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208
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • We as a society need to figure out how to use it ethically.

    We can't even restrain ourselves on the usage of weapons, the extraction of natural resources, the usage of energy, consumerism, or cars. The way our societies are working will not give much chance to ethics.

  • I struggle to find anything. Maybe affordable housing, but that's a thing of the past. It changed a lot in 20 years and everything that I may have been missing at some point is long gone.

    The people there proud themselves in being a rural region with a small town surrounded by close villages, but everyone knows everyone and if you don't fit socially with the others, mainly conservative, they will all bitch and talk about you in your back. Also, they take their cars to go literally anywhere. The next town is 7 km away, there's a dedicated bike path, and they whine that "everything is so far away in the countryside that you absolutely need a car". Yet, I moved in a metropolis where my work is 9 km away through dense urban landscape, and I can cycle there just fine.

    I'm glad I left and I don't really miss any of it. I don't even like going back there. In fact, I prefer the services, and geographical features, of my new home.

  • I had those when I was a kid a few decades ago and they had the tip coloured in red. They were designed to look like fake cigarette, but in candy form, for kids. However because of anti tobacco movements, they renamed them to "candy sticks" and removed the red tip.

    I think OP is trying to recreate the old ones.

    EDIT:

  • I guess I don't fit anywhere because fuck guns.

  • It can be expressed by a graffiti that I saw on the side of a bike path in Montreal, in French: "L'humanité ne court pas à sa perte, elle y va en voiture". Or something like "Humanity is not running to ruins, it's taking a car".

    As much as I want to blame giant corporations and capitalism for a lot of our societal problems, this sentence resumes so well how common people also enable all of this by refusing to change and just going with the easiest option. I know we won't reach our climate change goals. I know because when I say I organized my life around the fact that I don't need a car, everyone tells me that they couldn't live without a car, that it's very useful, and that I should get one. I'm not even a real adult as long as I don't have a car. I'll feel so much freedom when I'll have a car. I should just get a car! Just get an electric one! Like, instead of encouraging people to live without a car, the vast vast majority of people will actually encourage others to get one.

    So yeah, we're not "running" to our loss. We're wasting energy to move our fat asses in individual motorized multi ton metal cubes to go there faster. It's so useful! So practical! So fast! There's no time to waste. Like Marge Simpson once said: "Outta my way, Nature!"

    It's a giant metaphor for the rest of our society. Same with all the AI hype, food delivery apps, and over consumption in general. We're digging our graves out of excessive "convenience", and cars are one example of this.

  • Yes because I come from a rural region where most people can only speak French, and I'm the only one of my family that can speak multiple languages. Sometimes it feels like I know different worlds unbeknownst to them.

    No because the languages that I know are not rare. There's millions also speaking those languages so my perspective and experience is far from being unique.

  • And that's how you learn that Lemmy is full people that can't tolerate diversity. I can read that person's comments just fine but apparently others downvote and whine.

    And they don't even need to learn another language, just a letter. But alas, I guess this is very hard to do.

  • No. Nothing matters. He said it himself.

    I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn't lose any voters, OK?

  • When I started to use Linux more than two decades ago, Qt's license was not considered free software friendly. Because I didn't want proprietary software, I avoided KDE and Qt applications. I know the situation changed after a few years but it stuck with me.

    Controversy erupted around 1998 when it became clear that the K Desktop Environment was going to become one of the leading desktop environments for Linux. As it was based on Qt, many people in the free software movement worried that an essential piece of one of their major operating systems would be proprietary.

    Plus, it was much easier at that time to have themes and "rice" my desktop using only GTK apps.

    So it's petty but even to this day, I kept the old habit and still avoid Qt applications.

  • I know it's not what your asking but I never used Discord because it's proprietary and, my friends and I stayed on IRC.

    Now IRC is usually just text but we wanted something a bit more modern so we settled for The Lounge. It's a web IRC client that can display and host videos and images. It can also keep some of the channels history. It brings some modernity to IRC, as we can paste images directly onto a channel.

    There's another similar client called Convos. Apparently it can also do video/voice chat but I never tried.

