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Joined
3 yr. ago

  • All this has happened before and it will happen again

  • One of them is dead, so his security is perfect. I’m hoping the other one ups his security game real soon now (due to natural causes, obviously).

  • Most or all of the GMO crops will both pollinate and germinate. The requirement to buy new seed is legally enforced, rather than a biological necessity.

    There have been cases already where pollen and/or seeds have blown into neighboring fields and hybridized with non-GMO crops. At least one grower has been sued by Monsanto for harvesting and selling Roundup-ready soybeans that were hybridized that way.

  • That’s true, as far as it goes, but the amount of phenylalanine created is incredibly minute and is matched by other, “natural” foods. In the vast majority of people, the body quickly metabolizes excess phenylalanine. The only genuinely well-documented danger is for people with phenylketonuria, because they have a genetic variation that breaks that ability to metabolize.

    Last I checked, which was admittedly years ago, the studies that showed direct harms were flawed, not statistically significant, or have not been repeatable. The early studies that led to its ban in the EU used absolutely massive doses of aspartame, well beyond what you could possibly ingest in a day.

    I’m not saying it’s safe for sure but it’s safer than obesity or massive doses of sugar on a regular basis.

  • In dietary terms, literally nothing is wrong with it. There are economic concerns because the business model is to patent (copyright?) the GMO stuff and force growers to buy seed every year, instead of saving seed from each harvest. There's also some concern that really successful GMO crops, such as Roundup-ready corn, will dominate planting and become a monocrop which could lead to massive crop loss if a blight or other disease evolves to target that particular strain.

    The other things in the picture vary between probably-but-maybe-not-harmless (aspartame), definitely harmless (MSG), to actually helpful (fluoride and Prozac).

    Bottom line: the meme, when interpreted correctly, implies that pop songs are generally good but somewhat artificially manipulated.

  • A stern letter!

  • I very much enjoyed taking Amtrak’s Coast Starlight from SF to LA. If it was a little faster and a lot cheaper it would easily beat cars and airplanes 100% of the time

  • You mean today? Today is Wednesday.

  • I was gifted, pleasant to teach, and distracted the teachers by asking tangential questions that were interesting enough for them to answer, thus derailing the entire class. One teacher actually put that in my report card and complained about it to my parents.

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  • The scumbag known as Marc Andreessen is a right-wing accelerationist. He and his cronies, including Peter Thiel and Elon Musk, want to destabilize and eventually destroy nation-states so that everyone lives in corporatocratic city-states. These are the people who think late stage capitalism is a step in the right direction.

  • It’s definitely not in keeping with his politics in later songs, so I can believe it. On the other hand, it’s still a song I enjoy

  • Cananas

  • I downvoted it because it’s not funny. It’s real, valuable information. It’s not the kind of thing that belongs in c/nottheonion because there’s nothing odd or funny about it.

  • As far as I know, input-remapper will handle any mouse, regardless of how many buttons it has, since they just show up as human interface devices.

    I use, and really like, the razer naga v2 hyperspeed mmo mouse, but it’s about $100 USD. I’ve never tried them, but the Redragon mice are inexpensive and generally get good reviews.

    All of them should work just fine with Linux, though any rgb bullshit might not be adjustable with anything that isn’t razer.

  • Talking on the phone with a friend about rebuilding his Pathfinder character, so it sucks a lot less for the glory of the empire

  • I don’t disagree at all but I know it bugs some people, so here we are.

  • Truly an historic effort by OP

  • Terribly misleading headline. The actual finding is that people who believe in karma are less likely to punish a brand directly by boycotting because they think karma will do it.