1335
Did you pay your taxes? (sh.itjust.works)

Related: Robert Reich posted earlier today that Tesla paid ZERO taxes on $5 billion in sales (earnings?), so that’s just fucking great.

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Couldn't they also be a mathematician? The Pointcarré recurrence theorem is a good example of infinite rate in a fixed dimensional space. Also, that quote really oversimplifies environmental engineering, the ozone layer has been fixed by the kyoto convention because every person with the simplest understanding of the carbon cycle can understand why the earth has been able to sustain ressource consumption for all animals and can still do so for a very long time still, infinitely or not.

[-] SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 19 hours ago* (last edited 19 hours ago)

Animals don't grow infinitely. If their population surpasses capacity, they have a mass die-off

I don't know why you bring in the ozone layer here. That was not a problem that had anything to do with reaource consumption.

[-] tetris11@feddit.uk 2 points 20 hours ago

Ozone was fixed because the cost of shifting to a different gas was economically viable for largely Western countries.

The Montreal protocol was still impressive though as something that many countries could agree on without it becoming political. Ah, simpler times.

Haha, i agree, and thank you for the correction, my memory is not what it used to be, the montreal protocol did fix the ozone layer problem, the kyoto protocol adressed different issues, my error. Hopefully common sense will shift regarding the assumption that nuclear energy is bad, in my view, it is the only way to sustain humankind as we move past the recent start of the fifth industrial revolution. Humanists like Marx, Keynes and Rifkin seem to agree that the hopeful (and paradoxially very unlikely) sixth will be the death of work but I still have to see how things advance before I start believing into it.

China has shown a lot of promise thus far with their carbon reduction and development of small scale nuclear reactors, and hopefully someone will fix the fission theory someday. And concerning the simpler times, things are strange indeed in the future we live.

[-] adb@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 day ago

IMHO mathematicians go into the madman category.

[-] dmention7@midwest.social 2 points 21 hours ago
[-] Pee_comes_from_the_balls@lemmy.world 1 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago)

At times when we cannot understand the causality of a problem, it is better to acknowledge what we know, and more importantly, what we do not know rather than to create narratives from ignorance. I hope that my words will find you in a tone of compassion, not as an attempt to be classist or make you think that your grasp of reality is not valid.

Rest, and relax, math is not the issue here, the problem is ignorance. What you have just posted a tribalistic fallacy believing that things are simple, us vs them and the system being akin to big brother, this is a normal human behavior that some describe as Projective Identification. Nature is more complex than we think and so is a reality in which over 8 000 000 000 exist, and all pitch in to the pool of what the future will always carry back to us. Wether positive or negative.

this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2026
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