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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)M
Posts
6
Comments
31
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I’m not sure if I’ve made my peace with it, but my despair was something of a phase. Everything unfolding is too big for me to stop it, so I’m just along for the ride now. I think a lot of people haven’t really seen it coming yet, so there’s going to be a lot of wailing and public gnashing of teeth (and blaming Democrats) in the relatively near future.

    But I don’t think the opposite of hope os necessarily despair. The despair is still present if I want to go looking for it, but I compartmentalize it most of the time, and focus on the things I need to do in the near-term. I still have plenty of responsibilities to execute. One foot in front of the other.

    Enjoy what you can when you can. Be thankful for what you have.

  • In hard times, it's overwhelming to live only in the present.

    Incorrect as a general rule. I find the present plenty overwhelming, but it’s precisely because of the overall societal trajectory into the future.

    There is some minor to moderate difficulty right now in dealing with high inflation, but that’s not the overwhelming part. What’s overwhelming is the obvious worldwide collective descent into madness and the terrible future in store for billions of people as we blow past old climate goals.

    Even if we all somehow manage to rein in the fascism that’s not serving the interests of the majority and is spreading across the world, we’re hurtling towards:

    • worsening natural disasters
    • collapse of insurance markets
    • collapse of mortgage markets
    • collapse of food supplies
    • dwindling fresh water supplies, both rivers and aquifers
    • worldwide refugee crisis from unlivable equatorial regions
    • martial law to suppress food riots and refugees
    • likely development of autonomous robot soldiers that removes any possible balance for front line morality
    • likely accelerating and compounding climate impacts through tipping points
    • collapse of the AMOC
    • melting permafrost methane release
    • sea level rise inundation

    That all seems fairly well baked in at this point, but none of it has really come to pass yet. The future bad effects are not yet actually part of the present, but the feelings of overwhelmedness that they induce are very real for anyone paying attention.

    Mindfulness in the present is a good escape from the future.

  • Ok that’s kinda cool but this land sailing thing looks way more awesome than puttering around on the flat in my SUV. Still wouldn’t want to own one though.

  • Right, I’ll just pull over and get my landyacht out of the back of my truck. OP, is there a rental place for these in Primm?

  • You need to clean the chain really well before the first wax, so that bare metal is exposed for the wax bond. The rest of the stuff you’re talking about (chain ring, cassette, etc) isn’t getting waxed and doesn’t really matter (although now is a fine time to give them a relatively deep clean). The wax lubricates motion among the plates/pins/rollers of the chain, and that’s it.

    There is no relative motion to lubricate between the chain components and the sprockets - each time a roller comes into contact with a sprocket for a trip around the gear, it stays fixed in place and the pin rotates inside the roller. This design leads to chain wear (easy and relatively cheap to replace) instead of cassette and chain ring wear (expensive).

    Zero Friction Cycling is the place to go to read about waxing details. Here’s their chain prep guide.

    Silca now makes a product that promises to make the initial chain cleaning trivially easy, but you need to heat it all to 125°C to work (instead of only 75°C for normal waxing), so to use it you pretty much also need their expensive crock pot with its precise temperature control (normal crock pots don’t get that hot).

  • Current Cox monopoly service area customer here, and I don’t love them, but this sounds like a recipe to make things even worse.

  • Water supply is dire. The Colorado river is oversubscribed and most of the aquifers are being sucked dry for unsustainable agriculture. For the west coast (California) to break away it needs to take most of the Colorado river watershed with it. That means Utah, Colorado, and Arizona are critical.

  • Take some Yin Yoga classes. It’s a much slower pace than other yoga (holding poses for 3-5 minutes each), and a proper Yin class also focuses on mindfulness during the activity. The goal is to clear your thoughts and bring your focus only to your body and your breath. Different instructors will approach it differently, of course, and not all studios even offer Yin. Forgive yourself for a wandering mind, just observe it when it happens and then recenter your focus on your breath.

