• Formfiller@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Billionaires, government officials owning stock, private campaign finance, the two party system, racism, sexism, health insurance, private equity, for profit prisons, for life Supreme Court appointments, Nazis, Zionism, Wall Street, unregulated banking,jobs that don’t pay a living wage, unaffordable housing, student debt, the police state and lobbyists

  • buzz86us@lemmy.world
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    Fossil fuel subsidies. No longer needed since we have more viable alternatives, and they just contribute to global warming, and litter.

      • Landless2029@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        I saw a vlog that interviewed local farmers that were trying to be diverse planting strawberries and veggies. They explained that they were barely making it, but if they just planted corn the subsidies would kick in and they’re make a lot more.

    • null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      I’m not sure that’s true.

      The supply chain for food is heavily dependent on diesel. All machinery on farms is diesel, and the trucks that move the food to silos then mills then factories and then shops are all diesel.

      Presently there’s no real substitute for that machinery. Sure it might be technically possible to construct an electric tractor or truck but it’s not economically viable at this time.

      The subsidies don’t really serve to make fossil fuels continue to be viable, it’s more like a measure to avoid sudden inflation due to fluctuations in the price of diesel.

      • buzz86us@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        🤣🤣🤣🤣 There are dozens of companies making electric tractors, AND in a rural area it is much more viable to have solar panels than to rely on the next diesel delivery, or make long trips to the nearest filling station.

        Areas with solar panels are even posting higher crop yields.

        • drhugsymcfur@lemmy.world
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          I’m sorry, can you point me to some of these dozens of companies making electric tractors? My farm could be in the market for a new tractor with equivalent run time and power capacity as our current JD 7R 270.

          https://www.deere.com/en/tractors/row-crop-tractors/row-crop-7-family/7r-270-tractor/

          I’ve tried searching for equivalents online and I’m struggling.

          Also not to move the goalposts, but I tried searching for an EV combine that can run a 14hr day during harvest with no downtime and I wasn’t able to find anything.
          Could you please point me towards some sources that would be available for the '26 harvest season?

          Call me a sealion or whatever you will, but those products aren’t available there is no EV market for full time farm equipment and there is nothing on the horizon other than some nice looking 3D renders and proposed spec sheets.

        • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          3 days ago

          I think you misunderstand the economic choice that smaller farms are making. When you can get a 50 year old workhorse tractor for 20k that you can actually maintain yourself, it makes far more sense than any 200k+ tractor whether diesel or electric. Additionally folks are used to diesel, they’ve already got a big tank on the property that they refill every few months, and they might not have sufficient electrical connection to get several of the giant swapable battery packs for their tractors and keep one on the charge while they work.

          If farmers were starting from scratch, sure it might make sense to go all solar and all electric, but these are folks who are constantly squeezed for cash, constantly relying on crop insurance and well-timed loans and subsidies to stay afloat living on 200 year old farms that have been in the family since the land was stolen from the native Americans, and probably still using the equipment dad bought in the 60s and 70s because that’s the most financially viable option.

            • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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              2 days ago

              That’s one of the reasons why many smaller farms run 50-70 year old tractors, they’re machines designed to be maintained and kept running indefinitely so we have farmers using literal antiques to get work done. Literally they’ll drive off the field to the antique tractor ride then head back to the field to finish the days work after the ride.

      • DomeGuy@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        A diesel engine can literally run on vegetable oil. We don’t need fossil fuel subsidies to keep farm tractors working.

        If we must distort the market directly, we should do so on the demand side. Give farmers a per-Joule fuel subsidy, and let them use petro-disel, bio-disel, or electric as the market may provide.

        Either we believe that markets work or we don’t

        • null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 days ago

          Obviously, there isn’t enough vegetable oil to run every tractor and every truck.

          In Australia, bio diesel is subsidised in the same way regular diesel is.

  • we is doomed!@lemmy.world
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    Humans organised by hierarchy.

    It never works and always ends with civilisations that ever attempt it collapsing. No matter how often we do the same dumb shit over and over it never works… Are we insane anons ?

    • MonkderVierte@lemmy.zip
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      It works in communities of around 100 people, like those human evolved in. Which is why this is our default organization structure, every form of government devolves to sooner or later. Maybe we should give up the idea of countries or at least try to keep it in check with smart laws somehow.

