“walkable cities” are a nice idea until you end up in the part where there’s plenty of (violent) crime so you just end up taking a car because its relatively safer than being out in the open
@cell is there a lot of crime in your city? I thought it was super safe
@hj unironically would be helpful against the types of thieves who smash windows
get some reinforced glass and armor and bam you have a mobile fortress
get some reinforced glass and armor and bam you have a mobile fortress
@kaia this is a huge consideration when going across the causeway to johor bahru tbh, singaporeans become easy targets because suddenly you don’t have effective police or public transport
@hj killdozer is unironically one of my favorite examples of “modern techniques and knowledge applied DIY simply”
composite armor technology that was completely alien to WWII industrial giants applied in such a way DIY effectively stopping all police small arms, it’s so elegant
composite armor technology that was completely alien to WWII industrial giants applied in such a way DIY effectively stopping all police small arms, it’s so elegant
@cell and the fact that you don't even need any weaponry, just raw brutal force and a lot of armor.
@hj you try to show modern jet engine design to wwii powers and it won't be that helpful because the prerequisites (advanced metallurgy) didn't exist back then
but show them composite armor concept and suddenly you would have changed the course of history
but show them composite armor concept and suddenly you would have changed the course of history
@cell yeah but at the same time tank engines would need to be more powerful to move all of that armor
@hj ..which in return requires more advanced metallurgy
so you're saying if we travel back in time, any time, we better max out our metalworking skilltree?
so you're saying if we travel back in time, any time, we better max out our metalworking skilltree?
@cell metalworking is nice, but it requires tools, which in turn requires lesser metallurgy, which also requires tools.... It's the classic "who made the very first anvil and how" problem. And then there's a problem of getting resources, chemicals, electricity, fuel, workforce. Very often it's not about knowing something is theoretically possible and more about is it is practically possible/viable/profitable.
I've never understood why right-libertarians see the killdozer guy as a hero. Didn't he buy land that was confiscated and auctioned off by the state?
@Hyolobrika @cell because it's one guy vs. uncaring government
@Hyolobrika @cell private businesses and governments go hand-in-hand, more likely to protect business interests than individuals.
IIRC they were small businesses run by individuals the killdozer guy didn't like.
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@Hyolobrika @cell all businesses are ran by individuals. It's a group of people bullying one person, whether government, organization or both. People love those "vs. World" stories.