• @CmdrShepard
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        171 year ago

        The face of right-wing politics is wedge issues and conspiracy theories. It’s not as if people are being judged for believing in a smart conservative fiscal policy because that is no longer something the modern Republican party represents.

          • @CmdrShepard
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            51 year ago

            Yeah, no it’s pretty fair assessment of the party. You as an individual may have different beliefs, but your differing beliefs don’t represent the party and their rhetoric.

            FFS the ex president convinced a mob of people that the election was rigged and they stormed the Capitol Building looking to capture/kill the legislators who were confirming the results. If a republican president of the United States doesn’t represent the republican party then who does?

            • @goat@sh.itjust.works
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              11 year ago

              Oh, American Conservatives.

              Americans, pleeeeease, say if it’s America or not before making such statements.

      • @myslsl@lemmy.world
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        101 year ago

        You can probably actually do this reliably in cases where those political views work against the persons interests. It’s not like people voting against their own interests is an uncommon phenomenon.

        • Billiam
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          111 year ago

          It’s very possible to vote against your own interests for the good of society though- a billionaire might vote to increase taxes on himself, for example.

          One of the many issues with the majority of right-wing voters in the US is that the votes they cast are against both their best interests and the interests of society, and that’s what makes them evil and/or stupid.

    • @Sunrosa@lemmy.world
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      261 year ago

      Sometimes my friends laugh at me for how little I know about pop culture. I laugh back though. I wouldn’t say I’m proud of it but it’s just funny.

    • dudeami0
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      81 year ago

      Being proudly ignorant of everything is bad. I will respect people who know they don’t know things though, you can’t know everything about everything. It’s why people generally specialize in a field in an industry.

    • Scrubbles
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      391 year ago

      Coping mechanism for the poor, they can’t admit they’re at the bottom and so it feels good to put other people down for nonsense reasons

    • @mcc@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Some people can be very well educated but choose not to follow reason. For example polititions appealing to a voting base. Point is these things certainly say “what a twat” but doesn’t necessarily reflect poor education.

    • ram
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      341 year ago

      On the flipside, the belief that someone with a formal education is somehow beneath you or brainwashed for it.

    • @scarabic@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      Everyone is below someone else somehow, since you use that word. I’m beneath my friend in film knowledge. I’m above my friend in gardening skill. In this sense, one can clearly be beneath someone else in education. Or height. Or travel experience.

      You meant that regardless of education, we all have the same human worth. That’s true. But yeah you can absolutely be beneath me somehow

  • @SeverianWolf@beehaw.org
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    841 year ago

    People who litter. Throw their rubbish out the window of the car. Or who throw rubbish in public, like into drains or sidewalks.

    It’s in the mentality, and I say the lack of education is the reason for it.

    It’s sad to see the people of my country do this, and to see it with your own eyes.

    • stellardreams
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      11 year ago

      I think it’s more narcissism than education. People who are educated can still not care about the environment and preserving public spaces.

      • @SeverianWolf@beehaw.org
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        21 year ago

        Hmm, I can see what you mean. “I just don’t care”

        “That’s why cleaners exist right?” “We are giving the cleaners something to do” “This is not my public space”

        The sort of thing people would say when you ask why do they do this.

        I’ve seen all sorts of people. People who throw rubbish out from their Mercedes sedan. People who throw their plastic containers onto the sidewalk from the motorbike while waiting for the green light.

        Funny true story. A colleague of mine was having a smoke with a Japanese guy who was visiting our country on a business trip.

        My colleague threw the cigarette butt onto the floor after finishing. The Japanese guy went to pick up the cigarette butt that my colleague threw on the ground, and threw it into the dustbin nearby. My colleague never felt so embarrassed seeing him do that.

        That’s why I think it’s education and upbringing.

      • adderaline
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        51 year ago

        i mean i get the impulse, but if we were to blindly trust any sort of knowledge system, science is the one to trust, right? like, any downsides of trusting scientific consensus are necessarily larger when trusting information sources that aren’t scientific, and if you follow through with trusting science blindly, you might ignorantly begin to believe that empirical testing and intellectual honesty is necessary for determining the truth of your beliefs!

