Sicily - which has already been brought to its knees by a prolonged heatwave - is battling wildfires that are threatening towns and cities across the island.
Slash and burn farming is a common land clearing technique there ahead of the rainy season. It's the right time of year, but I dont know if that's what it is for sure. The current major conflict in the DRC is on the Eastern side, so I don't think it's that.
Even if he's not renting, buildings frequently border public sidewalks and other buildings. The permit process is there so they can verify that the company is taking steps to not accidentally kill someone, damage other property, or just block off the whole street and sidewalk while doing it.
There's a fair bit of risk that goes into building works and it's a good thing to have some basic processes around it.
I'll try it, assuming I remember to! Some of the possible side effects seem suspicious with conditions I have, but I guess I can go slow and watch. I keep meaning to check the markets to see if they have fresh ones again.
I just watched the first episode of the new Futurama season and the running gag was their attempt to make fun of the Hulu streaming network (Fulu)… in the year 3023. Not only that, but they also parody Black Mirror which itself parodies Netfix (Streamberry) in their latest season....
I guess you could call post-modernism and it's satire a consequence of capitalism. But I can't call it lazy. I think it's more of a "there are few opportunities for social critique and commentary where the source has enough means to survive backlash" issue.
And there's a lot worth critiquing about capitalism, I'm glad someone is doing it and able to live on it.
Ok, let's assume we do this, scatter the poor across the land.
How do those people, who typically are in greater need of healthcare, education, daily living assistance, transport assistance etc. due to not being able to afford preventative care going to access the services they need the most? I already hear about people in the US travelling many hours one way to see an insurance-authorised specialist for a chronic condition.
Doctors and social workers and teachers aren't exactly lining up to work in the Appalachian mountains. We are also more frequently hearing about industrial rural towns having their water contaminated through companies spilling and dumping waste. Scattering people across the land without sufficient infrastructure is an 'out of sight, out of mind' solution. Cities are the only places which have the resources to support people at larger scales for a variety of different issues, when people are also expected to work 40+ hours a week during standard business hours.
The repo and NFT itself is symbolic, it's just a digital signature on a contract. The people who are benefiting most from this are people laundering money who get to leverage traditional financial, legal and even extra-legal services with their equity. Even money is symbolic, given most of it doesn't physically exist and it may not even be pegged to a physical resource.
This is how, for instance, a Saudi prince might invest in a new business which he doesn't politically want to be seen as involved with. Should the business fail, the loan system ensures some form of potential loss recovery and debtor verification. Should the business succeed, nobody else needs to know and everyone is happy.
Good example of the Gestalt principle of proximity in action. Excellent shirt design, in my opinion. Maybe not the best choice for a professional context though?
"That billionaire worked hard to be the only person able to afford the best nutrition, education, healthcare and network. How dare you trivialise their efforts by just handing out rewards to everyone! The deservedly poor are just going to get all uppity!"
I think this has generally been the criticism. They feel it is a devaluation of their work to provide resources for or share them with others. The damage to them is from the increased competition for their tenuous social/financial status when they have a fairer fight.
You can see it even in the social media posts about "why do people flipping burgers deserve a slightly more liveable minimum wage when I had to sell my left kidney to buy my MBA!".
I appreciate the question was rhetorical, I just thought it was a good moment to discuss prosocial and antisocial motivations and how they manifest.
While this is true, I think it's more of a symptom of the in-group expanding when it acquires an easier-to-distinguish bullying target. Excluding the Irish and Italians in the US was (generally) more difficult than looking for melanin or hair texture, and as they lost their accents many could blend right in before being noticed. And once you're in, you're much harder to dehumanise. These days a "no Irish" sign would be quickly laughed off or removed, but they were everywhere in the US once.
Same problem with excluding poorer whites of all varieties from pools, you might be able to do it by looking at clothing, but even that's harder and there will be infiltrators to the niche in-group social sphere. The Great Gatsby infiltrating the ultra wealthy, and the kid from the wrong side of the tracks makes friends with less-poor kids at the community pool.
