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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: May 31st, 2023

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  • Du wirst aber nie eine hundertprozentige Sicherheit bekommen. Auch wenn sich das wie die Verharmlosungen von den Impfgegner am Start der Pandemie klingt (die Umstände sind jetzt aber einfach andere). Es auch die Grippe schon immer gegeben und die hat auch jedes Jahr tausende Leute getötet und das hat auch kaum jemanden interessiert. Ein gewisses Risiko sich eine potentiell tödliche Krankheit einzufangen ist einfach die Realität, der man sich aussetzt, wenn man in einer Gesellschaft lebt. Natürlich sollte man Maßnahmen ergreifen um Risiken zu minimieren und die Folgen in Grenzen zu halten, aber man kann zum jetzigen Zeitpunkt zb keinen Lockdown mehr rechtfertigen. Maskenpflicht in der Öffentlichkeit fänd ich persönlich auch nicht problematisch, aber man hat ja zu Hochzeiten der Pandemie schon gesehen, dass es super viele Leute einfach nicht interessiert.



  • Come on, don’t be disingenuous, you need more than a bus ticket if you don’t live close to the border of a state that allows abortions.

    Your whole trip will most likely take three days or more (getting there, getting the procedure, coming back), so you need at least two days in a hotel/Airbnb. You will have to get off work for those days as well, that is cost as well.

    That could be around 300$ together if you don’t have any vacation/sick days, on top of the cost of the procedure itself. And it’s not like you can save up that money over several weeks/months either, when you need an abortion every day counts. Contrary to some media, those affected don’t want to wait until the last possible day.

    Some people really only have money for the bare necessities. And they are the ones who really should have access to an abortion because a baby wouldn’t improve their situation in the slightest.

    Being poor isn’t a choice in most cases. Learned helplessness might play a role, but telling them “just get a bus ticket, lul” won’t change that.




  • Don’t put yourself into an even more miserable situation when it doesn’t even benefit you in a measurable way.
    E.g. Lights/dark rooms: Let’s say you use a 5W LED light bulb (which should be bright enough to decently light most rooms). If you leave that running 24/7 for a whole year, that is going to cost you ~13€/$ (0,3€/$/kWh). You are not going to keep it running 24/7, you are not even going to run it half the day. It is not worth 5 bucks to spend the whole year in darkness, no matter how little money you have.

    Obviously turn off the light when you’re not in the room or it’s the middle of the day in summer, but be reasonable with yourself.

    The same goes for food: Sure, buying cheap staples (in bulk if possible) is a great idea, but don’t try to save 5 cents if that means skipping on the salt, herbs and tomato paste which would take your 2/10 bland bowl of carbs to at least a 7/10 and give you something to look forward to.



  • Mein Verdacht liegt auf einzelnen Hilfsstoffen, die nur bei der Fleischverarbeitung genutzt werden. Ein Stoff, der erwiesenermaßen ungesund sein kann, ist (Nitrit-)Pökelsalz. Beim Erhitzen (Braten/Grillen) bilden sich zusammen mit dem Eiweiß Nitrosamine, die dann krebserregend sind.

    Ich könnte mir vorstellen, dass wenn man diese einzelnen Zutaten vermeidet, man die größten Nachteile vermeiden würde. Dann isst man aber auch weniger hochverarbeites Fleisch, weil Pökelsalz vor allem in Sachen wie Wurst drin ist.











  • Somewhat of a fair point. I was more so referring to back in the day where it was not a given that a game would release on steam. I clearly remember the old videos from Totalbiscuit where that was a point worth mentioning. Asset flips and the like just couldn’t be released on steam, as everything had to go through at least mid sized publishers (not an ideal solution by any means). This meant that you couldn’t get many indie titles and some bigger publishers didn’t want to use steam either, but those games that were available on the platform, while not guaranteed to be good, were at least not broken or complete trash. This changed with the introduction of steam greenlight and the later removal of almost any barrier to entry to release something on steam and that bothers me a bit.


  • You do know that you can disable that popup in the settings, right? You can also decide on which page the client opens. So if you set it up right you won’t see an ad inside the client unless you consciously open the store page. And I would think that ads on a storefront are somewhat the point of the storefront.

    Yes, you can be bothered by how much of a cut steam takes, or how they no longer curate what gets on their store, but compared to what’s happening on consoles it’s in another league. If you don’t want to use steam, go ahead and try GOG Galaxy, it’s a bit rough around the edges and doesn’t have every game, but those it has don’t have DRM.