[-] mintyfrog@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

Communities with older people. I still need Reddit for communities on old motorcycles, cars, etc

[-] mintyfrog@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You're kind of arguing against the foundation of human society. If we're all required to "do our own research" about things, where does that requirement end?

Yes, you should do your own research. How much research you need to do depends on the subject matter, how critical it is, and the potential for motivation to mislead you. I can't tell you where that ends, but for politics and news I am of the opinion that it should end a lot later than trusting a random stranger to censor your access to content.

How can I buy food if I have to do my own research on what's healthy or what's dangerous?

You probably should research this.

What about my tap water?

Yeah, you probably should also research this before drinking it because of how critical it is. Maybe get it tested or read your city's water test results. Do they have motivation to mislead you?

How can I put gas in my car? Use electricity? A computer? A phone?

I'm not sure what the struggle is here.

Somewhere along the way you have to trust the systems that have been built by the people before us to function, and for people who work in those fields who are experts to use their expertise.

Yes and no. Should you see inconsistencies, you should probably verify that what you're trusting is accurate. Inconsistencies like blocking wikileaks on a qanon blocklist. However, what you're talking about isn't even the case here. We're talking about a blocklist maintained by strangers on the internet.

[-] mintyfrog@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

Even if what you're saying is true, you're now relying on someone else (or a group of people) to censor sites you wouldn't like and also not be susceptible to those things when creating this blocklist. You're ignoring the risks associated with false positives. You can't outsource your own critical thinking.

[-] mintyfrog@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Nope. The linked list does. Check the URLs. WikiLeaks is blocked.

[-] mintyfrog@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

Disagreeing with general consensus ≠ wrong

An entire country being contrary just because of national pride and arrogance is completely different.

Is it your position that all countries should have the same language regardless of their cultural history?

Also, it isn't rooted in national pride or arrogance. Aluminum came first and was the name given by the first chemist - a British scientist - to isolate the metal. The variant aluminium came from a reviewer who changed the spelling just because he liked the sound better. Aluminum was recognized by ACS 65 years before IUPAC standardized to aluminum. IUPAC has recognized aluminum as an acceptable spelling since 1993. So yeah, the general concensus is the aluminum is okay even based on your logic because IUPAC says so.

[-] mintyfrog@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

In what poor country are cars banned?

Funny how you respond to just this comment but not the others.

What bus is going to run to bring farmers to massive farms, miles apart?

[-] mintyfrog@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

As opposed to....? Are you saying that collective ownership over the means of production would solve this problem, or that under communism people just simply wouldn't be able to have cars?

[-] mintyfrog@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

I agree with your edit. Those below the poverty line shouldn't/can't finance an EV battery. Combustion cars can be purchased for ~$500 and are usually fixable for only a few hundred dollars with enough time and tools. Most engine problems are more expensive in labor than in parts, so almost anyone can fix for cheap with YouTube tutorials. If all else fails, junk yards are full of parts, including engines and transmissions.

Even if EVs may have better reliability, when it comes time to sell it, someone in poverty can't afford to buy and fix it. The raw materials in the battery are worth too much, and the batteries don't last forever.

People may not have (or have access to) banking, financing, etc and shouldn't need to finance everything in their life. Financing is like a tax on the poor.

Hopefully these things change in the future, public transit improves, we make combustion cars cleaner, or batteries get cheaper, but right now it's the poorest that will be paying most for this environmental crisis.

[-] mintyfrog@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

My guess is it's 6 users that they've identified as doing a bunch of distribution but only have their reddit names to identify them

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mintyfrog

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