You can see it in England as well, the old-money Londoners will look down on another equally white English person for having an accent that indicates they're from Manchester or Sussex. Or even worse, gasp Yorkshire! I've seen that happen to Bavarian and Saxon Germans too - people ashamed to speak because their accent identified them as out-group.
I'm glad this is slowly changing as more historically out-group people make it into in-group leadership positions, and people aren't as shamed out of intercultural relationships. But I think that there will always be some arbitrary group of people who are considered to be the bottom of the social hierarchy. And those people will generally be the people who are most obviously different from the equally arbitrary 'ideal'. Like people who rely on assistive technology, or people who are very overweight, or people with 'bad' teeth.
Maybe in the future it will be all humans if we're conquered by an alien species who we can't easily blend in with. We'll all be inferior to the many-tentacled, who are clearly the superiorly limbed species.
The pool closures were a reaction of "I'm taking my ball and going home" that caught widespread attention and was easy to copycat for other small-town "elite" who resented being forced to treat out-group humans as in-group humans. It definitely a response to desegregation, which in itself is the deliberate barrier removal for a social out-group that is gaining widerspread acceptance. Which groups are the outgroup and ingroup change over locations and time, this time it could be roughly distilled to 'white' vs 'black'.
Pool closures are definitely still inseparable entirely for the context of the time, the civil rights movement and 'race relations' and slavery and the US. But the same patterns play out all over the world regardless of why one group has power and the other doesn't.
Small anecdote: one of my grandparents was concerned about my parents marriage. Because 'mixed marriages don't work' (actual words). Both of my parents are visually the same 'race', their family heritages are separated by around 2000km / 1250mi. Almost nobody in the world would think they are somehow 'different' in any significant way, let alone incompatibly different. It's really bizarre, but a hint of previous social expectations and how narrowly in-group and out-groups have been defined.
There’s a lot of to-do list apps, reminders, calendars etc out there advertised towards us to help us do things like break down large tasks into meaningful chunks and focus on what we need to do each day, but I want to hear from the community what do you guys think is the best so let’s start a thread
The whole island of Sicily covered by wildfires tonight. It's a catastrophe. Here is a satellite image. (feddit.uk)
Sicily - which has already been brought to its knees by a prolonged heatwave - is battling wildfires that are threatening towns and cities across the island.
This is Nova… (lemmy.world)
They were sole survivor of a traffic incident which killed their mom & siblings. Doing great a couple weeks later and growing fast!...
Musk failed to get the necessary permits to change Twitter’s building signage to X, and the police shut it down just in time for “er” to remain. (mastodon.social)
The awesome Taylor Lorenz reports this on Mastadon. Highly recommend to follow her if you like these updates about what’s going on.
The most extreme celestial objects in the universe (www.astronomy.com)
OC Avalokiteshvara, Bronze sculpture, China, 10th century
Location: China, Yunnan, Dali Kingdom (937-1253), 10th century...
Long COVID impacts brain function 2 years after infection - study (www.euronews.com)
OC 335B Smith Street, Singapore extending into low cloud
OC Slightly blurry not my puppy adorably nomming my arm.
Why are so many TV shows trying to be "meta" these days? I think it's lazy writing.
I just watched the first episode of the new Futurama season and the running gag was their attempt to make fun of the Hulu streaming network (Fulu)… in the year 3023. Not only that, but they also parody Black Mirror which itself parodies Netfix (Streamberry) in their latest season....
Rising rents, not mental-health issues or addiction, are driving homelessness, advocates say (www.msn.com)
Does anyone actually make money from stuff like this? (nftandgamefi.com)
This has to be a scam of some sort, but i don’t even see how the people at the top are making money.
She’s got a lot to say (i.imgur.com)
I'm getting mixed messages (lemmy.world)
Opinion | A radical idea: Just give kids lunch (wapo.st)
What are the best apps for managing ADHD?
There’s a lot of to-do list apps, reminders, calendars etc out there advertised towards us to help us do things like break down large tasks into meaningful chunks and focus on what we need to do each day, but I want to hear from the community what do you guys think is the best so let’s start a thread