Mr_Fish

joined 2 years ago
[–] Mr_Fish@lemmy.world 18 points 1 day ago (1 children)

It's like how in the Shrek universe, dragons and donkeys are the same species.

[–] Mr_Fish@lemmy.world 10 points 1 day ago (4 children)

Can you tell me precisely what Ukraine did to provoke Russia into invading, other than just historically being part of the Russian empire?

[–] Mr_Fish@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago

I'm presuming that this is me choosing a name for myself, not what would my name be if I was born a girl.

My name does have a feminine version (Joseph => Josephine), but I'm not really a fan of gender swap versions of names, so it wouldn't be that. I'd probably go for something biblical like Deborah or Esther.

[–] Mr_Fish@lemmy.world 1 points 3 days ago

Honestly I kinda stumbled into my specific career. I've known I enjoy working with computers for a while, so I took digital tech class all through high school. I went to uni thinking I'd do mechatronics engineering, but that needs chemistry so fuck that. I then switched to software engineering, but then I saw the timetable of some second year engineering friends I had, then said fuck that. Then I switched to computer science for the next year, planning to go into researching ai (this was in 2020, don't judge too hard), but dropped out for my mental health. Then a family friend at my church offered me a position doing automation/efficiency programming, which was better than the pool attendant job I had at the time. I've been there since.

Also, if you're not sure what to do, don't feel guilty about taking a gap year. Take that year, earn some money, figure out what you enjoy doing. And don't feel like you have to go to uni. Polytech and trades are just as good as uni.

[–] Mr_Fish@lemmy.world -5 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Don't expect funny from jankforlife. The best you can get is "America bad therefore soviets good"

[–] Mr_Fish@lemmy.world -5 points 1 week ago

advocating for voting in genocidal right wingers

I am advocating for using your vote to reduce human cost as much as possible. What that means depends on the context.

If you're in America, the decision right now is between one genocide, two genocides, or refusing to have an impact on that decision with how impossible the system is for third parties. One less genocide is the least bad option, unless you have a better one.

If you're in New Zealand (where I live, so I'm more familiar with the politics here than anywhere else), there are multiple options because of MMP voting. That means I won't be advocating for voting in genocidal right wingers.

citation needed

Labour coalitions have historically been the governments that have had the best impact on workers rights. At least far more than national coalitions.

Also, don't think I'm saying you should vote for labour next year. Labour is shit, vote for someone better

[–] Mr_Fish@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

"Very cheap" in terms of time, effort, money, and opportunity cost for each individual involved

[–] Mr_Fish@lemmy.world -2 points 1 week ago

OK maybe I read that wrong. The way I interpreted it, I read "electoralism" as using voting as a primary tool. Using that definition, I agree with that paragraph. Voting alone is nowhere near enough to produce real change.

But if the definition of "electoralism" is using voting in addition to direct action, I don't think that paragraph gives much reasoning behind itself. It's a good statement, but it needs more backing it up

[–] Mr_Fish@lemmy.world -4 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Mate, I read the whole thing. The only claim I saw as to why voting is counter productive is that "voting convinces people that they've done all they need to" idea, which I think is flawed. All the other arguments are talking about voting having low impact and it can't fundamentally change things.

Please, if there is another part that I missed, tell me what it is, whether that's something backing up the complacency claim or another claim entirely. I'd love to be proven wrong here.

[–] Mr_Fish@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Non stick: alright for eggs and other relatively low temperature stuff. Make sure you only use rubber, plastic, or other soft utensils, and never clean it with a scraper or steel wool. The surface of the non stick is fine as far as I know, but if you go deeper by getting too hot or scraping with something too hard, you can expose the toxic chemicals.

Stainless: my go to. Use whatever utensils you want, and clean it however you want. The main thing to make it non stick is heat the pan up hot enough that when you splash a bit of water on it, it beads up and scatters. Then use plenty of oil. The main downside is you usually can't put them in the oven.

Cast iron: better in use than stainless, but harder to clean. Upside is you can use whatever with them, and you can swap between oven and stove. Downside is you can't clean them the same way as anything else.

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