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sj_zero | @sj_zero@social.fbxl.net

Author of The Graysonian Ethic (Available on Amazon, pick up a dead tree copy today)

Also Author of Future Sepsis (Also available on Amazon!)

Admin of the FBXL Network including FBXL Search, FBXL Video, FBXL Social, FBXL Lotide, FBXL Translate, and FBXL Maps.

Advocate for freedom and tolerance even if you say things I do not like

Adversary of Fediblock

Accept that I'll probably say something you don't like and I'll give you the same benefit, and maybe we can find some truth about the world.

Ah... Is the Alliteration clever or stupid? Don't answer that, I sort of know the answer already...

On one hand, fuck da po-lice. On the other hand, fuck people who are on their phone while driving. I was out for a walk on Friday, and this car belted past, and we saw the person driving the car never looked up from their lap.

Peanut butter and pickle is actually ok.

Anyone who hasn't had a nice peanut butter and bread and butter pickle sandwich is missing out.

i am epileptic and wut is this?

I think I need to go to bed. I didn't read the "in", and I was like "eating your car is degenerate? I guess so, but why bring that up?"

"And that's how I got fired from my job as a secretary."

Man, this is NOT what is meant by "get a hobby".

#nextcloud So I played a bit more with external samba shares on my nextcloud, but I found that there were some real issues with it. Unfortunately, in my application trying to access the smb share killed php! Can't explain it, but once I got a few levels deep, the game was over and I couldn't even access the instance anymore until I either rebooted the computer or later figured out I could reboot php-fpm.

I tried webdav next and it worked a bit better but I couldn't pull any files. Finally, I moved to ftp and while it wasn't happy at first, but after restarting php-fpm one more time, everything clicked and I was able to navigate the share and more importantly pull files from the share.

dangit. I was hoping to avoid that, the point of the planter box was to not have to get down on my hands and knees to do some gardening.

One thing that a lot of studies do with respect to who is feeding the planet is they conflate a "small farm" and a "family farm". The study I found showed that the two are definitely not the same. Defining a "family farm" as a farm owned by one individual or group of individuals and a "small farm" as a farm that has less than two hectares of land, the study I found said that 85% of food was produced by "family farms", but only 35% of food was produced by "small farms". This is due to the fact that the majority of land is operated by family farms of all sizes and a minority of agricultural land is operated by small farms.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305750X2100067X

Historically, this reality that some families end up with massive and quite productive farms is one of the truths that led to the massacres of the kulaks in the soviet union, since some of the former serfs were more successful than the others.

According to one analysis, organic farming methods were generally between 20 and 50% less productive per acre for food crops.

https://www.scribd.com/doc/283996769/The-Yield-Gap-For-Organic-Farming

That's really bad. 20-50% reduced global productivity would put a lot of places that are ok today in bad shape.

On the topic of biofuels, my mind is actually changed -- you're right, we shouldn't be wasting like that. I didn't think they were that bad, but looking at just how much food they're using up, it's a vanity project we're spending overwhelming amounts of energy wastefully on, especially when there's questions about where regular people are getting their next meal from.

https://www.ifpri.org/blog/food-versus-fuel-v20-biofuel-policies-and-current-food-crisis

I have a problem with statements like that, because I've lived my entire life listening to people tell us what's going to work and then it doesn't work. Rubber needs to hit road and a thing needs to work.

Whether we like it or not, there's entire countries that weren't able to previously feed their own people with their farmland that are now exporting food because they started chemical fertilizer on what was previously sustenance farming. You can say it's wrong, but the proof of the pudding is in the eating -- and ammonium nitrate fertilizer helps feed the globe.

That's why I'm so much about proven technologies like hydroelectric and streetcars, because we know they can work because they did work, they are working, and they can continue to work.

And tbh, not even the people in charge of the world are fully in charge of the world. You control your generals maybe 90%, and they control their lieutenants maybe 80%, and through layers and layers eventually even authoritarians only exert so much control over the masses of people.

2023 is the year of permaculture. 4 plants that are good for an extremely cold ecosystem year after year: a strawberry plant, two blueberry plants (the hardiest plants of the bunch) and a raspberry plant.

The wire is because I know we have some critters I absolutely expect to try to escape with my plants. The plastic is because it turns out I didn't have as much wire as I thought I did. We'll see how it holds up, but I strongly suspect I'll need to get more wire.

I'm really excited to see how they grow this summer, but I'm more interested in seeing how they manage over the winter.