    • Shanmugha@lemmy.world
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      Oh we definitely are. We already have had so many profound human beings that to live well all that is needed is just listen to them and apply what they have said. But no, people choose to do dumb shit yet again and again

  • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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    4 days ago

    Religion.

    It served a purpose when societies were first moving from hunting and gathering to agriculture. A community needed to coalesce around something tangible for resource sharing, protection, decision making, etc…

    It’s why, from a societal evolution perspective, we went from totemic religions based on fertility and family groups, to mass religions with defined hierachies and roles, because the evolution or religions reflect that evolutions of society at the time.

    We don’t need that anymore. It does more harm than good in the modern world.

    • CANDYgirl7012@lemmy.wtf
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      People used to need religion to stop them from functioning the same as animals back then, but in this century, if someone needs to be told by a religion that murder is bad to stop them from doing it, then they should be locked up.

      Also so much molesting goes on at religious places that people just sweep under the rug. And what batshit crazy is going on with women in religions? Like there is a stoning sentence for a married woman who cheats, she just cheated! Get a freaking divorce and move on.

      Cults get so much shit but what exactly is the difference between a religion and cult? They sound pretty similar if you look from an outside perspective.

      The most important thing is we gotta think about the children. Just imagine how cruel it would sound to an alien.

      “We make our 9 year Old daughters up before sunrise every morning to pray but our sons can avoid that till they are 14”

      “We make our kids go without food or drinks for 16 hours everyday for a month every year. It is good for their body! (Kid passes out in the background)”

      “My daughter is having her first child too late. She is 14!”

      “So we send our daughters to be nuns, they will live there until they die.”

      “I cut my son’s dongdong.”

  • VM_Abrantes@lemmy.world
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    July and August Add them to the end of the calendar or rename them properly, there is no reason September-December should have been globally accepted out of order for over 2000 years

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Young earth creationism

      What I hate so much about that, is all the “evidence” just points to some near extinction level event that humans worldwide suffered.

      And obviously for that to have happened, it means there had to be a lot more people.

      Like, entire cities/tribes/whatever were wiped out everywhere, but some had individuals survive. Which explains how “the last two people” could have kids who just happen to later have spouses and kids of their own without any explanation for where the new people came from.

      They were just outside of walking distance.

      Over the 300,000 plus years anatomically modern humans have been on Earth, that’s probably happened a bunch. Hell, we’ve had 2-3 actual ice ages over that span.

      We don’t know shit about 250k of those years.

      • -RJ-@lemmy.world
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        From what I understand (and as a Christian), it’s those Christians that take a literal reading of the Bible, not understanding that those parts of the Bible aren’t meant to be read literally but are about the WHY of creation rather than the HOW. It’s about WHO God is rather than how He did things.

        • Krafty Kactus@sopuli.xyz
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          5 days ago

          Either that or Genesis is just an explanation made up by a people group that had little to no idea how anything in the natural world works lol

          • shalafi@lemmy.world
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            If you squint real hard, Genesis is a tale of stellar and planetary formation. Then comes evolution. Give the first bits a read! Yeah, evolution is mixed up a little, still surprisingly on point for a bunch of Bronze Age sheep herders.

            Then there’s a second tale, in the same short book. What a clusterfuck. But I can still see some real history in it. If I squint real hard.

            • Soggy@lemmy.world
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              4 days ago

              Squint so hard your eyes are closed, maybe. Any overlap between biblical verse (translated through at least two languages) and modern scientific understanding is coincidental.

            • Krafty Kactus@sopuli.xyz
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              5 days ago

              Yeah seeing as the writers of the Pentateuch didn’t even know what the stars were, I’m pretty sure that’s all a coincidence lol.

        • shalafi@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          Wow! Nailed it! I had thought that as a young Christian, didn’t know there was a verse for it. Lost my religion long ago BTW.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      What’s weird is the young Earth thing is relatively new. Before the 1850s or so, you would be laughed out of the room. As ignorant as we were, naturalists were having a hard time trying to figure a world that was millions, or 10s of millions, of years old. Churches, of any stripe, sure as hell wasn’t preaching it.

