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Cake day: October 22nd, 2023

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  • Here we find another reason why people find major dietary changes like this unrelatable. We have a headline that says people wrongly think that plant based diets are more expensive, and a comment section largely consisting of comments indicating that we should in fact assume a complete change of cooking habits is something we don’t need to factor in while making this statement. It’s a massive oversimplification.

    Many of the cheapest and most filling foods available at any given grocery store or especially at any given convenience store or restaurant contain some sort of animal product, whether that be meat, dairy, or egg. Yes, if you have access and the inclination you can get a lot of ingredients pretty cheaply, and yes raw ingredients tend to follow the pattern of plant based ingredients often being cheaper. But to say that a plant based diet is less expensive is as devoid of nuance as saying it’s more expensive.

    If you’re eating a plant based diet exclusively, you certainly do lose access to a wide range of cheap and easily prepared foods. The cheap version of a plant based diet requires either a fair bit of preparation or eating a lot of rice and beans. The version that likely most closely mimics the previous diet of people who aren’t doing a ton of cooking is likely to be more expensive.

    This also assumes access to fresh produce and both the facilities and the energy and ability to cook on a regular basis. The cost difference for someone who can’t or simply doesn’t cook every day to have a plant based diet with substantial variety is in fact significantly more expensive.

    All that said, it is much more attainable to shift to a diet that leans more heavily on plants while spending about the same amount and not denying oneself access to cheaper foods that might be available or quite as drastically changing one’s habits.


  • Nope. These people need to feel just as stupid as Trump voters in 2016 who subsequently voted for Biden after seeing the result. Given how many are still defensively showing up to post walls of text every time this is brought up, there’s a lot of work to be done to overcome the counter-messaging.

    We should absolutely do what we can to primary feckless centrist Democrats, and to push the party to the left, but that’s not mutually exclusive with getting people to show up and not make the same stupid decision twice. We aren’t going to completely fix our democracy in 2 years to the point that these idiots will be satisfied. We can make headway on making things better, but people need to vote for that to happen.

    So to be absolutely clear: if you did not vote, this is what you voted for. That should be upsetting, you should feel bad, and you should make damn sure that you don’t make the same mistake in 2026, 2028, or any other election as long as you live.


  • I have silicone trays and I love them. I haven’t had them super long (about a year), but I use them every day and they show no sign of wear. It doesn’t get brittle with time like some plastic, so I don’t see them wearing down any time soon.

    If you need to be able to stack them, it might be worth looking into some kind of small rack?




  • Your own link shows a change in pattern from ups and downs from year to year with larger patterns of rising and falling to an extremely recent upward trend in which every year is hotter than the last. We’re looking at a level of heating on the scale of decades to centuries that would normally be seen over millions of years. And humans didn’t show up during those hot periods, we showed up during the cooler period. Sure, there may very well still be life on the planet after we’re done, assuming we don’t acidify the oceans and we figure out how to dial down the rampant pollution after pushing ourselves into a kind of climate not seen for 35 million years, but will humans be able to live in that environment? Quite possibly not.

    Looking at the wider picture doesn’t show that there’s no issue, it shows that there’s a critical issue and we’re screwing with extremely long-term trends that constitute the conditions we evolved under.


  • I think part of this insecurity is rooted in the idea that it has to be all or nothing. People feel like either they can acknowledge that animal products are the product of immense suffering and give them up completely, or they have to harden themselves against the idea and resort to emotionally defensive responses like mockery and anger.

    The reality though is that you can acknowledge that there’s something wrong with the way we treat other animals, make some changes that you’re comfortable with, and still be doing a better job at reducing your complicity in suffering than if you did nothing at all.

    I do think that there needs to be room for that approach, and I think there largely is, but I feel like for some people the defensiveness is so overwhelming that they themselves can’t occupy that space and have to reject the information entirely and mock anyone who doesn’t follow suit.


  • What I see in these threads is the reverse. People insist that their pet solution is a panacea for every use case and when someone points out that it doesn’t work for them they get downvotes and sarcasm. Making use of the best software for your use case is not equivalent to complicity in animal torture and environmental destruction. Nobody’s being forced into constant pregnancy or having their calves taken away at birth because I feel like third party security patches for Windows will be a better option for me than fully swapping to a Linux distro.

    But what is definitely happening is people stop reading pro-FOSS threads by the third rabid fanboy response and actually miss what could be a useful alternative.





