- 9 Posts
- 212 Comments
I feel this so much in my 90s hatchback :'(
The SUV plague is a european phenomenon too.
…or you can be coding assembler - it’s all just bits to me
Ice@lemmy.worldto Uplifting News@lemmy.world•Dutch City of Nijmegen Bans Meat Ads and Endorses Plant Based TreatyEnglish1·8 days agoAt least in my country, this is already the norm. If it can’t be used as food for humans in one way or another it can be used in countless otber contexts such as animal feed or fuel via biogas or biodiesel. Same applies to food waste from shops, restaurants and households.
Nothing goes to waste.
Ice@lemmy.worldto Uplifting News@lemmy.world•Dutch City of Nijmegen Bans Meat Ads and Endorses Plant Based TreatyEnglish11·24 days agoOf course not, and even many objects should, at least in my opinion, be treated with some respect. I mostly agree with what you’ve written here.
To act as though we are above them
In my opinion, it is precisely because we are above them that we (or at least many of us) abhor unnecessary suffering and waste. The wolf however does not care when it slaughters a whole herd of sheep to eat just their livers and leave the rest to rot, neither does it hesitate to kill the zookeeper that has fed it for a decade when they slip up for just a moment.
Ice@lemmy.worldto Uplifting News@lemmy.world•Dutch City of Nijmegen Bans Meat Ads and Endorses Plant Based TreatyEnglish13·29 days agoRemoved by mod
Ice@lemmy.worldto Uplifting News@lemmy.world•Dutch City of Nijmegen Bans Meat Ads and Endorses Plant Based TreatyEnglish25·29 days agoLike deciding what animals live and die?
Yup, in most cases it is the owners of said animals that decide what happens to them, like with other property. The government trying to force (or prevent) putting an animal down would also be overreach.
The exceptions when it comes to property rights are generally when human beings are somehow endangered, which is where most rights and freedoms, sensibly, are limited.
Ice@lemmy.worldto Uplifting News@lemmy.world•Dutch City of Nijmegen Bans Meat Ads and Endorses Plant Based TreatyEnglish15·29 days agoRemoved by mod
Ice@lemmy.worldto Uplifting News@lemmy.world•Dutch City of Nijmegen Bans Meat Ads and Endorses Plant Based TreatyEnglish110·29 days agoI expect you’d have a rather different stance if it was advertising for something you enjoy in life that was being singled out and banned.
It’d be very different if it was a blanket ban on all advertisement in these contexts, but it isn’t. It’s the government trying to decide what people eat.
Ice@lemmy.worldto Uplifting News@lemmy.world•Dutch City of Nijmegen Bans Meat Ads and Endorses Plant Based TreatyEnglish37·29 days agoI wouldn’t be opposed to blanket bans on advertisingin certain contexts. This however is the state going nanny on the populace.
Ice@lemmy.worldto Uplifting News@lemmy.world•Dutch City of Nijmegen Bans Meat Ads and Endorses Plant Based TreatyEnglish1638·29 days agoYikes, how is that supposed to be uplifting? Sounds a whole lot like authoritarian overreach. Let people decide for themselves what they do and don’t want to eat.
Ice@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Are there any lemmy instances that support freedom of speech?51·1 month agoNot really. The Fediverse has a slant towards american left/far left and moderation tends to reflect this in larger communities. Particularly the americentrism and hostility to different perspectives can make it difficult to have meaningful discussions on certain topics.
(For context, I’d be impressed if I have more than ~30 countrymen active in the fediverse)
Here’s a few reasons:
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Not funny
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Not nuanced
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Bad art
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Comes off as smug/condescending (author)
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Makes fun of/disparages broad groups of people
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Assigns positions that people don’t agree with to labels they identify with.
Etc. Etc.
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Ice@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•Diplomacy dies on live TV as Trump and Vance gang up to bully Ukraine leaderEnglish9·3 months agoYeah I actually listened through (almost) the entire 50 minute thing during breakfast - and all things considered the atmosphere was mostly okay up until the last moments. Things were starting to wrap up, journalists asking questions, and then Vance jumped in with an entirely different attitude - and after that Trump completely changed his tone also.
So tragic to see how Z was doing his utmost to be friendly or at least respectful even when T made clearly incorrect statements or when some of the journalists asked insulting questions. He literally thanked him (and the american people) multiple times during the press conference, and then V jumps in, runs him over and turns the entire thing upside down.
Ice@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•French authorities double down on ‘discriminatory’ hijab ban in sportEnglish31·3 months agoI’m honestly not sure where I stand myself on this. It’s a difficult issue and I’m not sure there can be “only one correct answer”.
as long as it does not support or provoke harm to other peoples
Who decides what is harmful or provocative?