I also planted some green onions, but they're already looking pretty dire. We'll see how they do.
A planter with a full wire mesh A planter with a bit of wire mesh and some plastic taped over the sides

I feel for the people who will be hurt by the upcoming financial crisis, but in the meantime it's amusing watching the thing the powers that be promised would never happen occurring like clockwork.

It really depends on the role of the operator in the system.

If the operator is just a brainless and powerless widget, then by all means they can never be the root cause of a problem.

If the operator is empowered and used as an integral part of the brains of the operation, then you must accept that they will sometimes be the root cause of a problem.

Smart phones are increasingly putting their operator in the former role, so if something happens it really isn't the operator's fault because it's supposed to be a padded room where consumers of content are never able to do anything that can hurt anything.

On the other hand, something like a piece of heavy duty construction equipment is on the other side of the spectrum. If the bulldozer operator, empowered with the operation of the equipment, is supposed to level out a piece of dirt but some neurons misfire and instead decides to drive through the mayor's house, the operator is the root cause of the problem.

I see it personally, where companies spend ten or hundreds of thousands of dollars trying to engineer operator error out of a system where operators are empowered and relied upon as an integral part of the operation, and the company is always fighting the last war because incompetent operators are always finding new ways to screw up.

Full Clearing Another World under a Goddess with Zero Believers.

I like the series because like Hell Mode the characters actually do start out on the bottom.

For people running #nextcloud on a home server that's exposed to the outside world, I found out something really neat.

You can mount local smb shares as folders in your nextcloud. This means you can set up your nextcloud so you can access all kinds of local fileshares remotely through a firewall.

I've got a nas for archival purposes, but it's always a pain to get files off of it. Now I can use it just like any other nextcloud folder, and without something silly like exposing a samba share to the outside world.

One of the main characters in an Isekai series I like is a snek girl. She learned how to pretend how to have legs though. Fewer questions that way.

Spent more mobile data this month on the fediverse than on YouTube. I feel like that's some sort of win.

Some anthropologists think that one of the early traumas of the human race's high level of cognition is the realization that every individual will die. An individual realizing that they are inevitably moving towards death and there's nothing to be done about it is deeply traumatic, but there's a deeper trauma I think, and that'll be when humanity realizes that the survival of the human race or even the planet earth won't be universal. I think it's in that process right now, and that's where we're seeing some really childish ideologies come out of it -- civilization is grieving the realization that some day everything we ever were is going to disappear, and some people are in the denial stage and other people are in the bargaining stage, but ultimately it'll be something we have to accept and find ways to move on from.

Finding ways to survive and thrive as a species understanding that we're going to be destroyed someday whatever we do is going to be quite a bit more complicated than just saying "drill baby drill" or "stop all technology now and return to monkey life". Mindlessly consuming the earth to our premature end is bad, but so is trying to become an acetic monk trying to live off a glass of algae and a gallon of solar desalinated oceanwater and in the process killing billions because that's not doable on a large enough scale.

There are definitely ideologies which, if implemented, would immediately cause billions of deaths. For example, there are a lot of people claiming we need to stop using fossil fuels "RIGHT NOW". that's a call for the deaths of billions of people. You could end up with the worst of both possible worlds: First an immediate wave of death because people can't get food or heat. Then as people fight back against the genocidal governments and implement something in reaction, so climate change is ultimately accelerated anyway.

My viewpoint is that if we want to transition away from carbon (and no matter what we think it's a resource that is non-renewable and won't be renewed by the same processes again -- the carboniferous period is a geologic period and system of the Paleozoic that spans 60 million years from the end of the Devonian Period 358.9 million years ago (Mya), to the beginning of the Permian Period, 298.9 million years ago. It was the era after trees evolved but before fungi evolved the ability to rot wood, and massive forests built up and created coal beds), we need to kill some sacred cows. Particularly in Canada, we need to be going all-in on hydroelectric -- the one form of electricity that has been proven to be practical in Canada in cold weather. If Canada went all-in on hydroelectric, then not only would electricity be inexpensive and plentiful such that people could heat their homes and operate transportation using electricity, but they could sell massive amounts of electricity to the United States, replacing fossil fuels for many residential, commercial, and industrial uses in those regions.

There would be a cost. We will need to build things people don't want built in places people don't want to build things. We would massively damage the environment. The question becomes: Do you want to stop using fossil fuels or not? We have solutions that will work, but there will be a cost. There is no solution without an environmental cost, period.

Quebec, Manitoba, British Columbia, and I think Newfoundland are almost entirely hydroelectric. Most of that work happened before power dams became NIMBY.

But you don't understand! Someone on the internet might disagree with me! That's dangerous to our democracy. We need to crack down on dangerous words.

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