• AngrilyEatingMuffins@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    UserDoesNotExist, what you’ve just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone on this website is now dumber for having read it. I award you one downvote, and may God have mercy on your soul.

      • I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        My dude, your argument boils down to “this is the way we’ve always done it so this is the way it must be”.

        Have you considered the possibility that if innovation were to slow, and companies DIDN’T insist on quarter-after-quarter growth, the world might just continue to turn? That while the richest individuals may be slightly less rich, the vast majority of people would continue their lives with no negative consequences?

          • Void_Reader@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Have you considered that this too might be an ‘experiment’?

            Defenders of monarchy and the divine right of kings used to argue the exact same thing - that we tried democracy before and it failed in the Roman Republic and Ancient Greece - so clearly feudal monarchy is the best, right?

            Yet here we are, experimenting again.

            Why is this joke of a system the ideal? It doesn’t produce innovation - most of the stuff that led to the internet and modern computing came out of DARPA and various govt funded universities. All of our space advancements were from state-run NASA and the Soviet space programme. The wealthy CEO types only start ‘innovating’ after taxpayers fund most of the R&D. Same with medical advancements, material science, physics - almost every single positive innovation has come from state-run, taxpayer-funded, or non-profit institutions.

            Maybe try reading a little bit more about all this innovation you seem so fond of:

            https://academic.oup.com/ser/article/7/3/459/1693191

            https://demos.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/files/Entrepreneurial_State_-_web.pdf

            https://yewtu.be/watch?v=oLLxpAZzy0s

              • Void_Reader@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                None of those links are about Chemistry or Physics. The demos link is Economics, The Entrepreneurial State. The youtube link is about the history of the internet. Maybe try learning something that isn’t STEM. Might broaden your way of thinking.

                I’ll respond to the rest of your comment later, although I’m not sure I want to anymore since you clearly have no interest in taking into account new information.

                Also how the fuck can you be interested in technology and say something like this:

                Because most of it was useless. What kind of innovation did. space exploration bring to humans?

                If you know anything about any science you should know how stupid of a point this is

                  • Void_Reader@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    Yes, unfortunately I am extremely stubborn. Sorry.

                    Fair, you do you mate

                    Because rockets are boring. Bubble and stuff is just extraordinary craftsmanship and black matter will take some time. And I overall hate relativity theory. I am hoping for gravitons. Wave functions rock.

                    Well, have fun with that, I will stop arguing.

                    Not stupid. Some sciences simply are idiotic. Do you have any idea how much I hate biologists. Entitled brats. Some of them have an extreme superiority complex. And don’t get my talking about physicists. Buch of weirdos. You should see physicists interact with biologists. It like two different species encountering each other. But communication attempts are futile.

                    llmaooo you should do science-themed standup

                    I only know three biologists and they are lovely people. Never seen them interact with physicists though so you may be right.

          • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            And sooner or later I will hopefully have children.

            And when the average summer day is 60c and crops fail every single year, and Nestle has taken half our drinking water, and the smoke in the air from wildfires is giving everyone asthma, and deadly storms happen year round, and the coasts erode, and wars break out for the remaining water/etc, what will you tell them? Will you tell them to look at the brilliant ‘innovator’ CEO’s who intentionally shut down electric cars? The CEO’s who found out climate change was happening sixty years ago and intentionally hid it to keep themselves rich, what do you tell your kids about that?

            What innovation is worth your children dying early?

              • xts@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                I don’t believe that those scenarios are that plausible.

                lol i think they said the same thing about the Titanic sinking. also the submarine guy said the same thing about it imploding.

                Hmm 🤔

                also all evidence that’s not conservative propaganda points to us hitting the worst possible outcomes when it comes to climate change. Read the IPCC reports and the worst case scenarios listed within. That’s what’s going to happen over the next ~40 years

          • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            You know, as a member of the SSBN force, occasionally during thermonuclear launch exercises I take a moment to regret the death of humanity and the biosphere. People like you, on the other hand, are what steels my resolve to flip the switch with gusto. I hope you know that I’ll be thinking of you, should I receive the order to commence procedures to launch.

              • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Shipmate, I am a Navigation Electronic Technician First Class Petty Officer, fully qualified in both submarines and in my rating. I have been on five strategic alert deterrent patrols over the last three years. I’ve been through fires, flooding, and steam line ruptures. When we set condition 1SQ for Strategic Launch during WSRT, I was the one at the consoles conducting the procedures to do so. I’ve been a helmsman, planesman, Strategic Navigation Technician, and Quartermaster of the Watch.

                Of course I wouldn’t have internet while submerged or at sea. Have you ever heard of in-port periods?

                Fragile personality or not, I’m the sailor at the switch. What have you done with your life, shipmate?

                • prole
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                  1 year ago

                  Don’t let the troll get to you… I’ve had someone on here a week or so ago tell me I was lying about my expertise. It’s almost like they’re all taking lessons from the same people.

                  • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    Thanks. And yeah, they’re probably just trying the tried and true War Thunder and Discord method. Or they’re not taking lessons from the same people, they are the same people. Who knows?

                  • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    Shipmate, if you look in my post history I literally did an AMA about my profession about a month ago, and a Machinists Mate Chief even jumped in to contribute. I haven’t disclosed any ships movement, naval nuclear propulsion information or even controlled unclassified information. I keep my personal electronic devices physically far, far away from any work device, and we never cross the streams, as the saying goes.

