Probably much more even, if multiple people live in one apartment.
woodenghost [comrade/them]
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woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Antiwork@lemmy.ml•Declaration of Educational Warfare3·2 months agoYes, have you heard of Paulo Freires Pedagogy of the Oppressed? Some central points: liberation must come from the oppressed and not be imposed externally, rejecting internalized oppression is necessary to reclaim our humanity, awareness of economical contradictions in order to become active to change them, praxis as the combination of reflection and action. Also much more.
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What task would you excel in if you lived in the Stone Age?2·2 months agoOkay, I’ll be the silent part
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What task would you excel in if you lived in the Stone Age?4·2 months agoJuggling. I’d find some nice stones or pinecones and teach everyone how to juggle and do some tricks. I also know an ancient game you can play with stones or knuckle bones. And I know some songs. And stories. People in the stone age had lots of free time to pass, so all of these would come in handy.
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What are some places in Europe with a low price level and worth traveling to?1·2 months agoI think, Venice is still the only city literally charging an entrance fee. They do that, because they got more tourists, than the city could handle. But I think what you have heard might be about tourist taxes. Many cities charge those per night. But you won’t notice it directly, it’s just that, if you’re staying in a hotel, they’ll automatically add it to the price of the room.
I second Prague. It’s beautiful and worth it whether you come for the history or the culture or the atmosphere.
Crows are so shy, it’s too cute! They’re like cats, if you stare at them or lock eyes, they get really nervous. So slowly close your eyes and look away to put then at ease. If you pull out food they like, like peanuts in their shell, you can almost see a little exclamation mark appearing above their heads, like 🥜 ❗ 🐦⬛
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Name one thing you don't believe in, but you wish was actually true.19·4 months agoAn afterlife. Might be nice.
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•To what extent is this accurate?7·5 months agoYou’re out of touch with reality with this idealist conception of wages as a result of knowledge. The value of labor is the cost of its reproduction. Capitalists pay workers exactly as much as they need to for them to turn up again the next morning. Knowledge does not directly factor into their calculation. Don’t expect to be rewarded for the work you put into your education - the system isn’t fair and doesn’t work like that.
Instead, wages are the result of a collective power struggle between labor and capital. High wages occur either when labor is strong and capital weak or when you betray other workers and aid capital in their exploitation.
Now expert knowledge is one of many things that might help by increasing bargaining power in the struggle with capital, but it’s neither necessary nor sufficient. For example an automotive engineer might have just as much knowledge as a chemical engineer, but where I live, chemistry earns you about 50% more, because the chemistry union is stronger.
So union power, strikes and social movements are a big factor. Others are location, the average rent, international competition, the reserve army of labor. At any specific time, the boom and bust cycle of periodic crisis strongly effects wages.
The organic composition of capital plays an indirect role: If the degree of automation suddenly rises, this will lower workers bargaining power short term and lower profits long term which increases pressure on wages.
So if you want a career with stable, high wages but don’t want to help exploit others, look for sectors with a long-term chance of a strong bargaining position for labor.
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Memes@lemmy.ml•Mark Twain - Travel is fatal to prejudice.1·5 months agoTwain also wrote often about meeting annoying US tourists on his travels and going out of his way to avoid them. For example in “A Tramp Abroad”, after describing a particular annoying interaction with one he writes:
And away he went. He went uninjured, too—I had the murderous impulse to harpoon him in the back with my alpenstock, but as I raised the weapon the disposition left me; I found I hadn’t the heart to kill him, he was such a joyous, innocent, good-natured numbskull.
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's a luxury that would break you if were no longer able to have it?11·5 months agoPrivate space. I used to share one room with my siblings. It was alright as a child, but I don’t want to go back. And I know that many families around the world have very little space for two, three or four generations living under a roof.
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What percentage of Reddit users are bots or foreign bad actors?3·5 months agoIf reddit and lemmy (to a lesser degree obviously) have anything in common, it’s that they both desperately need perspectives from outside the US to be heard more. I mean just knowing what is meant by “foreign”, shouldn’t happen. Like foreign to which country? Oh of course the global hegemon again… Why is this the default on an anti-imperialist site?
