ActivityPub Viewer

A small tool to view real-world ActivityPub objects as JSON! Enter a URL or username from Mastodon or a similar service below, and we'll send a request with the right Accept header to the server to view the underlying object.

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{ "@context": "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams", "type": "OrderedCollectionPage", "orderedItems": [ { "type": "Like", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227/entities/urn:activity:810644399654830080", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227", "content": "One evening I was taking a train back from Westport to New York City. On that railroad, after a certain hour, you buy your ticket on the train…<br />So I got on the train, and before that I had been out in the autumn leaves with a wonderful friend, I was really happy, and the conductor came down the aisle, and he said, “Tickets please.” I said, “I’m sorry I’ll have to buy my ticket from you.” He asked me what kind of ticket I wanted and I hadn’t realized I had a choice. I could get a regular or a senior citizen ticket, so I said, “Senior Citizen?” and it was the same way as when I was 18 years old, and I could drink legally in New York, I went in and ordered a “beer?” and the bartender would hear the tone of my voice, and I ask for my identification. So I asked him how much the tickets were, and he tells me the senior citizen is $4.50 and the regular is $7.00. I was pleased, and then as he went away, I started to realize what I had put on with the idea of ‘senior citizen.’ It wasn’t just an economic category. I mean, it was technically, but psychologically, it wasn’t.<br /><br />Psychologically, it had to do with a change in my status within the society, and as I started to feel the nature of the mantle I was on, the mantle of being a senior citizen, I began considering all of my models of senior citizens. Like if you look at television, look at all the people of age and see how they are characterized in all the stories; they’re either foolish, irrelevant, or sort of bumbly-wise. I was absolutely overwhelmed with the mythical conspiracy we are all a part of that defines aging. As I become more aware of the way in which the mythical fabric of the culture is defining who I am, like in the determinant of age, I realize that as I become more aware of it, it starts to have less power over me. Just that awareness changes things...<br /><br />Continue reading: <a href=\"https://www.ramdass.org/can-find-power-amidst-mythical-model-aging-culture/\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.ramdass.org/can-find-power-amidst-mythical-model-aging-culture/</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/810644399654830080", "published": "2018-02-14T22:51:25+00:00", "source": { "content": "One evening I was taking a train back from Westport to New York City. On that railroad, after a certain hour, you buy your ticket on the train…\nSo I got on the train, and before that I had been out in the autumn leaves with a wonderful friend, I was really happy, and the conductor came down the aisle, and he said, “Tickets please.” I said, “I’m sorry I’ll have to buy my ticket from you.” He asked me what kind of ticket I wanted and I hadn’t realized I had a choice. I could get a regular or a senior citizen ticket, so I said, “Senior Citizen?” and it was the same way as when I was 18 years old, and I could drink legally in New York, I went in and ordered a “beer?” and the bartender would hear the tone of my voice, and I ask for my identification. So I asked him how much the tickets were, and he tells me the senior citizen is $4.50 and the regular is $7.00. I was pleased, and then as he went away, I started to realize what I had put on with the idea of ‘senior citizen.’ It wasn’t just an economic category. I mean, it was technically, but psychologically, it wasn’t.\n\nPsychologically, it had to do with a change in my status within the society, and as I started to feel the nature of the mantle I was on, the mantle of being a senior citizen, I began considering all of my models of senior citizens. Like if you look at television, look at all the people of age and see how they are characterized in all the stories; they’re either foolish, irrelevant, or sort of bumbly-wise. I was absolutely overwhelmed with the mythical conspiracy we are all a part of that defines aging. As I become more aware of the way in which the mythical fabric of the culture is defining who I am, like in the determinant of age, I realize that as I become more aware of it, it starts to have less power over me. Just that awareness changes things...\n\nContinue reading: https://www.ramdass.org/can-find-power-amidst-mythical-model-aging-culture/", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811/https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227/entities/urn:activity:810644399654830080/like" }, { "type": "Like", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227/entities/urn:activity:813089735273082880", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227", "content": "When you take birth, you are extremely vulnerable. You’re at the whim of all the forces around you, so what you develop through socialization are techniques for your own survival as a separate entity. That survival comes from creating boundaries so that you don’t just get wiped out. Those boundaries as a little person, as a child, are enlarged by being a member of your family, where you have allies, and are now a part of a group. It becomes, “I have people that are gonna help me. We’ve agreed to help one another.” You know, not all the time, but I’m thinking more in physical proximity than in a psychological sense.