiTheDino
@minmi.sfba.social.ap.brid.gy
#Sf raised and sf returned. I’m a #data scientist working in #sustainability. Mom to two gremlin children and one angelic senior dog. She/her
Profile pic is a […]

🌉 bridged from https://sfba.social/@minmi on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/
Man I love the first few episodes of every season of alone where they’re doing awesome survival shit.

But I truly hate the last part where they’re all just seeing who can die the slowest for 500k to like pay their wife’s medical bills.
February 18, 2026 at 4:59 AM
Sooooo sorry hun, I *have* to go to work today and leave you with the kids on their fourth rainy day out of school. Wish I could stay. Can’t. BYE.

Don’t judge me.
February 17, 2026 at 5:15 PM
There’s a guy on the train with a camo hat that says “protect the polls” and I honestly can’t tell where this lands on the political spectrum.
February 17, 2026 at 5:05 PM
Reposted by MinmiTheDino
How have I lived to the Year of our Lord 2026 without having seen this meme before now?

#starwars #memes #ReneMagritte
February 17, 2026 at 2:55 PM
My 5yo tried to record his rendition of “we shall not be moved” at the children’s museum today but the thing was broken so it was stuck in chipmunk voice.

He is furious but I fucking love it.
February 16, 2026 at 11:53 PM
“White liberal women are the most dangerous people in our society,” the far-right activist Laura Loomer posted on X

This is giving us far, far too much credit but it still made me feel all warm and fuzzy inside
February 16, 2026 at 11:29 PM
Trying to sneak outta my kids room but my body is made of rice crispies (apparently)
February 16, 2026 at 4:50 AM
Feeling very tradwife making eggs and bacon for my husband and two sons but on the other hand everyone is leaving me the fuck alone so maybe there’s something to this.
February 15, 2026 at 7:14 PM
Reposted by MinmiTheDino
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." - Louis D. Brandeis
February 14, 2026 at 4:34 PM
February 14, 2026 at 8:49 PM
3yo: mommy!
Brings his face really close to me. Speaks very seriously.
3yo: mommy, I’m gonna do something you don’t want me to do. But I have to.

Great, can’t wait, thanks for the heads up. 😂

#parenting
February 14, 2026 at 3:45 PM
Why am I craving the fuck out of congee right now?
February 14, 2026 at 5:07 AM
Once more into the breach

(4 day rainy weekend with small children)

#parenting
February 14, 2026 at 2:17 AM
[Ice arrest]

ICE has arrested an elderly nanny in #sanfrancisco in the Diamond heights neighborhood.