      And here we are, with the flat Earth idea being even newer.

  • Quilotoa@lemmy.ca
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    Tips. How ridiculous is it that restaurant owners guilt us into paying their employees salaries because they are too cheap to pay them a living wage? How unjust is it that we chose to tip the people who bring our food from the kitchen to our table and leave the hundreds of other service workers without tips?

    • Krudler@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      A better understanding will flow from knowing that federal minimum wage for tipped employees is $2.13 per hour.

      So there is specific legislation in place to abuse restaurant workers, restaurant owners take full advantage of this.

    • TheDoozer@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Weirdly, Alaska, California, Guam, Minnesota, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, and in the vast majority of cases Montana have no exemptions for tipped employees, and shockingly they still have restaurants. And customers aren’t paying exorbitant prices for food (except where I live in middle-of-nowhere island Alaska) compared to the rest of the country.

      It’s almost like their entire argument of not being able to keep their business if they have to actually pay their employees is either nonsense or a skill issue.

  • Hossenfeffer@feddit.uk
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    4 days ago

    Well, facism seems like the obvious choice right now, but I’m going deeper and choosing bigotry.

      • blackbrook@mander.xyz
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        I get you, but how would you phrase it? I expect, BTW, that it might be intended to cover both the extreme of children forced to work in a sweatshop 12/7 and children who have to help their parents with some subsistence tasks.

          • blackbrook@mander.xyz
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            Maybe not, but the boundaries can be fuzzy, and statistics tend to get built on technical language that may not treat the fuzziness the way you or I would agree with. So I get the urge to use vague language like ‘affects’ or the difficulty in finding language that is general enough without sounding mealy mouthed.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      Easy to say, but I’d argue it’s baked in.

      “Fifty thousand years ago there were these three guys spread out across the plain and they each heard something rustling in the grass. The first one thought it was a tiger, and he ran like hell, and it was a tiger but the guy got away. The second one thought the rustling was a tiger and he ran like hell, but it was only the wind and his friends all laughed at him for being such a chickenshit. But the third guy thought it was only the wind, so he shrugged it off and the tiger had him for dinner. And the same thing happened a million times across ten thousand generations - and after a while everyone was seeing tigers in the grass even when there were`t any tigers, because even chickenshits have more kids than corpses do. And from those humble beginnings we learn to see faces in the clouds and portents in the stars, to see agency in randomness, because natural selection favours the paranoid. Even here in the 21st century we can make people more honest just by scribbling a pair of eyes on the wall with a Sharpie. Even now we are wired to believe that unseen things are watching us.”

      ― Peter Watts, Echopraxia

    • iii@mander.xyz
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      5 days ago

      I kinda get it. Everyone needs something to look forwards too. Sadly, for some, there’s only the idea of afterlife for that.

      • flabbergast@lemmy.world
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        All religion is baseless bullshit, so yes, it is problematic in itself.
        It is divisive by nature/design.
        And it is made worse by people abusing it for power over others or discrimination.

        • Yeahigotskills2@lemmy.ml
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          I think it’s a bit of a stretch to say it’s all baseless. It could just as easily be the passing down of allegorical tales — stories seeded by some guiding or controlling force countless generations ago in our collective development. There are even arguments for things like a collective consciousness or sub-atomic networks, suggesting that our linear experience of time might just be a way of processing information.

          Honestly, who really knows? But speaking as someone who has oscillated between Christianity, Buddhism, and atheism in my youth, I’ve come to see atheism as just as much of a limiting dogma as any other belief system.

          • flabbergast@lemmy.world
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            After posting my comment, I figured the baseless part might get some critique, but I decided to leave it. I meant it as ‘not based in realty or not based on facts’, if that helps clarifying.
            Also, if you heap in atheism with Christianity and Buddhism, you don’t understand what atheism is.
            Christianity and Buddhism are actual systems of belief, while atheism is simply a lack of belief in any god or deity.
            Anyone who does not believe in some god/deity/greater power, is an atheist. Whether they like it or not, that’s what it is. A simple definition about a persons lack of belief. It does not come with any other rules or dogma. No rituals or leadership at all, so it can’t be a system.

