RidgeDweller

joined 1 year ago
[–] RidgeDweller 10 points 7 months ago

Good unpopular opinion! I'm skeptical the modern games/organization would survive if you tossed the judged events out though. And a quick search shows there were a few subjective events in ancient games, too. Maybe there's another organization with competitions that suit your interests better?

[–] RidgeDweller 1 points 7 months ago

Piggybacking on this: you can still access your camera in lockdown mode if you've enabled the lock button double-press gesture, just in case you want to record your interaction with the pigs for good measure.

[–] RidgeDweller 12 points 7 months ago (5 children)

Jesse, what the fuck are you talking about?

[–] RidgeDweller 9 points 7 months ago (2 children)

Wait, y'all stopped?

[–] RidgeDweller 5 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Interesting, thanks for the context. I don't know anything about asphalt, but if it didn't cause any health or safety issues I'd place it on the innovation end of the spectrum. I'd be interested in things like how the spent diesel fuel was disposed of and if any petro chems would leach into stormwater from asphalt made this way.

[–] RidgeDweller 8 points 8 months ago (3 children)

The water characteristics you're worried about sound like aesthetic problems, which might be displeasing but pose no real health risks. These vary significantly between public water systems. If the system pulls from surface water, the water might need more treatment in the dry season since contaminants concentrate in surface waters more that time of year. I'm lucky to live somewhere that has no noticeable taste/odor/color issues. For places that do, you should be able to drink it from tap without issue, but it might taste/smell better if you run it through a filter or even just let it sit in a pitcher in the fridge.

If a municipality were to cut corners with their water treatment in a similar way to the asphalt plant you mentioned (which sounds kinda shady btw), people would get sick and potentially die. Most municipalities are very risk averse and take liability seriously to avoid litigation/losing money. So, it's not impossible, but I think it'd be unlikely for a city to skimp on water treatment just to save a few bucks. Water treatment facilities are also required to constantly test for things like pH, turbidity, and chlorine residual and report to the state, so it's not as simple as hiding things from an inspector the day of.

[–] RidgeDweller 8 points 8 months ago (1 children)

In general? Not really, considering how much of an impulsive piss baby he is. On Chao specifically? I have no idea. What's the motive?

[–] RidgeDweller 13 points 8 months ago (3 children)

Idk, seems reasonable that a drunk boomer could fatally misuse a piece of tech on accident. Don't Teslas record everything in/around them? Hard to jump to conclusions when we haven't seen all the evidence.

[–] RidgeDweller 1 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Sure, you can and should if you're aware of the challenge and care enough to combat those biases. It might feel like second nature for some, but it can also be like a muscle that needs to be exercised for others. It sounds like they're trying to do so now, and that kind of growth should be encouraged imo.

Considering how many people will either assume they're open minded enough already without really reflecting on if there's room for improvement or actively go out of their way to treat others like they're inferior, I don't see the value in dragging other folks down for attempting to be more conscientious towards others. Who knows - maybe another future former racist will read their comment and come to the same realization.

[–] RidgeDweller 9 points 8 months ago (3 children)

You can believe that to be true, and I suppose you really could be that enlightened. But most people have some degree of implicit bias, and it is wise to be aware of this and to actively challenge our own biases.

I read MonsierPatEBrown's comment as similar to your first sentence here, but it took them 35+ years to recognize they do have stigmas towards black people that they're now working on. That's an accomplishment many people will never achieve tbh.

[–] RidgeDweller 8 points 8 months ago

Makes sense, that's where my local NIMBYs hang too.

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