        • dudeami0
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          61 year ago

          I would think it’s more about knowing how to trust it. See some news article about “This study said X”, don’t take it as fact. See a study that has been done numerous times by different groups that corroborate a result and you can have a much higher degree of trust in it. There is a reason the scientific method is a continuous circle, it requires a feedback loop of verifying results and reproducibility. The current issue is clickbait headlines getting the attention, people see it’s “Science” and blindly trust it and it becomes a religion like any other.

    • @utopianfiat@lemmy.world
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      201 year ago

      What do you mean by “trusting in science”? Science isn’t meant to be trusted, it’s meant to be verified.

      Given the reproducibility crisis occurring right now, nobody should be “trusting” in science as a matter of course- we should be verifying the decades of unverified research and dismissing the unverifiable research.

      We fucked up the entire field of Alzheimer’s research for nearly a quarter century by “trusting in science”. We still bias towards publishing new research in academia over reproducing existing research. Science has a big problem with credibility right now and saying “oh just trust in science” isn’t the solution.

      • justhach
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        01 year ago

        Ok, but I do not have access to labratories or ways to run my proper experiments. Am I supposed to just stay on the fence about everything that I can’t personally test, or should I trust in the consensus from the scientific community regarding stuff like climate change, virology, etc.?

        • @utopianfiat@lemmy.world
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          51 year ago

          The proper scientific answer to that question is not to trust or not trust. You should absolutely do your own testing, whether that means asking good questions of the experts, reading the existing research carefully, up to and including reproducing the experiment yourself where practicable.

          If an experiment is impossible to reproduce, then you should be asking yourself what good its results are.

          • @s20@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            That is an impossible standard for folks to live by. I can’t do that, and neither can you.

            When I say I “trust in science” I’m talking about the process and the method. Which means I trust the results when people follow that process. i also trust that the answers may change if there’s new information, because that’s part of the process.

            I don’t have the equipment to perform all those experiments. Even if I did, I wouldn’t trust the results because I don’t have the education to set up, run, and interpret an experiment more complicated than improving my chili recipe.

            So, in much the same way that I trust a mechanic to fix my transmission and a.plumber to fix my pipes, I trust a scientist to follow the scientific method.

            That’s what “trusting science” means.

            • @utopianfiat@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              I trust a scientist to follow the scientific method.

              The scientific method isn’t an epistemological framework, it’s a framework for practicing science.

              • @s20@lemmy.ml
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                31 year ago

                And what part of what I said made you think I don’t know that?

                I’m aspedantic as anyone, but at this point you’re being antagonistic. Either you legitimately don’t know you’re doing it, or you’re intentionally trying to make people feel stupid. But you definitely know what people mean when they say they “trust” science.

                Please stop. You’re making pedants like me look bad.

                • @utopianfiat@lemmy.world
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                  31 year ago

                  Why assume I’m being pedantic? The social media landscape is littered with “I fucking love science” clickbait, “amazing nature” accounts that are literally AI generated photos, hell, the entire fields of evolutionary psychology and nutrition ought to be a wholesale indictment of our contemporary scientific establishment.

                  This isn’t pedantry, I am serious as a heart attack.

    • hoshikarakitaridia
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      71 year ago

      unfortunately my dad who has a diploma in engineering and is working in that field for probably 30y now is still prone to it.

      Whoever spread those conspiracies should die a slow and painful death to experience a fraction of what they brought on to a lot of families and friends.

    • @ccunix@lemmy.ml
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      41 year ago

      Trust what? Many scientists will quite justifiably have completely opposing views (do vaccines cause autism for example).

      • @s20@lemmy.ml
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        11 year ago

        How…

        Scientists don’t have opposing views on thats specific thing*. It’s an example used right up there with thinking the earth is flat.