            • Yeahigotskills2@lemmy.ml
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              I wouldn’t say I heap them in together. At times in my life I have rejected a belief in anything ‘higher’, which fits your definition of atheism, although perhaps my mindset was closer to an agnostic atheist stance, which to me is more along the lines of ‘I don’t believe, but I can’t be certain as there’s a limit to my knowledge’, as opposed to being a strong proponent of the belief that there is nothing beyond death.

              • flabbergast@lemmy.world
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                Fair point. No one can be sure about there being anything after death. For me it’s like the safest and most logical bet that there won’t be anything. All other ‘options’ come across a lot like wishful thinking. No one is going to believe in anything that doesn’t fit their own narrative.
                Personally, I would not be able to believe Santa Claus is real, so why would I believe in anything supernatural? I’d rather find answers in science.
                Also, the idea of there being eternal life after death would just terrify me. It would be the most boring and useless way to spend time. It is the notion of my time being limited that gives it value. When time is unlimited, everything loses meaning.

                • Yeahigotskills2@lemmy.ml
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                  3 days ago

                  I hear you. But then does the existence of some sort of higher purpose/unknown science necessarily imply everlasting life?

        • Flax@feddit.uk
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          4 days ago

          Where’s the evidence that your partner loves you?

          Also, there is evidence for the resurrection of Jesus, people just reject it because it doesn’t fit their desires and makes them cry like a waa waa baby

        • Daemon Silverstein@calckey.world
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          @MotoAsh@lemmy.world @TomMasz@lemmy.world

          Firstly, it’s obvious “believing” means “zero evidence”. If a belief had any solid evidences, it wouldn’t be a belief, it would be a peer-reviewed scientific paper instead.

          That said, you’re conflating “belief” with “religious hierarchy” when, in reality, belief isn’t necessarily dependent on hierarchy. I believe in Lilith and Lucifer, and I have no one “above me” except for Her and Him. In fact, the belief I follow on my own isn’t even compatible with any kind of hierarchy, because these entities represent independence and rebelliousness, so it’d be quite paradoxical for me to have a leader/master/priestess/whatever.

          Finally, I challenge you to point out any kind of “humanity’s ill” inflicted by Luciferianism and other left-hand path beliefs, even those who actually have hierarchies (e.g. Quimbanda).

          So, I sincerely remind you, don’t generalize and attack every single religion and belief system on Earth because of a half dozen big ones who actually are to blame for many historical wars (“Holy wars”) and their interference on scientific progress. Don’t demonize the demons and demonesses, we’re friends of scientific inquiry. Beware not to do friendly fire.

            • Daemon Silverstein@calckey.world
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              @MotoAsh@lemmy.world Where in centuries of human history were there any wrongdoings stemming from Luciferianism and other leaderless occult belief systems? Where in centuries of human history did Luciferianism and other occult belief systems interfered or tried to hinger with scientific progress?

            • TheWeirdestCunt@lemmy.today
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              Go on then try to explain how pagan religions that boil down to “don’t fuck with nature, it’ll kill you” are damaging?

                • TheWeirdestCunt@lemmy.today
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                  my point that it doesn’t matter which religion

                  idk man saying it doesn’t matter what religion you’re talking about sounds like you think they’re all equally bad to me.

                  Also idk who’s beliefs you think I’m making a strawman out of but I was refering to my own beliefs that help me to actually go into nature as I can at least 4 times a year to help with my depression, maybe I’m more open to it because up until a few years ago I was studying to become a conservationist but it’s certainly better than back when I also thought that anyone who believes in something is a dumbass

          • Flax@feddit.uk
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            Don’t demonize the demons and demonesses

            You are all following demons. Self-proclaimed Satanists, Atheists, “progressivists”, billionaires, nazis, racists, bigots, child molesters, and rapists. Men who abuse women and women who abuse men. And those demons hate you more than anyone else can. They’ll lead you to the everlasting hellfire. They won’t be your friend.

            we’re friends of scientific inquiry.

            Christians basically invented the scientific method. It has never rejected science apart from some fringe beliefs.

      • originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com
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        5 days ago

        at best its a waste of human energy and maybe good for those that require that emotional crutch

        your argument is the same for guns, which we as a species should also mature out of