Fisherman75

joined 1 year ago
[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 2 points 2 days ago

I live in a sober living apartment building. They sometimes get donation boxes from different places and you can ask the security guard to let you back to where they keep them and pick out whatever you need. I think I influenced them and got them into some good habits with that by bringing back to the wellness center on the bottom floor what I didn't use one month and explaining my reasoning that someone else might need it, because then later they told me to do that when I took a box a different month as if they had come up with the idea. Felt like I made a difference, even though they pretended like it was totally their ingenious social worker idea. Anyway, now it basically constitutes a food pantry anyone here can access with the security guard's permission. They give you resources in the wellness center that point you to local food banks and sometimes offer to drive people there. Others have their own cars and can drive each other.

[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

Wow. Shocker. Capitalism isn't so easily reformable toward sustainability. I don't understand why more democrats, like the ones who have been up until now relying on the sentiment of large financial institutions and corporations to finish the job of addressing climate change, don't get their head in the game and realize how eco-unfriendly so much of capitalism is, and, depending on one's definition of capitalism, how eco-unfriendly all of capitalism may be. I think some of them have developed a greater love for their white picket fence-esque life as marketed to them in real time than for understanding the impact of scientific information about climate change on the life of the planet including their own per an authentic scientific understanding - because the latter starts to look more socialist by almost every definition of socialism.

[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 3 points 3 weeks ago

A fungus infecting the ecosystem and crops in the san joaquin valley that makes people get this fever thing, makes everyone sniffly kind of and some other stuff.

[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 4 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

Yeah it sure is cheap living in the bread basket of the world, the san joaquin valley. My rent is 334. I even have housing assistance. Ag ag ag is all I hear here, and everyone has no idea how unsustainable industrialized agriculture is. Plus the droughts, the toxicity, the general poverty, and also valley fever.

[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

Cascadian Laboratories Incorporated "CascaLab" on Facebook pages. Our website is down and our donation mechanism doesn't work right now. We're very small and new, since 2022 we were founded. We do almost nothing but feyerabend-inspired research remote from one another. It's kind of coddiwompling and we try to research ways of making sure we're not doing armchair research, that we're actually testing real world things. One thing I test is home economics solutions. We're actually wondering about creating a federated network of nonprofit think tanks of similar size just meeting the minimum requirements for a 501 ( c ) 3 each of them rather than actually scaling. I picked some of my closest friends, those among them who were most excited about doing it. I used legalzoom to create it.

[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 month ago

Something I've found is actually working on oneself physically, practicing good physiological health so that one can biomechanically maintain good hand eye coordination, can avoid dropping or bumping equipment or devices for long periods of time (like many many everyday people are well known to constantly do), maintaining good awareness of your environment, and being able to connect with your equipment, devices, and hardware pragmatically the way a blue collar worker might personally connect with their machinery. This way, you can really stretch the lifespan of your hardware. Also, remember that brokenness is relative and along a gradient, not a binary question - if you can get functionality out of a device or hardware, especially according to your prioritization of need, then fundamentally it works; you just have to 'jimmy it a little bit' maybe, to use a blue-collar-ism.

I have a laptop from the early 2000s I maintain, an Xbox one I use for most functions still from 2018 or earlier, two android smartphones both for different purposes over 3 years old each without ever having used phone covers. And I went for a physical at the clinic and they said my stats on my health were above the 90th percentile of health for my age. I'm a bioregionalist so I'm always trying to be systemically "of" my surroundings, region, and community as a vital living breathing human being, and I use ASMR videos on YouTube to liven up my sensory capacities to connect therein to my surroundings and maintain a solid environmental awareness; helps in not dropping or bumping things hardly ever, or spilling liquids on anything.

Those are my first principles.

[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 7 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (3 children)

There are so many authors to let into my soul and digest. I operate a small 501 ( c ) 3 think tank so I've been in the process of letting Paul Feyerabend into my soul. It's a real emotional move to sit down and start absorbing a new author, to be honest. I was going to start on Marcuse next.

[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 1 points 7 months ago

And like I told another person here, I was referring to groceries, not prepared vegan food. There is no prepared vegan food around here, just scant ingredients at certain department stores.

[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 1 points 7 months ago

Grow food where? What kind of person can afford enough land to grow their own food? Plus doordashers usually get multiple orders in one trip kind of like carpooling, saves gas. I would just be going just for my own groceries thus wasting gas.

[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 2 points 7 months ago (1 children)

No doordash delivers groceries. I'm referring to groceries. I prepare all my own food these days.

 

I live in a vast rural area in the central valley of California. Here, people are fanatical carnivores. There is very little vegan food and I live very far from where most of it is available and don't drive for many reasons many of them environmental. Getting there would require riding a bike in the heat most of the year and people here hate bicyclists. Delivery like doordash is really expensive and only the same two dashers will take my vegan order I've noticed.

Has anyone found any useful tips for this basic kind of situation that I'm driving at?

[–] Fisherman75@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 year ago

100%. Yes. This. High five.

 

I'm voting green because if democracy is 'on the ballot' then I figure it's the choice I actually believe in and not just the slightly lesser of two evils. And so recently I feel targeted by democrats and its getting kind of weird and I was wondering if any other greens are experiencing the same thing in the US. I'm very open about my party preference and intentions for 2024.

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