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ericbomb, (edited ) in what are your fun, low stakes new year resolutions?

Gonna try and keep stuff to make smoothies in the house so when I get the urge for a smoothie instead of being sad because I have no smoothie I will instead have a smoothie.

pineapplelover, (edited ) in what are your fun, low stakes new year resolutions?

I will start applying for part time jobs (looking to get a remote or local job as IT help desk)

Edit: Hey OP, you should add durian a try. Lots of people don’t like the smell, especially if they’ve never experienced it when they were younger. However, it’s pretty delicious.

dingus, in How to pull rocks out of pipe in the ground?

Curious…why do you need to remove the rocks from the pipe?

Fiivemacs,

Maybe the clothesline doesn’t go far enough I to the ground hole to stand up straight.

sin_free_for_00_days,

She can’t slide the clothesline into the hole to set it up.

unoriginalsin, in WTF species of spider is this

Those are skulltulas.

Daxtron2,

chsk-chsk-chsk-chsk

Nachorella, in WTF species of spider is this

I recognise these little scamps. They’re pretty cute.

Rhynoplaz, in When/how do you think capitalism will be defeated?

When the poor have more money than the rich and are willing to give it up.

shinigamiookamiryuu, in When/how do you think capitalism will be defeated?

I wouldn’t say it’s necessarily better, but communist idiosyncrasies seem etched in all the most capitalist societies already, and this will almost certainly grow from that.

janus2, in What's your favorite instrument that really gets through to you?
@janus2@lemmy.zip avatar

Marimba

one of my friends rents one and played a few pieces for me. it was like existing outside of the rest of space and time. he’s really good at it and it just sounds magical

cheese_greater,

Reminded me about vibraphone ;)

jordanlund, in When/how do you think capitalism will be defeated?
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

“Defeated” implies being stopped by an external force, I don’t see that happening.

It will collapse under it’s own weight in less than a century.

Maeve,

Let’s hope it’s the next too big to fail/stock market crash.

shinigamiookamiryuu, in what's your new year promise?

I have many things I’ll try to strive for, but guarantees? Aside from finishing my studies and being more vocal about how I keep time, I couldn’t imagine being certain enough about something that it can translate into one.

DarkGamer, in When/how do you think capitalism will be defeated?
@DarkGamer@kbin.social avatar

Through abundance it will defeat itself by working too well. Approaching full automation the only way for capitalism to survive is via UBI, otherwise there will be no consumer markets. When we have enough productive capacity and sufficient UBI that everyone is wealthy without having to work, a society like the Federation from Star Trek becomes possible. When everyone has enough wealth that hoarding it becomes meaningless, we might achieve something like a communist society.

MxM111,
@MxM111@kbin.social avatar

"Hoarding" or controlling resources will be always meaningful. There is limited amount of accessible matter, and even if all basic needs of every human is satisfied, people have inspirations to do things, including BIG things, and for that they need resources. The only way we might have something like communist society is if AI takes control, and no human is controlling anything of a value. Kind of like a "Culture" series of books by M. Banks. Or if we go completely virtual, but even then, the computation resource is of the value...

Witchfire, in When/how do you think capitalism will be defeated?
@Witchfire@lemmy.world avatar

Climate change or nuclear war wiping out humanity

Jackthelad, in When/how do you think capitalism will be defeated?

Why would you want it defeated?

The most successful and happiest countries in the world are the Nordic countries, which are capitalist economies.

themurphy,

I think it’s because people see capitalism as one thing, while in reality they are implemented very differently.

The nordics are not successful only on their capitalism. It’s because it is regulated, and because the money is distributed more fair than in other countries.

ultranaut,

It’s probably not sustainable for one.

theluddite,
@theluddite@lemmy.ml avatar

The Nordic countries are also on Earth, which we are destroying. Some of their wealth comes directly from that destruction. Norway is the 5th and 3rd largest oil and natural gas exporter, respectively, making their happiness the result of good social policy that makes up for capitalist inequality which is directly funded by destroying the Earth and fueling capitalism elsewhere.

Even setting the climate aside (a ridiculous thing to do, really), the Nordic model isn’t possible to sustainably replicate elsewhere on Earth on capitalism’s own term, because we can’t make every country a net exporter of the most desired commodities for obvious reasons, or the beneficiary of complex historical circumstances, like neutrality during ww2 (Sweden), or a long-time colonial power (Denmark).