    • Voicemeeter and Virtual Audio Cables for separate audio channels with separate volume controls, macro keys, and easily adjustable toggling between outputs (more easily adjustable and less latency than JACK)
    • Eartrumpet for easy and immediate per-program control over audio channels
    • FL Studio
    • Adobe Premiere
    • MX Ergo drivers that have full functionality including remapping and holding down mouse 4 and mouse 5 and toggleable precision mode with LED indicator
    • No sudden troubleshooting mid-way through working on projects to break my flow
    • A Windows testing environment
    • 100% compatibility with every game I own

    There may be a few more, but these are the big ones. JACK, at the moment, just isn’t a replacement for Voicemeeter and while there are some DAWs for Linux, they’re not FL and I don’t know if they’re compatible with Guitar Rig. I’ve used OpenShot for video as well, and while it’s not terrible it isn’t really comparable.

    I’m sure that Linux is a good fit for many users. Personally, as an operating system alone if it weren’t for these issues, I’d prefer it. I’d love to be able to do what I need to do and also have a plasma, it’s much nicer. But at the moment it isn’t a real option without sacrificing things that I actually need. I also really can’t be dealing with suddenly needing to sort out how to make a finicky program work at the drop of a hat when I’m in the middle of working on a project.

    I’ve been dabbling with Linux since the early 00s. I like it and I wish it were a substitute for Windows for my use case, but it isn’t. No amount of people being rude and obtuse in threads will change that. Time might, but it hasn’t yet.



  • I imagine the downvotes are backlash against all the people who convince themselves that Linux is the only viable solution regardless of use case or workflow. There are definitely loads of people in the Linux community and the open source community in general who will pick a piece of software and proselytize it with no consideration whatsoever whether it fits someone’s actual needs. Like, personally, I like Linux but there are things I need to do that require me to have Windows. For some people this fact is absolutely unacceptable and they simply won’t hear it.


  • millie@slrpnk.nettoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldPlex has paywalled my server!
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    17 days ago

    Threads like this are why people don’t use open source. It sounds like a reality-denying anti-intellectual one-size-fits-all cult in here. This is also like half the threads about Linux. Just armies of tech bros who couldn’t put themselves in someone else’s shoes if their life literally depended on it.




  • I’ll always remember that time when Obama was up on stage taking questions from the Internet after having literally run on change as a campaign slogan and when someone asked about legalizing marijuana he literally laughed as if that would be absurd. And this is someone who did change quite a lot. The Democratic party’s mainstream has been afraid of radical change for a long time, even though it’s been demonstrated over and over again that it’s what brings energy to the party and gives them the ability to move the ball.

    I really hope this past election makes them a little less cautious and a little less centrist. We really can’t have our representatives just sitting on their hands waiting for the tide to wash away any and all progress. We have to keep pushing forward so when we do take a step back we don’t lose everything all at once.


  • This seems pretty constructive to me. I know there are people who will say that confronting narcissism as narcissism isn’t helpful, but I feel like that couldn’t be further from the truth. As someone who’s been affected by these patterns of behavior for decades, it’s the realization of how the pattern works that’s given me a way to defend against it. Narcissists tend to want to atomize their behavior in other people’s eyes so that the patterns won’t be seen. It’s easier for them to deflect from a single incident if that’s the only thing that’s allowed to be on the table, but it’s never about a single incident, it’s about the pattern.

    Deception and minimization are much simpler goals in a world where their victims aren’t supposed to look at the past, or aren’t supposed to draw conclusions from patterns of behavior. But when you do pay attention to the past and you do look for patterns and cycles, that’s when you can see what’s going on and defend yourself. That doesn’t just apply to individual relationships, it applies to our societies. The entire capitalistic model is one of atomizing wrongdoing and denying responsibility in the face of capital.

    I definitely think this could be a positive thing, and I don’t think that’s outweighed by the people who exhibit these patterns having the need to shut down conversation about them. If people come in to derail things or demonize people who are trying to figure out how to get out from under the very real harms caused by narcissistic abuse, that’s what banning is for.

    A huge amount of childhood trauma and abuse is enabled by people shying away from recognizing and calling out narcissistic patterns of behavior. If some of the people perpetrating the next iteration of that cycle have also suffered from abuse, that’s not really an argument for letting the cycle continue.



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