I post pictures with my other account @Deme@lemmy.world

  • 0 Posts
  • 11 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: August 9th, 2023

help-circle




  • Deme@sopuli.xyztomemes@lemmy.worldWhy though???????
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    11
    ·
    3 months ago

    It wasn’t about George Floyd as an individual. It was about what that case represented. People weren’t rioting to get him back alive, they were angry at the system which caused his death among many others. Police killing black people is a thing that keeps happening over and over again in the US. It’s a systemic issue that is never fixed. Floyd just ended up being the face of a movement born out of a lot of frustration about police brutality in general, possibly because of the way that situation was filmed. If he hadn’t died, then some other case would’ve served as the catalyst for the same movement.

    Oh and the exact manner of death was quite irrelevant. Either he suffocated due to having a boot on his neck, or then he OD’d and the officer killed him by omission, failing to provide medical attention. Most likely it was a bit of both.


  • Deme@sopuli.xyztomemes@lemmy.worldSomething's not adding up
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    Hydrostatic equilibrium yes, but equal? No. We agree that centrifugal force is a factor. Now ask yourself, why would gravity suddenly strengthen at the equator to get the surface acceleration to stay equal to that of the poles?

    It doesn’t. As a result the Earth seeks a new hydrostatic equilibrium, bulging out at the equator. This in turn strengthens the centrifugal force a bit while also slightly diminishing the force of gravity (because more of the planet’s mass is farther away). So the same effect is taken even further. Local differences add a layer of noise on top of this, but the end result is that the net surface acceleration is measured to average slightly less at equatorial regions than at the poles, with for example Singapore getting 9.7639 m/s2 of downward acceleration, while Helsinki gets 9.825 m/s2.



  • Ok sorry for the snide in that other comment. I think we’re talking slightly past one another. A society without banking or finance is a primitive one, but a society nonetheless. Now, all modern countries are advanced societies, but only current and former colonies started out that way.

    I suppose the question comes down to whether the meme is talking about rebuilding complex society, or just society in general. You seem to be talking of the former, while I speak of the latter. I also think the meme was referring to the latter.

    I’ll end by saying that while historical precedent is a very solid basis for how societies operate, I think it lacks imagination. Who knows what other ways there could be to build complex societies? I think that this is a powerful part of why people are fascinated with post-apocalyptic stories.




  • A very USA-centric comment. While it is true that countries that were former colonies have their roots tied to those imperialist projects which definitely involved finance, this is not the case for countries that didn’t start as colonies. The sweat of the subsistence farmer or the feudal peasant/slave was what built the foundations of most countries.

    In a truly post-apocalyptic setting there definitely would not be any need for finance of any sort. Job titles such as the one in the meme above are bullshit jobs that only exist to serve modern consumer capitalism. That is to say, they are not necessary. That’s what this meme is about in my opinion.