                  • wanderingmagus@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    And for the record, best of luck in your studies. I hold no personal animosity, and a great deal of professional respect, for my counterparts in other militaries. We all have a job to do. If that means one of us has to shoot torpedoes at the other, we’ll cross that bridge when the time comes. I do think, however, that you should never underestimate the willingness of the US to go to great lengths to do what it thinks is necessary.

      • Decoy321@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Do you not understand the system at live in is actively dooming us all? Why are you so vehemently defending it? Especially when you can acknowledge that other systems can exist?

        Why would you think that companies going bankrupt is somehow worse than people being increasingly unable to live.

          • 80085@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I cannot imagine a system that would lead to more freedom, better education or innovation.

            LOL.

            Even though I acknowledge that other systems have been tried in the past, I also believe that all of them, except capitalism with a few social tweaks, have failed.

            Capitalism fails every ~8 years requiring the use of vast amounts of public funds to keep afloat. I’d also say if fails daily if you look at all the needless suffering occuring in the world today, especially in the most “free market” countries and the countries these exploit. We have “socialism for the rich, capitalism for everyone else,” as Jon Stewart would say.

              • 80085@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Most leftists in the U.S. are democratic socialists, social democrats, are some flavor of anarchists; not authoritarian socialists… Most do not think violence is necessary, except for protection against the increasingly fascist right-wing. Many believe it’s possible to move closer to a socialist-like society by building mutual-aid networks and communities, and promoting candidates for government positions that align with their values; not through a violent revolution.

                And yes, I would prefer systems closer to Scandinavian countries, which the right-wing here calls socialism. Ideally, I would like to see some kind of real socialism where the workers own the means of production (factories, stores, farms, etc) and controls it through democratic processes, not the investor-shareholders or the government. I think the term is anarcho-syndicalism, but I doubt that will happen in my lifetime.

          • Jimbo@yiffit.net
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            1 year ago

            Hey guy uhhh

            Check the planet. It is literally burning right now and we are all going to either die, or have our lives massively changed by this climate catastrophe.

          • 3N1GMA@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Lol people like you that believe humanity will always overcome make me laugh. Talk to any environmental scientist and they will tell you we’re fucked. There’s no secret technology coming to save us.

              • prole
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                1 year ago

                But the earth has seen higher levels of carbon already. It has seen higher temperatures and lower temperatures. And we humans inhabit many climate zones already.

                This is like the “They can just sell their house and move” thing Ben Shapiro said about what people who live on climate change affected coasts will do. Who will they sell their house to, Ben??

                Humans can inhabit many climate zones, but several of them will become uninhabitable. The ones that contain the most people. And those people have to go somewhere. And all of the food that used to be produced in that place is gone. All of the ecosystems in those areas die, etc. etc.

                This is the “war and famine” part of climate change that people don’t often talk about. Most of the death and chaos isn’t going to be from people literally immediately burning up to death, it’s from the secondary effects of rising temperatures, drought, killing entire ecosystems, and forcing billions of people to leave their homes or die. And the migrant crises that come with all of that. If you thought Syria was bad…

                And you’re right, the earth has seen higher levels of carbon. The earth itself will probably be OK.

                  • prole
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                    1 year ago

                    Wow, how much time did you waste on this one? Keep going, maybe I’ll actually read the next one.

          • Void_Reader@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            The ‘future’ is not inevitable. There have been countless collapses in history. Our technology doesn’t make us immune. The people of the major Bronze Age powers probably thought the same.

            Also we do not have the means for weather engineering. If you’re talking about SRM, we have no idea what its consequences will be or how to do it effectively. It’s all theoretical. No aircraft we currently have can do this stuff. Sure, we could design it and build one, but then you need global governance to actually implement it properly. Not to mention the risk of ‘termination shock’ and countless others.

            Have a look at the scientific literature: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Stratospheric-aerosol-injection-tactics-and-costs-Smith-Wagner/e4e5a78335eda8c16557b32af915798b06091362#cited-papers

            Would you seriously risk the future of life on Earth on something this experimental?

            I fear this arrogance will kill a lot of people and cause a lot of suffering.

              • Void_Reader@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Firstly, that isn’t ‘already done’. It’s a PR statement from the Chinese government about plans. The stuff they have already done, like reducing hail etc., is nowhere near the same level to what is needed to stop climate change.

                Secondly,

                Radical solutions such as seeding the atmosphere with reflective particles could theoretically help reduce temperatures, but could also have major unforeseen consequences, and many experts fear what could happen were a country to experiment with such techniques.

                This is from your source ^

                So is this:

                In a paper last year, researchers at National Taiwan University said that the “lack of proper coordination of weather modification activity (could) lead to charges of ‘rain stealing’ between neighboring regions,” both within China and with other countries. They also pointed to the lack of a “system of checks and balances to facilitate the implementation of potentially controversial projects.”

                Think of the geopolitical mess this kind of thing would create. If it works that is.

                  • Void_Reader@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    Sure, I like the idea of space megaprojects. I doubt sunsails in orbit would be profitable though. How would you monetise it? Put massive ads on them? Charge everyone a subscription fee?

                    Now, governments could probably do something like that, and I wouldn’t be against it if safety and unintended consequences were taken into account somehow.

                    Also, I thought you believed space exploration tech was useless.

                    I agree there are many solutions. I don’t think markets and capital are going to make them happen.

                    We can probably buy time with tech solutions. Long-term solutions will have to involve major fundamental sociopolitical change.