        One completely discredited study linked the combined MMR vaccine to a new, made up gastrointestinal disorder. That disorder was supposedly linked to autism. The guy who ran the study had financial ties to a company that manufactured a measles vaccine separate from MMR. He had a financial motive. He paid children for blood samples at his kid’s party and bragged about it. He’s a monster responsible for every death caused by the measles since his evil, fake, completely made up study came out.

        You want to know what makes a person seem ignorant? Being anti-vax or buying into the abject nonsense that ASD is caused by vaccines.

  • @atlasraven31@lemm.ee
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    801 year ago

    Not being able to entertain ideas. “What would the world be like with 100% renewable energy?” “Would basic healthcare for every person help our country?”

    I tried to explain the 4 day work week to someone that gets paid by the hour. You make the same money but work 4 days a week instead of 5. Insisted he got paid less. Had to explain like a Bingo card with a Free Space, 1 day he is paid even if he stays home.

    • @utopianfiat@lemmy.world
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      251 year ago

      I don’t know if that’s necessarily wrong of them. There isn’t any precedent for hourly workers to be paid when they’re not working. The “four day workweek” as described simply means that any time over 32 hours a week is overtime. Hourly workers in general don’t really have a “workweek” anyway because they will often have multiple jobs or will work whatever shift they can pick up that works with their schedule.

      They understood how the 4-day workweek works based on how the 5-day workweek works. I think maybe you need to listen more to them and try to understand your own proposition better.

      When companies voluntarily implement 4-day workweeks, they are literally either cutting 8 hours or doing 10-hour shifts. They do not pay for hours not worked.

      • @Monkeyhog@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        If you can’t understand that 40 hours a week can be accomplished in 4 days instead of 5 days, than you are an idiot. It has nothing to do with your life experience. Its simple math.

        • @utopianfiat@lemmy.world
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          101 year ago

          So here’s what I’m talking about, we have a legally mandated 8-hour workday. It’s not implied that you’re changing that to a 10-hour workday.

          Also, if you’ve never worked a 10-hour day, maybe you don’t quite understand how much harder than 8 hours it is for most people- because fatigue compounds faster than a linear rate.

          So someone who is paid hourly and assumes you’re retaining the 8-hour workday isn’t likely to understand how they’re getting paid for 40 hours while working 32.

          And literally everything has to do with lived experience. Listen to people and try to understand their position. Being educated isn’t the same thing as being intelligent and knowing how to understand different perspectives.

          • justhach
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            51 year ago

            One of the main ideas behind the 4 day work week is that workers have become much more efficient, but with no compensation for that increase in efficiency. A worker in 2023 is going to get a lot more work done in the sane 8 hours than someone in the 70s/80s due to increases in technology, automation, software, etc.

            Pair that with the fact that the lions share of profits head upwards in business (ie, CEO/management compensation has increase way more than hourly workers), then it stands to reason that we can afford to pay those workers that extra day if we equalize the pay increases across the board instead of concentrating it in the ownership.

            • @utopianfiat@lemmy.world
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              31 year ago

              That doesn’t explain at all how a waiter who is being told to work 32 hours instead of 40, or 10 hour shifts instead of 8, is making more money or is otherwise better off.

              If there’s another policy like raising the minimum wage or UBI that’s required to make this work, it should be stated.

    • CleoTheWizard
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      141 year ago

      I think it’s good to note that while some of this is a failure to develop critical thinking, failure to entertain hypotheticals is OFTEN a trait for people with differing cognition. So don’t assume they’re poorly educated just from this, take it as a sign that the person thinks differently.

      I’ve met and am friends with people who struggle with hypotheticals and education isn’t the problem, just how their brain works.

      • @voxov7@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        Also, some hypotheticals don’t consider the inherent problem of a situation or ignores context, and therefor aren’t worth entertaining. Not all, just some. When that happens it’s best to explain why the hypothetical doesn’t work, which I suppose is entertaining it.

    • BarqsHasBite
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      111 year ago

      Because he’s an hourly worker he’s in the hourly mindset. You’d have to say your hourly rate would go up but only if you worked 32 hr/wk.

