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In case you can't tell, I'm passionate about rationality and critical thinking.

However, I still appreciate a freshly-baked π.

Posts
5
Comments
566
Joined
7 mo. ago
  • So, caring about the environment = cool

    But caring about animals, which are inextricably a part of the environment (a link which can be demonstrated by the pollution produced by industrial farming) = not cool?

    Seems an odd place to draw the line, but ok.

  • Or just about fighting each other and it’s all about drama because they don’t have the apparent ability to just simply talk to each other.

    Classic sitcom formula. I never got into a lot of the "family" shows in the 90s, because almost every plot revolved around someone being a poor communicator - and that's it. Person A can't talk about event/topic Y, and now Person B assumes reason Z and the entire episode and all its hijinks only exist because of it. Everything could've been avoided if Person A and Person B actually talked things through, like healthy, sane people who actually want to avoid conflict. But writers couldn't think of a way to both model proper communication and create a compelling storyline, so here we are.

  • When that show was popular, I had a boyfriend that didn't seem able to handle the idea of us liking different things. I never cared for zombies, but I'd heard good things about The Walking Dead and gave it a try. I pushed myself to watch the entire first season before deciding, "Nope, I can't."

    But when I told that boyfriend? Apparently I "didn't watch it enough." When I told him I didn't care for zombie stories, he insisted, "But it's not about zombies! It's about the people." Uhh yeah, it's about people in a world with zombies. I could watch a million shows about "people" that don't involve zombies, so why would I keep watching this one that I already don't like?

  • It makes me happy to see others shit on Friends.

    When it first aired, my mom was a fan and it would regularly be on in the living room, which was the crossroads of my childhood house - you had to go through it to get anywhere else. Which meant that Friends was impossible to ignore. Walking by, the highest praise I could conjure was, "Wow, that laugh track is doing a lot of heavy lifting."

    At the time of its popularity, I never heard anyone else dislike it. When the show ended, I felt alone in not being sad about it. Since then, I can't tell if people look back on it with nostalgia or if they are truly still amused by the bland, low-fruit, celebration of stupidity that makes up most of that show's humor.

    The theme song was good though.

  • It's been years since I've crossed the Canada/USA border, so things may be different today. But when I went, the Canada side was more concerned about smuggled weapons, while the USA side was more concerned about smuggled drugs. Still, it doesn't take much to trigger a border patrol search.

    Apparently if you go from New Brunswick in the morning, spend the day driving through Maine/New Hampshire/Vermont, and cross into Quebec the next day, that's suspicious enough to get detained for several hours and to have your entire car searched at the border. To me it just made sense to do a straight line drive through those states, since staying inside Canada between those two points would have been a much longer, more convoluted route. Silly me, being logical about my route without considering how others break international law.

  • What makes you the ultimate authority on what terms a woman can consider "derogatory"? Where do you get the power to decide what words other people should use to describe their own feelings? What makes your opinion about it more valid than those of others?

    Have you considered that the same word can make two different people feel two different ways? Unless you've got the power to know exactly what another person is feeling, there is nothing that makes your thoughts more valid than the thoughts of others in this matter. Doubling down that "derogatory" isn't the right word to use gives the impression that you don't believe "female" actually feels derogatory to a lot of women. Gotta wonder why that might be.

  • Croatia definitely blocks it better. Argentina still has lots of access to the Atlantic, and blocking Bolivia is a team effort between Chile and Peru.

    Yet Croatia's geography is basically a "Fuck you in particular," practically going out of the way just to block Bosnia & Herzegovina. Chile doesn't try anywhere near that hard.

  • My college English professor absolutely hated the narrative device of "fate." He felt it was a lazy excuse authors use to signify a character as "special" without having to work hard to justify it. Why work on character development to turn an average character into someone worthwhile, when you can just say they were born to be special? You can still use tropes like the refusal of the call to round out a protagonist and give them some illusion of choice, but ultimately the stamp of "fate" can only go one way.

  • if that was the correct explanation then we would expect to see (1) people in countries where it’s worse having even fewer children, which we don’t see, and (2) people in countries where it’s better having more children, which we also don’t see.

    That's not how things work. In fact, that's practically the opposite of how things work. Increased access to educational opportunities for women is strongly correlated with lowered fertility rates. It's a well-known pattern. Or another way to frame it, is that poorly-educated women are more likely to have more children.

    Part of the pattern is missing from this picture too - before this baby bust, was the baby boom, and before the baby boom, child mortality was a lot higher. A lot of medical advancements took place around the middle of the 20th century, which resulted in more children surviving to adulthood. Prior to this, people typically had many children because so many of them wouldn't survive. It takes time for a society to adjust to higher life expectancies, resulting in a period where people continue to have many children just like their own parents did, despite no longer needing to.

    However, those high rates don't last. People adjust to the new health expectations, leading the next generation to have fewer children than the one before.

    Add in other factors of a prosperous state, such as educational opportunities and access to comprehensive healthcare (which would include birth control), and it makes sense that "countries where it's worse" would have more children, and "countries where it's better" would have fewer. (Check the link above for more explanation. It goes into way more detail.)

