• 0 Posts
  • 25 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: July 13th, 2023

help-circle
  • Supplying people with basic life necessities should not need to garner a profit.

    This goes for food, water, shelter, but also electricity, healthcare, public transportation, and internet.

    (Coincidentally, most of these are basic human rights.)

    Society as a whole experiences net benefit (even am economic one) from those, so society as a whole should fund them.

    Yes, this requires taxes.


  • OK, I’ll bite:

    You appreciate civilization because you’ve lived in nature.

    What’s the most danger you’ve lived in

    People die of starvation in a world that literally has enough food for everyone - because speculating with food is more profitable than feeding them.

    People die of diseases that have known cures with low production cost - because the market will only finance medical research if the resulting drug comes with a net gain price tag.

    There are literal wars being fought and people being shot for economic gains.

    Humanity doesn’t have a resource problem. It has a distribution problem.

    And the current method of deciding distribution of goods is capitalism.

    that you think getting rich is equivalent to predation?

    Genuine question: Where do you believe a millionaire’s millions ultimately come from?

    There is only so much net economic gain one can create with their own two hands. Everything beyond that is created by other people’s hands.


  • Or did we become okay with being ruled by tyrants all of a sudden?

    If so, what’s the point of federation?

    The point of federation is not to prevent tyrants.

    The point is the option to exclude or include any instance due to whatever metric you want.

    If you don’t like tyrants, you can defederate your instance from any tyrant-ruled instance.

    And, obviously, you can run your own instance as tyrannical or democratic as you want - users who don’t like that are free to leave, instance-owners who don’t like that are free to defecate from you.

    If you’re just a user on the relevant instance, all you can do ist petition the people who have that power.

    I understand that’s basically what you’re trying to do, but your argument shouldn’t be about federation or lemmy’s inherent structure - the question should be “is anyone else annoyed by that behavior?”


  • foyrkopp@lemmy.worldtoNo Stupid Questions@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    8
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    5 months ago

    This isn’t about guys’n’gals.

    This is simpky about how people work:

    If your peers (friends, colleagues, family) have an opinion (any opinion), their default expectation is that you share that opinion - this is what being a peer is mostly about.

    You can demonstrate solidarity by agreeing - this is virtually always the safe option.

    You can demonstrate backbone by disagreeing - this can generate respect or animosity.

    You can refuse to weigh in - this is mostly a middle ground between the two above.

    How it actual shakes out in reality will depend on a myriad of factors, many of which you’re not even consciously aware of.

    Thus, this random internet stranger can give you only three pieces of advice:

    • Trust your instincts on how to handle this. Your subconscious is very well wired to navigate social situations as best as possible.

    • If you ever change your opinion or “change your opinion”, announce it clearly and give/make up a reason. People disrespect people who are inconsistent, but they respect people who can admit to mistakes / learn.

    • Sometimes, you can’t win. Sometimes, someone will be pissed off, no matter what you do. It’s no fault of yours, some situations are just not salvageable to begin with.



  • Question from someone outside the US who’s genuinely curious about why law-abiding citizens feel the need to carry guns to begin with:

    If you’re aware of this, how often are you carrying a gun in the first place? When/Why?

    Following what you say, there’s obviously the scenario where you have to defend your life (not your property).

    On the other hand, as I see it, the victim in the article would not have benefited from a gun in the car and the odds of a shell-shocked BF turning the whole thing into an actual shootout would’ve been >0.

    I’m not trying to argue crime statistics or morals here, I’m genuinely interested in a gun owner’s perspective.


  • Suburbs can’t be a ponzi scheme

    Genuine question: Why not?

    While the article indeed barely touched on its headline, the way I’ve seen the “suburb infrastructure upkeep problem” described seems indeed reminiscent of a ponzi scheme.

    The way I understand it:

    Suburbs have a relatively low initial cost (for the city) compared to the taxes they generate. However, their maintenance cost is relatively high because Suburbs are huge.

    Thus, US cities have long had a policy of paying the rising cost of their older Suburbs by creating new Suburbs - which is pretty analogous to a Ponzi scheme.











  • I had something vaguely similar happen to me.

    We got called out of the line for a manual luggage inspection because, as a surprisingly bored security agent informed us, X-ray showed a knife of about a foot length in our luggage.

    We had no idea what they were talking about.

    We were half-way through unpacking the whole pack when my SO lit up and asked “could it be my ice skates?”

    Agent took a look at the X-ray, nods, and lets us pack it back up without any further checking.

    Overall, turned out harmlessly, but the sheer confusion of where that supposed knife had come from, combined with how blasé that security person was about the whole affair from start to finish stuck in my mind.




  • You’d need to significantly increase overall education (both among voters ans legislators) on how science works to make the latter feasible.

    Scientists are human. Scientists have opinions. Scientists require funding. Scientists disagree.

    Simple example: The heliocentric model didn’t become accepted knowledge because the “earth is the center of the universe” crowd (who *were? scientists) was convinced by scientific argument - they weren’t. It did when they died.

    Science holds a lot of high-likelihood facts. This is what we call the “generally accepted body of knowledge”. We know that the earth is round. We can predict gravity in most circumstances. And yes, we know that anthromorphic climate change is real.

    But there’s also a lot of “game-changing” studies/experiments out there that are still to be debunked without ever making it into said body of accepted knowledge. This is normal, it is how science works.

    Yet it also means that for virtually any hair-brained opinion that is not already strongly refuted by said body of knowledge (flat earth, for example, is refuted), you can find some not yet debunked science to support it.

    Separating the wheat from the chaff here requires insight into the scientific process (and it’s assorted politics and market mechanisms) most people (and voters) don’t have.

    And no, just telling people whether a fact is broadly accepted in the scientific community or fringe science doesn’t work. We tried that with the topic of anthromorphic climate change.