<br /><br />So we grow up feeling that our identity groups gives us power, while it’s also securing our separateness. You can see this within the bigger system of nation-states where there are these huge egos. What’s very interesting historically at the moment we’re living in, is that the sometimes multicultural economic structures are becoming more powerful than the nation-states. The nation-states are in deep doodoo economically, and the industries are doing great. So that the reference to, “I am an American,” while it’s great, is no longer absolute salvation for you, because there’s a whole other ball game playing here.<br /><br />Now, the more insecure people get, the more they’re frightened by existing conditions...<br /><br />Continue reading: <a href=\"https://www.ramdass.org/can-hold-onto-identities-lightly/\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.ramdass.org/can-hold-onto-identities-lightly/</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/813089735273082880", "published": "2018-02-21T16:48:19+00:00", "source": { "content": "When you take birth, you are extremely vulnerable. You’re at the whim of all the forces around you, so what you develop through socialization are techniques for your own survival as a separate entity. That survival comes from creating boundaries so that you don’t just get wiped out. Those boundaries as a little person, as a child, are enlarged by being a member of your family, where you have allies, and are now a part of a group. It becomes, “I have people that are gonna help me. We’ve agreed to help one another.” You know, not all the time, but I’m thinking more in physical proximity than in a psychological sense.\n\nSo we grow up feeling that our identity groups gives us power, while it’s also securing our separateness. You can see this within the bigger system of nation-states where there are these huge egos. What’s very interesting historically at the moment we’re living in, is that the sometimes multicultural economic structures are becoming more powerful than the nation-states. The nation-states are in deep doodoo economically, and the industries are doing great. So that the reference to, “I am an American,” while it’s great, is no longer absolute salvation for you, because there’s a whole other ball game playing here.\n\nNow, the more insecure people get, the more they’re frightened by existing conditions...\n\nContinue reading: https://www.ramdass.org/can-hold-onto-identities-lightly/", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811/https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227/entities/urn:activity:813089735273082880/like" }, { "type": "Like", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227/entities/urn:activity:832706650133889024", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227", "content": "Over the span of a lifetime, parents and children develop conceptual models about each other’s identity, and those models don’t allow the full flow between them as human beings.<br />What is required is not that we dismantle these models piece by piece, examining them and judging them and saying, “Look at this thing you have about me.” I don’t think we have to do all that. I think quite differently. I think we have to cultivate a place of “I am.” We have to cultivate that other part of our consciousness and just recognize it’s “I am,” because the minute you acknowledge that in yourself, you can look at your parent or your child, and you’ll see another being who “is.”<br /><br />This is a story from Miracle of Love: “You don’t even care about your old father,” Maharajji said to a devotee, “Every day you should take sweets to your father. If a man has a father and a mother, he needs no God. It’s easy to pray to a murti, to a statue, but hard when the murti speaks back.” Then he made the man hold his ears, an Indian form or promising, similar to ‘cross your heart’ and promise that every day he would attend to his father and bring him sweets. The next evening the father came to Maharajji. “What is this?” Maharajji said, “Your son loves you and serves you, and you do nothing for him. You should make your son a new suite. He is your devotee.”<br /><br />Because our culture focuses so much on individual personality, and because we have come to interpret freedom as satisfying our desires, one of the things that has been sacrificed into the kind of personality cult of which we are a part, is the understanding of the function and role of family. Family is really defined in terms of roles, not in terms of personalities, and when you put personality above role, then the family structure suffers badly...<br /><br />Continue reading here: <a href=\"https://www.ramdass.org/culture-isolation-within-western-family-model/\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.ramdass.org/culture-isolation-within-western-family-model/</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/832706650133889024", "published": "2018-04-16T19:58:56+00:00", "source": { "content": "Over the span of a lifetime, parents and children develop conceptual models about each other’s identity, and those models don’t allow the full flow between them as human beings.\nWhat is required is not that we dismantle these models piece by piece, examining them and judging them and saying, “Look at this thing you have about me.” I don’t think we have to do all that. I think quite differently. I think we have to cultivate a place of “I am.” We have to cultivate that other part of our consciousness and just recognize it’s “I am,” because the minute you acknowledge that in yourself, you can look at your parent or your child, and you’ll see another being who “is.”