A priest may find that the colander makes a mockery of religion, others might see a hijab as a symbol of oppression of women and others still may find that a certain slogan remind them of past trauma?
How do you strike a balance between dress code and preferences?
Should the state be free from religions, or free for all religions?
Does it even make sense to have the same rules in every country?
I myself am certainly biased in this context, given that I trust in science, evolution and the empiric process. Furthermore, I myself have been permanently negatively affected by religion, and all the ones I’ve encountered so far have been anti-scientific to a certain extent, regressive and denounce my own personal views. Does it not make sense then that I am anti-religious?
If I had to quickly codify my stance at this moment, I would say that I’m fine with freedom of religion to the extent that it intersects with the other personal liberties (Freedom of thought, expression, personal autonomy) that I think everyone should have the right to. However, I don’t think religion should give anyone preferential treatment in any context - religious organizations and religious folk should be subjected to the same regulations as a person of another (or no) belief or organization.
For instance, that might include exemptions from dress codes. In this case I would be against it unless the dress code would be equivalently relaxed for everyone, which I certainly wouldn’t support in some contexts. Some examples from healthcare for instance (since I’ve experience in the field) - it is imperative that what you wear is hygienic for the safety of the patient, and some of your duties might go against the personal beliefs of some people (abortion for instance). That doesn’t mean that you should be exempt from those duties or regulations because of your personal convictions. Suck it up, or go find another job.
Ice@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•French authorities double down on ‘discriminatory’ hijab ban in sportEnglish3·3 months agoFrom what I’ve read on the topic, this take seems misguided at best or outright wrong at worst. Historically, secularism in France has been a primarily liberal/socialist/anti-monarchist pursuit.
French secularism has its origin in the French revolution, half a century before Algeria came under French control. Religious institutions were viewed as a part of the aristocratic establishment and the concept of laïcité was introduced under the revolutionary era and entrenched (along with concepts such as freedoms of thought, expression & conscience) during the Napoleonic era. Further progress in this direction was not made by imperialists, but rather revolutionaries after bloody conflict (the French commune for instance) and generally steps were taken to repeal them when conservative/monarchist governments dominated.
Ice@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Folks from metric countries, how does Dominic Toretto live his life? What distance at a time?1·3 months agoI know, we’re also so small that most of it was never localized to Swedish. But in the spirit of the question - funny
Ice@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•French authorities double down on ‘discriminatory’ hijab ban in sportEnglish91·3 months agoTo start off, you could write entire essays delving into this topic. Everything I’ve written in my reply is very condensed, so if you feel something lacks nuance, it’s probably to keep it brief rather than because I thought it is “THE ONE AND ONLY ANSWER”. Here goes.
Religious freedom has two key parts: freedom of religion and freedom from religion.
Which of these holds prominence is different depending on the secular country you’re in, and usually has a lot to do with the historic path that the nation and dominant culture took to become secular.
In France organized religion had an authoritarian position in society, dominating it for more than a millenium. It took literal centuries of bloodshed and more than one revolution to put an end to that dominance. That is the origin of those laws. The lessons behind their making were learned at the cost of many lives, and personally I don’t think that such laws should be ripped up without proper consideration.
Religion, particularly the organized kind is designed to spread and exert power over people and societies. Furthermore, unlike many other things such as ethnicity, sex or disabilities, it is a strongly held personal belief, which is a choice. Yes, there is some nuance there, but it is mostly based on convictions and antiquated traditions, much like the old republican laws themselves perhaps.
A question follows, should a person based on an arbitrary strong personal conviction be granted special treatment?
If yes… then I argue that this should not be limited to “religious” beliefs. The only thing that makes those particular sets of beliefs special, after all, is tradition and mass adoption, much like our own cultures. So, lets consider some other minority beliefs. Should a furry who “needs” to wear wolf ears be allowed to wear that? A sikh their turban? A pastafarian their mandated colander? What if someone strongly believes that they can’t go outside without wearing a CocaCola branded cap (mmm delicious ad revenue)?
Ice@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Folks from metric countries, how does Dominic Toretto live his life? What distance at a time?1·3 months agoWell, in Swedish, we have “mil”, which is 10km, so mr. Toretto would be living his life 2.5km at a time. However, I can only assume he’s a pilot in his alternate Swedish incarnation, since covering that distance in “ten seconds or less” would mean travelling at >900kmph.
So you met someone who was shitty about consent, and decided to also be shitty about consent?
Wow!
Agreed - all Ghibli movies are beautiful in their own right, but taking that cinematic mastery and applying it in what is essentially a film about the tragedies of war?
Shivers.