Put another way, there is no Nordic model available for Bangladesh, whose workers work six days a week in factories to make the cheap clothing that happy Norwegians wear. Norways needs Bangladeshes to keep their standard of living.

In a previous job, I spent a good amount of time in a Bangladeshi garment factory. That specific factory in which I worked had been on strike a few years prior, requesting a raise to dozens of dollars per month. That’s not a typo – per month!. The police fired into their picket line, killing and wounding hundreds. This fall, Bangladeshi garment workers went on strike again, demanding a tripling of the minimum wage from its current ~75USD per month.

The urban poverty that makes my life possible, so far away, out of sight and out of mind, is an absolute fucking disgrace. We should talk about it daily. When they go on strike, as those garment workers are now, every single westerner ought to strike in solidarity, even if motivated by nothing but shame. Instead, we don’t even know that it’s happening, at least in the anglosphere.

I’ve since become convinced that there’'s only one path to a just and verdant world – international solidarity. Communists and anarchists have filled libraries with ideas for what that might look like. I’ve read some tiny sliver of that corpus. If you actually want to know why some of us want capitalism defeated (beyond the anecdote that I just relayed), or if you’re curious how much better some of us think the world could be, I’d be happy to point you towards books that spoke to me.

ultra, (edited )

What books spoke to you?

theluddite, (edited )
@theluddite@lemmy.ml avatar

Going to give a wide range of answers based on topic, so you can pick up what interests you. Happy to give more if none of these appeal to you.

If you work in tech, Stafford Beer’s Designing Freedom. It’s very short, accessible, and full of so many big ideas about what computers are for that it exposes the tech industry’s absolute fucking poverty of vision.

If you’re interested in deep dives on more technical topics, David Graeber’s Debt. It’s a fucking tome, but it’s also amazing. So much of what we take for granted in our world is completely arbitrary and made up, but no less powerful, and there’s nothing quite as arbitrary and powerful as the concept of debt.

If reading a cinder block based on an internet stranger’s recommendation is too much for you, maybe try Graeber’s Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology, or his The Utopia of Rules instead, depending on which topic interests you more. Graeber is a great place to start because he’s accessible but also his mind isn’t limited by the confines of capitalist realism in a very special way. He was truly one of our best.

If you want something that’s extremely light and fiction, I recommend William Morris’s News from Nowhere. It’s extremely cringe in a way that only 100-year-old socialist utopian fiction could be. It’s excessively sincere, even naive, in a way that rings hollow to our cynical modern selves, but it’s such a short read, and it’s so adorable. I like the way that he challenges the concept of work. I think that the modern left should revive that line of criticism. I also enjoyed that you can see early versions of things that we associate with more modern movements in his utopian vision, especially degrowth and reforestation/environmentalism, not just for “the environment,” but with nature as a part of and inseparable from the human experience.

Finally, if you like philosophy, and you want in depth analyses of capitalism, and don’t mind something that’s maybe less accessible, I recommend Adorno and Horkheimer’s essay The Culture Industry. It was written in the 1940s, and it reads prescient today. They saw the rise of capitalist mass media as more than just a threat to independent thought, but a pacifying, homogenizing, almost all-consuming force. If you want something longer than The Culture Industry, and probably slightly less accessible, I recommend their Frankfurt School colleague Herbert Marcuse’s One Dimensional Man. He basically argues that capitalism, and more specifically what he calls “technical rationality,” has conquered our culture and our very ability to reason, at scales big and small.

ultra, (edited )

Do you own theluddite.org?

theluddite,
@theluddite@lemmy.ml avatar

Yup!

ultra,

Cool! I love your site!

theluddite,
@theluddite@lemmy.ml avatar

Aww thanks so much friend 💖 I’m so glad to hear that!!

aldalire,

This answer right here chief 👆

moon,

Cuz rich gets richer and they steal my wages. Fuck em.

CascadianGiraffe, in How to pull rocks out of pipe in the ground?

A coiled wire screwed to the end of the stick (like a spring). Jam over the rock and pull up.

Fiivemacs,

Or put silicone on tip of stick, glue to rock, cut stick, apply more silicone and repeat until empty.

Oha, in How to stop eating junk food?
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