  • That link was a frickin' roller coaster and I'm left with more questions than answers now. From the employees having previously reported that the walls were too low, to the worker who refused to let the young men into the cafe after the tiger got loose, to the random drama about the impounded BMW, to the guys who were attacked having already been facing charges of public intoxication and resisting arrest...

  • Trump has crossed so many lines but I really do not see any outcry, mass resistance or opposition?

    Be mindful not to mistake suppression of dissent with lack of dissent. News media is actively avoiding protests. We’re out there, even if the news cameras aren’t.

  • I’ve mentioned this before in other threads that seek a women-centric Lemmy option, but there was at least one secret community on Reddit like that. Invitees’ post histories were vetted before an invite was sent, both to find women specifically, but also to prevent trolls.

    I don’t know exactly how they did it, all I know is that I got an invite one day and found the most open, comforting community I’d ever seen online. It was a place where we could talk about anything from silly stories that made us smile, to complaining about specific issues with bras, all without fear of trolls hijacking the thread, or turning an ordinary thing for us into something sexual.

    I miss it.

  • Ask Lemmy @lemmy.world
    Whats_your_reasoning @lemmy.world

    To those who downvote your own comments… Why?

    I’ve occasionally noticed ordinary comments with zero upvotes to them. Yet, our own comments are upvoted automatically whenever we make them. So for comments to have zero upvotes, either something I don’t know about is happening, or there are people who downvote their own contributions.

    I can’t help but wonder, why? It seems like extra effort without a clear reason.

    Atheism @lemmy.world
    Whats_your_reasoning @lemmy.world

    President Donald Trump revealed on Thursday at the National Prayer Breakfast an executive order instructing Attorney General Pam Bondi to seek out and prosecute "anti-Christian bias."

    "To confront such weaponization and religious persecution, today I'm signing an executive order to make our Attorney General, who's a great person — she's going to be a great Attorney General — Pam Bondi the head of a task force, brand new, to eradicate anti-Christian bias," Trump said. "About time, right? Anti-Christian bias. Yeah, never heard of that one before, right?"

    "So many times you hear, but you don't hear the anti-Christian bias," he continued. "The mission of this task force will be to immediately halt all forms of anti-Christian targeting and discrimination within the federal government, including at the DOJ, which was absolutely terrible."

    Trump suggested the FBI and IRS were "terrible" for targeting Christians.

    "In addition, the task force will work to fully prosecute anti-Christian viol

    Alternative Nation: The Fediverse's Alternative and Indie Music Community @lemmy.world
    Whats_your_reasoning @lemmy.world

    Rise Against - Tip the Scales

    Honestly, the entire Siren Song of the Counter Culture album deserves a listen (or re-listen, if you're a fan but it's been a while.)


    Are we so alone,
    So distant,
    So forgotten,
    As we think ourselves to be?

    These are our lives
    But did they ever even matter?
    Are we worth remembering?

    These machines feed on the tears
    Of broken lives and dying dreams
    We're throwing wrenches in the gears
    Our lives will not be lived in vain

    When this is all said and done
    We spent this life on the run
    Judged by the company we keep

    Our language, buried inside
    These lungs that keep us alive
    We breathe so selfishly

    Promises we plan to break
    Are made in whispered voices
    Cause our despair knows many names

    We make mistakes
    But we apologize with roses
    We never stop to smell along the way

    *These machines feed on the tears
    Of broken lives and dying dreams
    We're throwing wrenches in the gears
    Our lives will not be lived

    Trees @lemmy.world
    Whats_your_reasoning @lemmy.world

    Best tool for applying concentrate?

    I recently began using concentrates and I'm still exploring different types for the first time.

    Recently I got some budder, but I've been having difficulty getting it into the ring. I have a metal tool (originally designed for tobacco, iirc) with three different tips, but it isn't cutting it for this. Although sugar clumps together well and is easy to drop into the ring, so far budder has not been cooperating. It sticks to the tool, it doesn't stick to the ring easily, and I usually end up having to use my fingers (then cleaning them with pumice scrub, because nothing else will get the stuff off.)

    I figure there has to be a better solution. So what do you guys use to apply concentrates? Are there any particular tools you would recommend? Or are there tricks to this process that might not be obvious to a newbie? Any help would be greatly appreciated. :)

    ADHD @lemmy.world
    Whats_your_reasoning @lemmy.world

    The last leg of my "finding a provider" journey... for now

    cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/21148286


    I was kicked off Medicaid at the start of this year and subsequently lost access to my ADHD and depression medication. In February, I moved to a new area and got a new job, but had to wait several months until I qualified for health insurance through it.

    After that point, I had to wait for a weekday when I wasn't working and when I had the mental capacity to tolerate back-to-back disappointing phone calls... all without medication that would make the process significantly easier to tolerate. These are only the calls I've made today.

    Finally, FINALLY, I have an intake appointment scheduled.

    It's absolutely shameful how much a struggling person is expected to do in order to access basic mental health care.