Evkob (they/them)

Languages: Français, English

Pronouns: They/them

Communities:

  • 12 Posts
  • 487 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 5th, 2023

help-circle


  • New Brunswick here, it’s much the same with the speeding and the huge pickups, but I’ve found drivers give me a lot more space when passing on a rural road than a busy city street. Like usually half a lane away from me at a minimum, if not an actual proper pass.

    I’m assuming it helps that I don’t really “look like a cyclist”, at least in the eyes of motorists. I feel people might be more aggressive towards someone wearing lycra on a road bike, whereas my goofy ass riding a hybrid-cruiser-city bike and wearing a high-vis vest is novel enough on a rural road for them to take notice of me.





  • I mean, he’s not wrong that many of Halifax’s residents don’t care for bike lanes; it’s an inevitability of how Halifax is made up.

    The Halifax Regional municipality is huge, clocking in at 5475.57 km^2. That’s almost 10% of the entire province of Nova Scotia by area. Here’s a street view picture of a random spot I picked in Halifax, this is what most of Halifax looks like:

    (Of course, most of the population lives in the urban core. Density drops from around 1500 inhabitants per km^2 to just 64 when looking at the whole municipality)

    This is just one of the many reasons urban amalgamations are a scam, one often proposed by conservatives to (among other reasons, like subsidizing suburbia) drown out progressive voices in cities that support things like bike lanes. Toronto is a great case study in this, where the surrounding suburbs have been choking the city proper and slowing progress since 1998.

    It’s frankly ridiculous to entertain the notion that someone living in Tangier (location of the above street view) should have a say in how streets and neighbourhoods are organised in downtown Halifax. Let them decide what happens on the road in Tangier, and let the people who actually live in the neighbourhoods of downtown organise them to their wants and needs.

    In conclusion, Tim Houston is an absolute fuckwit. And his coffee and doughnuts suck.



  • I think this is something I might be too French-Canadian to understand, here we’d call it “pot” or perhaps “herbe”, both of which don’t translate to “bad grass”.

    Unless overseas “herbe” translates to weed. We use it pretty interchangeably with “gazon” (which just means grass)







  • Tomatoes would be odd, I’ve never seen that. Onions, or at a minimum garlic power, should be in any burger recipe, IMO. Carrots would totally work for a veggie burger, I found this recipe that looks pretty tasty and uses both carrots and onions.

    But disregarding all that; I very rarely eat burgers that don’t have both onions and tomatoes as toppings :P


  • Evkob (they/them)@lemmy.catomemes@lemmy.worldVeggies Burgers
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    5
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    3 days ago

    To add to idiomaddict’s great points, the animals don’t eat exclusively grass. In Australia (assuming based on your instance): “the latest estimate (2017-18) of annual feed use in Australia is 13.58 million tonnes” (SFMCA).

    This includes “cereal grains, legume grains, vegetable protein meals, animal protein meals, cereal milling co-products, minerals and vitamins” as per that same source.

    I often see people use the deforestation of the Amazon for soy crops as a sort of gotcha for vegans, even though most soybeans are grown for use as animal feed (in the Amazon, mainly cattle). Incidentally, cattle farms are also responsible for much more deforestation in the Amazon than soybeans, but I digress.

    I’ll also note that grass-fed beef has often been shown to be as bad (or sometimes worse) for the environment than feedlot beef. It also can’t scale to meet current meat consumption.