    So I'm not sure we'd switch to an XMPP based protocol, as IRC web clients pretty much just already works for us instead of Discord.

  • Why are you trying to convince me that cars are awesome and for adults that needs to get stuff done?

    You think I go shopping using a kayak? There are literally the biggest retail stores of my country a few street corners away from where I live. There is a grocery store on the other side of the street.

    And you know, people without cars have nothing to do all day. They don't work and don't do anything important. Only people with cars are busy people getting stuff done. It's impossible to get stuff done otherwise.

    Not to mention that peole without cars will never feel like real adults.

    I'm not an adult and I don't get stuff done because I don't have a car? I can't go shopping? WTF?

    Keep your "freedom". I don't want it. There's already enough cars in the streets. You don't want me driving. Stop trying to convince people that don't want to drive. You have nothing to gain. Everyone already loves cars. I know that.

    I'm glad that you love your car. You're not the only one. Now can some people actually want to live without one or are you going to force yours into my living room to tell me how useful it is, and how it makes you feel mature and important?

  • And people actually use that as an insult. "You're not an adult until you own a car". Which is a sad way of seeing millions of people that have been living without a car for their whole life.

    And the freedom feeling depends mostly if you live in a region that is offering you ways not to be car dependent. Where I live, we have a very decent network of bike paths in the city but also going into the countryside and traversing the province. I live on the island of an archipelago and can pull my inflatable kayak with my bike trailer, explore the islands around, access nature nearby. I can also go camping and hiking and into the wilderness 200 km away by using this cycling network. I often go visit my parents and family 140-170 km away by cycling there. I could have start to drive and bought a car 25 years ago but I moved somewhere I wouldn't need one, and my bike represents freedom. I'm free from having to pay big oil to fill a tank to go anywhere. I'm free from monthly parking fees. I'm free from paying the plates and the insurance.

    Over the years, what I learned about cars don't make me see them as freedom. I see them as a way to keep people perpetually paying for gas, sending billions to big oil. I see them as an endless sea and stream of pollution. They pollute the air and the sound. They are bad for mental and physical health. They take an ungodly amount of space. They kill about a million people every year. On the planet, every 30 seconds someone is killed in a car related "accident". Every year, two billion animals (yes, billions) are killed by cars.

    Going to see my nephew for his birthday in the suburbs where my sister lives is comical. Twelve people invited to go park their cars around a house that only has space for the cars of the occupants. You have to find parking everywhere you go for this thing, then whine that there's no parking anywhere. Going to a funereal is also depressing, but even more so because you can see the traffic and congestion created by someone that died.

    Cars are a horrible for humanity. They're like a drug that everyone tells you to try. You'll see. They're so useful. Of course you can't go back.

  • Yeah. I moved into a city and region with enough transit for my needs but my family still lives in a place where there hasn't been a coach or trains in 30 years. There were before but not anymore. And going to other regions or cities without a car is also becoming more and more difficult, if not impossible.

    Unfortunately my province and country only care about cars. I really don't want to drive but I fear that I won't have any other choice at some point in the future because my other options are actively deteriorating.

  • A car. Gas/petrol for a car. A parking spot for a car. Car insurance. A driver's license. Winter tires for cars. Anything car related.

    It's so ridiculous to pay for a mobile living room that needs to be parked everywhere people go with it.

  • I make a difference between the workers and the industry.

    Therapists where I live can work in the public system, or in the private system.

    It's free to see a therapist in the public system and they are paid by the government, but it's nearly impossible to have a session because they are booked months and months in advance. So they are not making more from this.

    Then there's the ones working privately, usually also booked months in advance but for a few hundred dollars an hour. They are also not making more from this because they were already working full time.

    However there is a "mental health industry", like Betterhelp, that will gladly exploit and profit from the circumstances.

  • "And because I consider mental health important, today I'm proud to present my sponsor, Betterhelp!"

    Sweet capitalism.

  • And face coverings are now illegal in public.

  • I don't have a car nor a house and I'm in my 40ies. I've been told multiple times that I'm not a responsible adult as long as I don't have one of these.

  • linuxmemes @lemmy.world

    And Debian is supposed to be the stable one