Ven, they/them

  • 11 Posts
  • 17 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • I mean, I very much get how it feels that way given the current political climate, but the data does indicate Americans have gotten more open-minded over time, especially about racial/cultural differences.

    And this study specifically notes a huge shift in rhetoric about immigration between 1945-1965 - correlating with the big boom in travel in the 40s, post WWII, and jet travel coming into play in the 50s-60s - two of the biggest increases in American travel. And the overall trend positive has continued, despite the increased polarization in the last couple decades.

    I’m not at all saying that increased travel caused all of this, correlation is not causation and society is way more complex than that. But the trends are there, at least.


  • Personally, I rather prefer Maya Angelou’s take-

    “Perhaps travel cannot prevent bigotry, but by demonstrating that all peoples cry, laugh, eat, worry, and die, it can introduce the idea that if we try and understand each other, we may even become friends.”

    Travel is not some magical, all-powerful cure for the ills of the traveller or the world. And when done without care, without awareness, it can do a great deal of harm. But it is also a powerful tool to foster connection, which in turn breeds understanding. And that is dearly needed in our world.







  • Love it, but it has pretty niche utility.

    It’s great for improving frest fruit/vegetable access in small urban communities, without massive transportation costs and preservative use.

    Also very cool for small, isolated environments like ocean voyages and space, where production space is severely limited.

    And extremely interesting from an ecological perspective when combined with a full circle microsystem, as in aquaculture.

    But overall, it remains wildly inefficient for large scale agriculture needs.




  • TX lawmakers are going to doom the state, again. “make no mistake, the 9th largest economy in the world runs on natural gas” - more like the largest laughing stock in the world blacked out the whole state on natural gas…

    Wind was hit far less by the 2021 freeze, and solar was hardly impacted at all. Meanwhile, they continue to advocate for overreliance on under equipped natural gas facilities that completely failed to maintain functionality - shutting down TX for days, and killing 200 people as a result. Solar is the best option they have to prevent it from happening again, short of a total power grid overhaul, but instead of celebrating growth there, they decide to fearmonger about scary renewables.




  • Do you remember how long ago you saw it? Everything I’m aware of for furniture disappeared or went for-profit years ago.

    Someone’s already mentioned Opendesk, which mysteriously cut off access to files with a “we’ll email everyone when they come back!”. Spoilers, they did not come back, its been nearly 5 years. Instead they started selling furniture by request and partnering with fabrication services. There are some others that were similar, AtFab, fabsie, opendesign (which I think was a wiki, so maybe that was the one posted?)… but none are still active and the websites/links are dead or replaced by something different using the name. You can still find designs on github though, and some on Pintrest, of all places.

    Here is one such repository of Opendesk’s designs: https://github.com/timrolls/Opendesk . Go forth and fab freely.





  • I voted to enable because I think it’s worth seeing how restoring downvotes goes, but if the feature gets abused to bully or brigade I’m all for turning them right back off. I also think that even though voting rules aren’t really enforceable, it would be good to add voting etiquette to the instance wiki as a guideline to help discourage downvoting excessively, or for asking questions & other benign things.

    Really I hope the ability is added to restrict who can downvote, or at least to disable federation for downvotes. That would be the best option imo.


  • Personally, as it currently stands, no. But it could potentially be, given better waste treatment practices and far better regulation and consistently enforced safety requirements.

    It’s far greener than fossil fuels, when run carefully at least. But between the persistent issues with waste reclamation and harmful leakage, and the massive amount of damage that can be done when mistakes are made or safety is overlooked, I don’t think it qualifies as “green”.

    So from a practical standpoint, I still think new resources are better spent developing infrastructure for solar, wind, geothermal, etc. But as we are phasing out other power sources, pretty much everything else should go before we start to decommission nuclear.