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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: January 1st, 2024

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  • I’ve seen this and known the end was coming since I was a teenager 25 years ago.

    Who care about consumer spending when I’ve been watching the current biosphere die off for my whole adult life?

    I’m supposed to save for a future in a society that’s pretty obviously collapsing as the biosphere deteriorates?

    I don’t have zero hope for the future but the idea that this current infinite expansion system can continue is obviously wrong.


  • Literally boots.

    Work boots for my jobs doing physical labor. I would spend around or slightly under $100 every year for a new pair because theater, construction and pest control destroyed a pair a year.

    Then I bought Redwings for close to $300. They lasted 3 years before the pandemic and likely would continue to last in those types of career for years to come.






  • There’s been a documented decline of about 70% in animal populations, the amount of weather and climate related destruction has demonstrably increased, there’s traces of plastic and forever chemicals almost literally all over, Australia was on fire for half a year, wildfires are increasing in frequency in the western US, hurricanes are coming with increasing frequency and intensity from the gulf up the Atlantic.

    There’s also the fires that tore across Greece, the tornadoes forming in states in the US that have seemingly never had them before, the massive loss of ice from Arctic and Antarctic areas of the world.

    This is just a small smattering of the things I remember from recently.

    I’m not saying that next year everything is going to immediately collapse. But I can see the stability of the ecosphere dissolving in front of me and there are quite a few nations that seem like they are leaning towards collapse if history is any judge of things.





  • karashta@kbin.socialtoShowerthoughts@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    10 months ago

    “Walden (/ˈwɔːldən/; first published in 1854 as Walden; or, Life in the Woods) is a book by American transcendentalist writer Henry David Thoreau. The text is a reflection upon the author’s simple living in natural surroundings. The work is part personal declaration of independence, social experiment, voyage of spiritual discovery, satire, and—to some degree—a manual for self-reliance.[2]”

    It’s his “independence” and “self reliance” parts that make him a hypocrite

    This doesn’t invalidate everything he says and does.

    But it’s really easy to be “independent” when someone else foots the bill for the land you’re living on and you mom does your laundry for you.




  • The issue isn’t the amount of money in circulation. Who do you think controls the prices that thereby makes your money worth less? It’s not demand from the consumer, it’s greed from the seller. Going back on a peg to gold would just mean less poor people have even less money.

    It also cripples the functioning of the federal government by creating a financial restraint. The only real constraint on the US federal government and those like it is resources. Granted, everyone still pushes the false narrative that the federal government needs to collect the money it creates before spending it and barely anyone questions this. Governments suspended the gold standard when they wanted to anyway: see FDR’s actions during WW2 as an example.

    The real issue is the absolute greed and psychopathic lust for power of the elite. We need to take back our own governments and tax these people out of their wealth and thereby reduce their power and influence.