    • @MrVilliam@lemmy.world
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      51 year ago

      I like the idea of the 4 day workweek and would absolutely advocate for it, but I’m not sure how I personally would be affected by it. I do rotating 12 hour shift work to operate a power plant. I flip between 36 and 48 scheduled hours, 5 to 5 flipping between days and nights with a few days off between to flip my sleep schedule.

      Would my OT start after 32 hours instead of 40? Would my company hire more people to schedule me between 24 and 36 hour weeks as a result? Because I’m not sure they’d be down with paying 4 hours OT on the cheapest weeks of my labor, and 16 hours OT every other week. So they probably have me work less, but does this result in a one time 25% raise and then fall off over time as no further raises come?

      Idk, I would be fine either way because of how I budget, but I think these are valid questions that most hourly workers should be concerned about. I don’t think it’s such a simple concept, and companies will almost certainly find loopholes to exploit to fuck us like they did for the ACA.

  • @Jode@midwest.social
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    1 year ago

    I see this in a lot of places I do work:

    Toolboxes covered in union stickers, AND Trump stickers…

    • @Something_Complex@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      Mb it’s that period from your past life when you still deleting files to have space for you new one.

      They just don’t have the communicative havility to tell us, then ya forget.

      My new religion is this(it has some inspiration from previous ones but hey, tell me one that didn’t)

      • @HolyHell@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        21 year ago

        And to get rid of the craving for a bit. I say this while smoking a fag (glad I can say this without risk of admins banning me). I should probably quit l.

        • @johker216@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          If you knew saying that word could cause pain in others, why would you say it and further celebrate it? OP may not have meant their question this way, but your comment is how I identify people with poor emotional intelligence.

          • @HolyHell@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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            51 year ago

            Because it’s not a slur, it’s literally the word for a cigarette and that’s it. I’m not celebrating anything I’m just glad I don’t have to go back and edit my comments to avoid a completely unwarranted ban.

            • @johker216@lemmy.world
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              01 year ago

              In the English speaking world, it is a slur regardless of whether or not you use it as slang for a cigarette. Do you really believe that using a word is more important than making sure others don’t feel marginalized? Emotional intelligence is partly about empathy and using that to recognize harmful behavior. A sign of maturity and positive personal growth is realizing that your behavior causes others to feel unwelcome and correcting that behavior. It’s fortuitous that, in a thread about signs of poor education, we are having this discussion. Criticisms are learning experiences, not made with malice; malice is purposefully saying something harmful and celebrating it. Will your life truly be ruined by substituting that word so you don’t accidentally hurt someone?

              • @HolyHell@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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                1 year ago

                In England it is literally the word for a cigarette. I don’t know what to tell you, most people call it that here. It has no relation to the slur and has different origins. Next you’re going to tell me I can’t have faggots and mash for dinner tonight because you might cry.

                Also how inconsiderate of the bbc for using the word faggot on one of their own YouTube channels https://youtu.be/pVHbWHGVYaU

  • gordon
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    581 year ago

    Not understanding the marginal tax rate.

    • @triarius@programming.dev
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      I see so many educated people not realising this. The maths involved is something we learnt in ~ 5th grade, and I distinctly remember doing exercises on marginal rates in primary school in maths class. It’s even simpler than compound interest - which is a staple of maths class later on.

      Yet so many people say there’s a problem with the education system that it doesn’t teach practical skills like these. It clearly does, kids just don’t remember it. Maybe it’s because they don’t need to use this knowledge until almost a decade later.

      • @howrar@lemmy.ca
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        31 year ago

        I don’t remember ever having done this in school. In any case, the math is easy, yes. The hard part is knowing the rule that the government put in place for taxing you, and that’s something you just have to know. You can’t logic your way to it.

    • max
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      231 year ago

      Or being confident about disliking reading in general, whether be it fiction or scientific literature.

      • @marco@beehaw.org
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        41 year ago

        It’s “Kampf” … I have tried to read a few pages… It’s unreadable drivel.

        Fun fact: The book wasn’t available in Germany for decades, because upon Hitler’s suicide the copyright fell to the State of Bavaria. That recently expired and now you can find some heavily annotated versions.