• TheLemmingOP
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      1 year ago

      Thankyou! Was excited about if someone would get the irony :D

  • Big P
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    491 year ago

    That we’ll solve climate change and I’ll get to live past 50

    • @Secret_Duck@beehaw.org
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      81 year ago

      We probably won’t solve climate change. We might be able to make huge air conditioned complexes with just a single basic bed for everybody with insect farms underground for us to eat?

    • @atlasraven31@lemm.ee
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      81 year ago

      There are some ideas to terraform the Earth to keep it habitable. It’s just very expensive and challenging and if we screw it up, we’ll be worse off than when we started. We likely won’t get a 2nd chance and as a species we don’t typically nail it on the 1st try.

    • TheLemmingOP
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      31 year ago

      No one knows what happens in the future. We can make assumptions and calculation based on statistics and probability. But ultimately we don’t know.

  • @Krulsprietje@lemm.ee
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    421 year ago

    “You can buy a house with your own money” someone told me when I was a kid.

    Last week I calculated that if I save every penny and dont spend a thing for the next 47 years I might have just enough to get myself a small house (hoping of course that inflation doesn’t happen otherwise it would be a shame to save +500.000 euro 😂)

    • TheLemmingOP
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      121 year ago

      They didn’t say where though. I bet in some country you can buy a house for less than 10k

      • Dandroid
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        111 year ago

        Yeah, I recently bought my own house. I had to move to a rural area 2000 miles away from all my family and friends. But I did it.

          • Dandroid
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            11 year ago

            Well, I borrowed from the bank. But I think just about everyone does that. Other than that, no money borrowed. My parents paid for my college 100%, which gave me a huge headstart in life, as I didn’t need to pay off any student loans. After college I got a job at a startup, which gave me a bunch of stock, and then we sold the company, which gave me a really nice payday. My down payment and moving costs were entirely funded by that.

            So it was a mix of luck between having parents that could pay for my college, luck getting a job at a company that sold, and then moving to a less expensive area. Of course, I don’t want to downplay how hard I worked in college and at the startup to put myself in a situation where I could get lucky.

  • @Raisin8659
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    181 year ago

    Well, not that I believe in it. Representative democracy. It’s like, we have the right to elect representatives, who seem to more often than not represent corporate/money interests, not really the interest of the majority.

    • @alokir@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      It’s just like every other political or economic system that we tried so far. Sounds great in theory, in practice not so much.

      • @Raisin8659
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        31 year ago

        You know of a good read on the Swiss? They have elements of direct democracies. I wonder how that does.

    • @Krulsprietje@lemm.ee
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      01 year ago

      If COVID has learned me one thing is that there is still hope! We really have a make it a large enough problem before the powers are willing to change.

      • @Ziggurat@sh.itjust.works
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        61 year ago

        Covid has show me the exact opposite. Governments saying this is fine, keep going out less than a week before ordering a full lock down. Karens and Karims (is that the male for Karen?) going crazy about something as easy as stay home and less than a year latter, people openly couching in public without even a mask

  • Greyscale
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    161 year ago

    That I have any sort of meaningful future or purpose ahead of me.

    • TheLemmingOP
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      31 year ago

      I hope things happen in your life that make you able to believe, that, what you said was a lie isn’t one.

    • @PeWu@lemmy.ml
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      11 year ago

      I can’t stop picturing myself as a demolished beggar quite soon. Or a pile of mashed meat near a 10-story building.

  • DJDarren
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    111 year ago

    “Flushable wipes”

    I’m at an age where moist arse wipes are a godsend, and I stubbornly cling to the lie that they’re flushable and fine.

      • @XEAL@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Every house I’ve lived on had a bidet and they all had a basic faucet. You clean yourself with a soapy sponge or hand and then spend several minutes splashing water on your ass and junk with your hand to remove all off the soap because there is no way the water stream can reach you. Then you have to dry yourself with a towel while water is dripping down your leg and even after drying properly the area still feels wet. At that point you realize it was more convenient simply climbing into the shower to do the same quicker and easier by washing yourself from the waist down.

        Wet wipes: you wipe yourself with them and dry with some toilet paper. Done.

        I will never give up the commodity of legally flushable wet wipes.

  • @pH3ra@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    That anyone should be allowed to vote.
    I mean, obviously I believe in democracy, don’t get me wrong… My idea is that you should have a chance to be allowed to vote. Like you have to at least pass a reading & comprehension test before you get like a voting license or something.
    You don’t get to drive if you’re incapable to see the road, you don’t get to vote if you’re incapable to understand what a politician is saying to you.
    I’m sorry

    Edit: I’m not from the USA, so I didn’t know that there was already something similar back then.
    Still, I believe that basic comprehension is foundamental in the voting process and there should be a way to check it. Otherwise there is no failsafe to populism taking over

    • @angstylittlecatboy@reddthat.com
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      1 year ago

      at least pass a reading and comprehension test

      That’s banned in the US under the Civil Rights Act of 1965 because it was used to cut racial minorities out of the voting process. I can also think of a bunch of other ways this could be abused.

    • hallettj
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      51 year ago

      You’re probably already aware that there have been literacy requirements to vote in the past in some places in the US, but those were actually an excuse to disenfranchise black people. https://history.iowa.gov/history/education/educator-resources/primary-source-sets/right-to-vote-suffrage-women-african/voter-registration-literacy

      Literacy tests were banned by the Voting Rights Act in 1965. There have been recent attacks on that law including the 2013 Supreme Court case Shelby County v Holder which overturned election oversight in jurisdictions with a history of racist disenfranchisement; and Allen v Milligan from a couple months ago was an attempt to overturn gerrymandering restrictions, but thankfully it failed. Combine that with continuing voter disenfranchisement (for example far too few polling places in Atlanta leading to black voters waiting in line many hours to vote), and there is no doubt in my mind that if literacy tests were legal again they would be used the same way they were in the 60’s.

      Personally I think history has shown that we get better leaders when more votes are counted.

    • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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      31 year ago

      It’s less important because votes are averaged.

      It’s well established that smarter people are just as likely to get caught up in bullshit. Maybe reading is a handicap to voting.

    • @UnverifiedAPK@lemmy.ml
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      21 year ago

      If you have a low IQ you’re not legally allowed to serve in the military, but you damn sure can vote for the president 😑