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Since Pi is infinite and non-repeating, would that mean any finite sequence of non-repeating numbers should appear somewhere in Pi?4·5 months agoIt’s remarkable how there are uncountably many non-normal numbers, yet they take up no space at all in the real numbers (form a null set), since almost all numbers are normal. And despite this, we can only prove normality for some specific classes of examples.
It helps me to think, how there are many “totally random” or non computable numbers, that are not normal because they don’t contain the digit 1.
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Why is it in popular imagining, that ghosts are {MOSTLY} depicted as miserable lonely sad folks that are stuck to the places they've died in?5·6 months agoBecause they are old. Ghosts are just the anthropomorphic manifestation of people’s fear of growing old. Religious framings are just an add on.
Trauma and grief can’t run their course if your mind is so senile and your short term memory so feeble, that you’re basically forced to live in the past. Forever repeating old arguments, reliving past trauma and never overcoming old fears. With your mind so set in it’s tracks, that you can’t even imagine leaving the place where you lived all your live — your “old haunt” so to speak. How could you live in the present, if you can’t even recognize your own children half of the time? But the long term memory often still works. Ghosts are real and if you’re lucky enough to live that long you might well become one. Of course aging isn’t always like this, it can be graceful and dignified but when it isn’t, that’s what people are afraid of.
People are scared, when they see older relatives acting stranger every day, especially in times before any way to diagnose Alzheimer’s and other forms of neural degradation. They might seem like they are not quite here anymore, like the person they were had long since died and yet, something lingers. Ghost stories are a socially acceptable way to express those fears.
Just observe the effects ghosts have on their victims: first, they are reminded of their own mortality. Then their hair suddenly turns white or gray or falls out, they lose sleep, wake up tired or grow old over night. They might lose their mind or die themselves. That’s all just normal aging.
Here is a handy key to select monsters and their meaning:
- ghosts 👻: aging, death, old people
- vampires(folk believe): plague, infection
- vampires(literature): landlords, feudalism
- zombies(modern): alienation, capitalism
- witches: women who stand up to patriarchy
- Frankenstein’s monster: the proletariat gaining class consciousness (no seriously)
I recommend the podcast “the horror vanguard” for details.
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•If dolphins were discovered to be able to understand democracy and you were tasked to train/teach dolphins how it works, what method of voting would you designate for them?2·7 months agoAh, that makes sense, thanks for taking the time!
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•If dolphins were discovered to be able to understand democracy and you were tasked to train/teach dolphins how it works, what method of voting would you designate for them?4·7 months agoGood effort comment, thanks! Are you sure about merit based evaluation for MJ? Wouldn’t people just strategically exaggerate their grades?
MJ encourages honest evaluation because exaggerating grades can backfire if too many others don’t follow suit.
I guess I don’t quite understand this point. Why wouldn’t everyone exaggerate grades?
Dolphin liberals would just tell all the dolphins to give dolphin Harris an excellent grade, insisting she was excellent in comparison to dolphin Trump. (Sorry to break out of the thought experiment.) So this:
This can help identify when all candidates are weak
wouldn’t happen when all the dolphins try to game the system. Did I misunderstand?
woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.netto Memes@lemmy.ml•As relevant as the day this was made13·9 months agoThe reason is that all those other things create actual value, thus cutting into profits of capitalists if publicly funded. If you’re a capitalist state that wants to steal massive amounts of wealth from the people and redistribute them to the rich by funding an Industry, then war really is the industry you want because it only destroys value.
For example, if you cancelled the Pentagons budget and funded centrally planned healthcare instead, no private healthcare provider could compete. It would completely close down a huge market. Same with education, infrastructure, etc. War doesn’t have this problem of closing down a market, but has the advantage of opening up new markets (resources, cheap labour, more consumers, even rebuilding after the war, etc.) via imperialism.
Edit: In short, imperialism is in part a reaction to the tendency of the rate of profit to fall and offers an opportunity to renew primitive accumulation.
The full text of the communist manifesto in fine print on the inside and this on the outside: