eightpix

joined 2 years ago
[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Private soil farming is a great business model. Low cost, high demand. With fewer chemicals and wider practice, the trade will be more sustainable.

More houses will be 3D printed — and smaller — in the future.

The internal combustion engine is the largest technological mis-step in human history.

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 5 points 1 week ago

I'm starting to think that the Nobel Prize for Economics should be renamed the Nobel Anti-Peace Prize.

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

Basically, there has always been opportunity in disaster. The Shock Doctrine uncovers the methods of those who engineer or wait for crises in order to capitalize on, or pass profiteering legislation in challening times.

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I read the Shock Doctrine back in '09. It crystallized the Bush II presidency in such detail and scope that I've never been able to forget it.

Things have only gotten worse. Even under Obama. Certainly under Trump and Biden.

The part about Yeltsin firing on his own Parliament was very insightful. Again, setting the stage for Russia's current exercises of Shock.

Letting enough people die expedites certain forms of problem-solving; particularly those that involve the military, technology, heavy industry, reconstruction, and financial sectors of the economy. When the most expensive things are destroyed — like cities, infrastructure, and the concept of human security — that's where the fuckiteering begins. Debt loads, overcharging, and profiteering on misery for companies /countries that caused the problems in the first place.

It's gross.

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

12 more drinks.

Honestly, now — not promoting binge drinking or alcohol consumption at all — but that book tears something in you. It can't be undone.

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

The Forever War is such an important and great read. I'd put it alongside Catch-22 and Johnny Got His Gun for an anti-war novel.

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Maybe Flowers for Algernon? I read this for the first time near when when I read Canticle. I much more connected to Algernon.

MaddAddam trilogy also touches close to home for me, not least because Atwood is Canadian.

I was also late to Childhood's End and The Chrysalids.

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 10 points 2 weeks ago

47m here. This was my journey:

Remember that scene in Heat, where Robert DeNiro introduces himself to Edie at the café? Do that. Stay interested. This goes for everyone. Get to know people. Take genuine interest in people, uncover what excites them, and get them talking about their excitement. If you find you're excited by the same things, great. If not, there are many more people to practice on.

Also helpful:

Read books written by women. Fiction, non-fiction, articles, TV shows, films... everything. Take on concerns as experienced by women (SA, undoing redpill /mensrights /manosphere, unequal pay, caring professions) as your own responsibility. You'll do everyone around you a favour.

Care for other people — less insofar as what they can do to/for you and more about the ends they are in themselves. Keep up good relationships.

If she's still around, and you have the emotional capacity to do so, call your mom or sister. Women like to know that their men can have a good relationship with a woman who is not a sexual object.

Finally, give a shit about yourself. Get better at what you want to be good at. Keep a clean living space. Eat healthy, get outside, and find enjoyable activities. If you plan on dating anyone, you're better off knowing what you like so that you can share it. Then, when she shares what she likes, you can approach it openly.

I'm not a guru. I'm still working on this from within a long-term committed relationship. It's hard. There will be closeness, rupture, repair, and growth in any relationship. The willingness to wash, rinse, and repeat is key.

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 9 points 2 weeks ago

Good trouble. This is the answer.

And good books, we're not alone out here.

I just finished One Day, Everyone Will Always Have Been Against This by Omar El Akkad. Not just about Gaza and the collateral damage of empires, but also about the tiny manipulations we're all subjected to that make us feel alone.

Great reading.

Note: the link is to the Chicago Review of Books.

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

Off and on since the late 90s. Mostly observational, stray thoughts, ideas for designs, or writing. Intense emotional moments are often channelled into my writing.

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 3 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

A little late to the game, aren't they?

[–] eightpix@lemmy.world 5 points 3 weeks ago

This may be anecdotal, but it may also be a canary in a coalmine.

I have seen a civilian population tear down its president and vice-president. Peacefully, and just before an election. It took months of activism. Weeks of protest and a 1-day general strike.

Look up Guatemala, 2015. Otto Perez Molina. #noletoca.

This was underreported, I think. Three presidents later, therr is Bernardo Arevalo. He is a president whose legacy hearkens back to before their Civil War, after WWII, and before US intervention.

 

At the bottom are the couch-dwelling viewers beholden to all above.

I know I've seen this online somewhere, but I can't remember where. It may have been a cut-scene from a video or a standalone .GIF file. I'm not certain.

If anyone in the community has seen this same image, I'd love to know the source.

 

They're all the same. Rotated 90° for each one. Except for the 'e', they flipped that one.

 

Trelawny, Jamaica. Not sure what's happening on the southern side of the island.

Being at a resort during a hurricane is peak boring dystopia. The staff calmly fed us breakfast and handed out pack lunches — sandwiches, cereal, and bananas. Fresh towels delivered just in advance of the lockdown. Gas-powered generators provide lights, TV, and Internet. The same fuel the earliest Cat-5 hurricane in Atlantic history. We stay in our room, entertaining two kids and exchange messages with friends back home and the family we travel with. The mattress for our king-size bed covers the patio doors. The staff residence we see below has its windows boarded up.

We've used two streaming services to watch movies.

The false alarm two hours ago showed that our go-bags are ready, and we can head to shelter in under 30 s. They ever actually confirmed it as a false alarm.

 

The Secretary General of the legit United Nations, said this.

Are there any adults in the rooms where decisions like "bomb Gaza" are made? Why are so few saying what defeated Jamaal Bowman are saying, "permanent ceasefire now". And remember how Bowman was defeated. $17K/hr.

Also, cute story, Lebanon is the only other country in the world to feature a plant on its flag. The Lebanese are beautiful, Mediterranean people. LEBANON is at the crossroads of empires, and now — as is often the case — Lebanese are victims of outland calamities; Syria, the dock, and econonic collapse.

Hezb. are based there. Lebanon is thus remade like Afghanistan. Isr. reserves the right to "defend".

 

I've seen this meme before. I have two questions:

  1. What is this meme called?

  2. Is there video of the outcome?

 

There are only a few books that I've experienced both ways. I'm wondering if this is an area for exploration.

 

BMO IFL in Toronto. Rumored to be coming to its end.

 

Democracy dies when any administration can laugh off a 4-word rebuttal of a central plank of the world's most pernicious, deadly conflict(s). Regardless of public opinion, America can't be seen to undermine its own interests.

 

Almost got it on the day!

 

Warning: the following contains spoilers for the following works:

The Expanse, S01E01-S03E10. Abaddon's Gate (Book 3), James S.A. Corey Three-Body Problem &The Dark Forest, Cixin Liu

If you want to try it out, read 5 books and watch almost three seasons of television.

. . . .

!!The ring gates are a Dark Forest weapons system. If this was clear to others, and I'm catching up, well, I'm slow. But, I just found out about Brin (1983).!!

Then, I got it. It's such a well-structured Whatsit.

I feel pretty good about this realization. I'm glad that these works work so well together.

 

Achbar Mark et al. directors. The Corporation : A Documentary. Big Picture Media Corporation ; Filmwest Associates 2004.

If a Corporation is a legal entity with all of the rights of persons, what is the psychological profile of one to whom "corporate personhood" is endowed? What behaviours do Corporations exhibit which support this psychological profile?

Ask yourself honestly — If you had forever to live, access to infinite money, and no body to imprison, how would you act?

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