Be vigilant. Keep each other safe.
February 14, 2026 at 12:54 AM
Here’s how many S.F. politicians have kids — and send them to public school
#### Read Mission Local often? Help **grow our newsroom** , joining the 3,250 readers who support us by giving below. Donate today! The San Francisco teachers strike, the city’s first in nearly half a century, is over. The teachers union and the school district reached a tentative deal early Friday morning. The sides announced the two-year agreement near 6 a.m. Students will be back in classrooms Wednesday. Schools had already been closed for Friday. Monday and Tuesday of next week are school holidays. Want the latest on the Mission and San Francisco? Sign up for our **free daily newsletter** below. Sign up The biggest sticking points were all resolved. The teachers won their marquee ask: fully funded dependent healthcare. For teachers with families, this ameliorates costs that often stretched to perhaps 20 percent of take-home pay, eating up recent wage gains. It’s a benefit that one teacher on the bargaining team who pays around $1,500 a month for his children’s healthcare described to _Mission Local_ as “life changing.” The fully funded family healthcare comes at the expense of raises below the teachers’ initial ask. Rather than the 9 percent raise the union desired, teachers will instead receive 5 percent over two years. “Certificated” staff like paraeducators, who are paid less, will get 8.5 percent over two years; the union had asked for 14 percent. Special education teachers will get “immediate relief” in “caseload reductions,” the union announced. The union also won other changes, like security guards being given the chance to become full-time employees. The district, in its pre-strike proposals, had made its offers contingent on reducing existing benefits, like prep time. The final deal does not give away much for the union, but does pause teacher sabbaticals for one year. “We know our work is not done,” said Cassondra Curiel, the president of United Educators of San Francisco. “While we didn’t win everything we know we deserve,” she said, the new contract was “a foundation for a stable district.” Superintendent Maria Su wrote in a statement that the new contract held “attract talented educators” while keeping the district financially solvent. “I know it has been a hard week, and I want to extend my heartfelt appreciation to our students and families. We cannot wait to welcome you back to school.” The strike was San Francisco’s first educator walkout since 1979 and was far shorter. The work stoppage 47 years ago lasted more than six weeks and involved court orders requiring teachers go back to the classroom and Mayor Dianne Feinstein urging a resolution. This time, Mayor Daniel Lurie made a last-minute plea for more time but only seriously involved himself days before teachers walked off the job. The strike had been brewing for months, and the two sides formally declared impasse on Oct. 10 when negotiations ceased until picking up again last week. Lurie, in a Friday morning statement, wrote that he was “grateful that our educators and school district have reached a tentative agreement” and thanked both sides for their work. Educators demonstrated at every school site in the city in the mornings, 30 minutes before the first bells usually ring. They held daily mass rallies at Dolores Park, City Hall, and even Ocean Beach. City officials joined the picket lines, and the head of the country’s second largest teachers’ union flew in to show support. Negotiations took place at the War Memorial Veterans Building where the more than 100 educators who were part of the union bargaining team sat down with the district’s representatives every day since Thursday, Feb. 5, save Sunday. Talks often lasted well into the night. The two sides quickly came to an agreement on proposals that would cost the district little: codifying protections for undocumented students, continuing its “Stay Over” program for homeless students, and implementing regulations for AI in classrooms. The economic package — wages and healthcare — and a new work model for special education teachers were more contentious. But once family healthcare was agreed to by the district Thursday evening, the other measures were passed within hours. _This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available._ #### Join the 3,250 readers who keep Mission Local free for all! Because of you, Mission Local reached and surpassed our $300,000 year-end fundraising goal. **All we can say is thank you.** Thank you for choosing to invest in a local newsroom rooted in San Francisco’s communities — one that listens first and reports deeply. If you haven’t yet had a chance to give, it’s not too late to be part of this community. **Your contribution today helps sustain the reporting our city relies on all year long.** We’re grateful you’re here — and we’d be honored to have you join our donors. Donate ## Latest News ### Here’s how many S.F. politicians have kids — and send them to public school ### ‘We are still trying’: Bini’s Kitchen holds on in SoMa ### S.F. tow operator gets 5 years in prison for scheme to torch competitors’ trucks ## Follow Us * X * Instagram * YouTube * LinkedIn * Mastodon
missionlocal.org
February 13, 2026 at 3:12 PM
Told my friend I would address an uncomfortable racial thing that happened in our friend group so she didn’t have to and HOLY SHIT IM SO UNCOMFORTABLE

This is a very good experience to have but damn
February 12, 2026 at 11:47 PM
Reposted by MinmiTheDino
Lots of enthusiasm and support from passersby outside at lunchtime! #SanFrancisco
February 12, 2026 at 8:47 PM
Ok here’s my sf tax proposal. For every residence you own, you pay $100 x (number of bedrooms - # of people using it as primary residence).

Got 5 people in a 2br? Congrats, here’s some cash. Own a 5br building you leave empty? Pay up.
February 12, 2026 at 4:41 PM
Teacher friend: “come picket with us! We have signs. And snacks!”

lol of course they have snacks.

All the power and all the love to our teachers ✊
February 12, 2026 at 4:05 PM
There are certain inventions I look at and I just think, wow, what a genius this person was to convince so many people they need this thing that has absolutely zero advantage over the things they already have. I want to do that one day.
February 11, 2026 at 6:17 AM
I hate my clothessssssss
February 11, 2026 at 5:42 AM
Reposted by MinmiTheDino
mstdn.ca
February 11, 2026 at 4:01 AM
I really wanted my kid to go to a language immersion school but at this point I think it’s actually cheaper for us to just move to France for a year
February 10, 2026 at 11:42 PM
SFUSD keeps saying they don’t have the money to pay teachers and yet somehow we just expect to keep having teachers even if they’re not getting paid enough to live?

I support the strike and the city needs to find a way to pay teachers. This is shameful.
February 10, 2026 at 4:28 AM
The other day my 5yo corrected my mom who was saying urinals are just for boys and he said, no, a girl can use a urinal if she has a penis.

Proud mama.
February 10, 2026 at 1:18 AM