\n\nThis is a story from Miracle of Love: “You don’t even care about your old father,” Maharajji said to a devotee, “Every day you should take sweets to your father. If a man has a father and a mother, he needs no God. It’s easy to pray to a murti, to a statue, but hard when the murti speaks back.” Then he made the man hold his ears, an Indian form or promising, similar to ‘cross your heart’ and promise that every day he would attend to his father and bring him sweets. The next evening the father came to Maharajji. “What is this?” Maharajji said, “Your son loves you and serves you, and you do nothing for him. You should make your son a new suite. He is your devotee.”\n\nBecause our culture focuses so much on individual personality, and because we have come to interpret freedom as satisfying our desires, one of the things that has been sacrificed into the kind of personality cult of which we are a part, is the understanding of the function and role of family. Family is really defined in terms of roles, not in terms of personalities, and when you put personality above role, then the family structure suffers badly...\n\nContinue reading here: https://www.ramdass.org/culture-isolation-within-western-family-model/", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811/https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/774332152945844227/entities/urn:activity:832706650133889024/like" }, { "type": "Like", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256/entities/urn:activity:1685324305446998026", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256", "content": " Cruzin La Jolla<br />In a Rolls Royce before I was promoted to Chauffeur. <br /><a href=\"https://youtu.be/ubZ8MhzhVqw?si=RYkGZ3h2Jy7UGwIx\" target=\"_blank\">https://youtu.be/ubZ8MhzhVqw?si=RYkGZ3h2Jy7UGwIx</a> ", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1685324305446998026", "published": "2024-09-24T14:37:05+00:00", "source": { "content": " Cruzin La Jolla\nIn a Rolls Royce before I was promoted to Chauffeur. \nhttps://youtu.be/ubZ8MhzhVqw?si=RYkGZ3h2Jy7UGwIx ", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811/https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256/entities/urn:activity:1685324305446998026/like" }, { "type": "Like", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256/entities/urn:activity:1685345344847613970", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256", "content": " Cruzin Maspalomas in a<br />Rolls Royce<br /><a href=\"https://youtube.com/shorts/0UuctX0YxXg?si=0qjpnRGSCax3tDRs\" target=\"_blank\">https://youtube.com/shorts/0UuctX0YxXg?si=0qjpnRGSCax3tDRs</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1685345344847613970", "published": "2024-09-24T16:00:41+00:00", "source": { "content": " Cruzin Maspalomas in a\nRolls Royce\nhttps://youtube.com/shorts/0UuctX0YxXg?si=0qjpnRGSCax3tDRs", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811/https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256/entities/urn:activity:1685345344847613970/like" }, { "type": "Like", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256/entities/urn:activity:1685403527922323465", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256", "content": "First run after reseal, flushing, creamkote, & piston rings. Last registration was 1975. <br /> <a href=\"https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1685403527922323465\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1685403527922323465</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1685403527922323465", "published": "2024-09-24T19:51:53+00:00", "source": { "content": "First run after reseal, flushing, creamkote, & piston rings. Last registration was 1975. \n https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1685403527922323465", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811/https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1430378138830901256/entities/urn:activity:1685403527922323465/like" }, { "type": "Like", "actor": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811", "object": { "type": "Note", "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1546693415687688205/entities/urn:activity:1685398913676218378", "attributedTo": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1546693415687688205", "content": "<a href=\"https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1685398913676218378\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1685398913676218378</a>", "to": [ "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public" ], "cc": [ "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1546693415687688205/followers" ], "tag": [], "url": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1685398913676218378", "published": "2024-09-24T19:33:33+00:00", "attachment": [ { "type": "Document", "url": "https://www.minds.com/fs/v1/thumbnail/1685398905493131277/xlarge/?jwtsig=eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJleHAiOjE3NTEzMjgwMDAsInVyaSI6Imh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm1pbmRzLmNvbS9mcy92MS90aHVtYm5haWwvMTY4NTM5ODkwNTQ5MzEzMTI3Ny94bGFyZ2UvIiwidXNlcl9ndWlkIjpudWxsfQ.0KE9BRed6qEBxnzz5r2yOh5VAotSRUlN3tUHMyXOH2Q", "mediaType": "image/jpeg", "height": 568, "width": 1004 } ], "source": { "content": "https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1685398913676218378", "mediaType": "text/plain" } }, "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811/https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1546693415687688205/entities/urn:activity:1685398913676218378/like" } ], "id": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811/liked", "partOf": "https://www.minds.com/api/activitypub/users/1685423564586487811/likedoutbox" }