Belief doesn't need confirmation, but knowledge assumes some confirmation.
Hedup
How many of those plants do ppl use in their daily lives? vs How many of those corporate products do they use in their daily lives?
Sounds like a lot of pain. Not sure if its worth it.
What if those 90% split into 45% and 45%? Then you need those 10% crazies to govern.
Hmm, looks like any AI we develop is destined to go back to GOFAI with a bunch of IFs and THENs.
Yeah, I wanted to read an article that I found in a search engine, but the og website had it removed now. I went to internet archive, but it didn't have it fetched unfortunately.
Perfect opportunity to do something, get impeached (including dems) and rally behind a new canditate.
Of course Biden shouldn't do anything heinous, but he definitely should do something earthshaking against either Republican party or the Supreme Court just to make a point.
I don't post almost anything online. I mostly just comment. But even the comments I make I sometimes consume as content - I really like comming back and rereading them to enjoy how good and smart I've been.
Lemmy is an improvement on Reddit, but imo not by much. There really is no innovation on the fundamental concept of subreddits/communities. The issue with Lemmy is that I've come across so many promising communities that quickly die off after the initial spurt of activity. I wonder if there is a better organic way to grow the "online discussion" from some form of general cespool, that can segementize only later when those needed segments (communities) emerge naturally.
I think a good way to cope is to identify what you believe to be the main cause of this and then identify real actions that will fight against it. Most important is that it is something actionable where you can do real things to fight. No matter how radical.