    It’s also probably the best stretching you’ll ever do.

  • Ever since I first saw it, this one has given me a feeling of ye olde Burning Man. I think it does have to do with the human form broken down into blocky robot shapes iterating across the page, but also the fire ring rollercoaster of Sauron in the desert with mountain backdrop. I don’t know, I just like it.

  • Traditional Art @lemmy.world

    Passivité Courtoise by Victor Brauner ca. 1930

  • It was also relatively narrow, applying solely to California. The administration is expected to appeal, and the judge placed his injunction on hold for 10 days.

    The Justice Department, which defended the Trump administration in the lawsuit, is expected to appeal the decision and could receive more favorable consideration from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. The judge also found that the 300 remaining troops on the federalized deployment could stay in Los Angeles, but essentially limited them to guarding federal property.

  • The flyer I got says it was paid for by “Protect Voters First, sponsored by Hold Politicians Accountable” and that the top funder was Republican Charles T. Munger, Jr. He’s the son of Warren Buffett’s (late) billionaire right-hand man, and he was one of the top donors for the 2008 prop 11 which created the California citizens’ redistricting commission for the state legislative districts. He was also the principal behind 2010 prop 20 which made the commission also be in charge of California’s federal congressional districts.

    So he’s understandably mad that Gavin Newsom is trying to override everything to mess with Texas.

  • What terrible framing by MendoFever. Dam removal is great news.

  • That’s great in the summer when you want to be cooling the air inside your house, but not so great in the winter when you want you want to be heating it. I’m hoping some water heater manufacturer figures this out someday and builds a unit capable of switching air sources for the heat, such that the cold output air could be circulated directly into the living space or ducted in a loop to the outside (or attic).

  • Federal law currently requires (nearly) every individual to file a tax return with the IRS, and it requires every business to withhold money from payroll and remit to IRS with appropriate bookkeeping.

    Even if California decreed all of that money should be paid to its new agency instead of to the feds, anyone doing so would be individually breaking federal law, and the gestapo would be sent after them. It’s a nice idea but I don’t see how it could work, short of secession (which has its own problems).

  • Would you like to suggest a mechanism to achieve that? Since every business and taxpayer sends money directly to the federal government, the state isn’t in a position to impede it. Unless you want to start talking about secession, and maybe that would be a good discussion.

  • Thanks! Mine is still a work in progress.

  • That’s really poor of State Farm, though unsurprising. And yet I’m still glad that they haven’t dropped my wildfire-adjacent home. The FAIR plan would be far more expensive, and no other insurer will write a policy that satisfies my mortgage company. FAIR is also underpriced at that, having already gone bankrupt once.

    It’s kind of a disgusting capitalism-bootlicking for me to be grateful to State Farm, but they’re my least-bad option at the moment. I expect the private insurers as a group to convince Ricardo Lara that rates need to go way up, or the state will end up being the only insurer in an abandoned market. There’s no other way with the climate change reality and atrocious political conditions for action. The potential mortgage failures if the insurance market fails will threaten a financial crisis on top of whatever other government financial havoc has been wreaked by then.

  • It’s lovely! Can you describe a bit about technical aspects of building and maintaining it? How often do you replenish evaporation, and do you do anything to balance the water?

  • That’s great to hear. I only have experience with a few finishes, but a little reading tells me your combo is popular for wooden food contact surfaces. What else do you like about it?

  • Stick Enthusiasts @sh.itjust.works

    I was told to stick this here

  • Woodworking @lemmy.ca

    Walking sticks

  • Native Plant Gardening @mander.xyz

    Matilija Poppy progress

  • CA Native Plants @lemm.ee

    Very sad they're destroying the century-old trees instead of selling them

    ca.news.yahoo.com /solar-project-destroy-thousands-joshua-100000768.html
  • CA Native Plants @lemm.ee

    Matilija Poppy liked the wet winter