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SJ Zero
7e14bd43a58df0a7fba367662ad1adf51edd7710da6588e7b6a18e68d25301c6

Every time I see a "X big tech site is down" story, it's like "huh, must be rough"

I mean, my sites do occasionally go down, but that's a skill issue I can overcome, innit?

"Government is expected to collapse" as in "a standard democratic event where the current government isn't going to continue and an election can be called"

What we're waiting for is "Government is expected to collapse" as in the end of the fifth republic and the beginning of the sixth republic (or the first french empire)

Nostr is one of the last services I needed to spin back up after tearing down all my servers and moving them to proxmox. I don't always come over to visit directly, but I'm glad it's here when I want to.

I wrote a super long effortpost about the fact that the Wachowskis are postmodernists, and the first Matrix movie worked because it was deeply steeped in postmodernism. The problem with every Matrix movie since is that you need a stroy other than postmodernism to have an arc, and they couldn't make any other story as effectively.

If anything though, the postmodernism of the Wachowskis is why the Wachowski brothers became the Wachowski sisters -- they deconstructed the essential nature of their biology and subverted them. It's a symptom of the problems with 3 of the 4 Matrix movies. Of course, "The mind makes it real" is objectively false -- the mind is a highly parallel thing where not every part can directly manipulate every other part. People feel pain, people think they're dying, people think they're dead, but they keep going because the thing that makes their hearts beat lives elsewhere, somewhere more primal than the higher brain functions.

By contrast, its contemporary Fight Club actually does something neat, it has 3 parts to its arc: Postmodern deconstruction (the Fight Clubs everyone remembers); Modernist postmodernism (Project Mayhem) where tearing down society becomes industrialized, systematized, and made into a machine where the individuals involved are just pieces of a grand narrative (of tearing down grand narratives); and finally adopting something older than modernism itself, standing next to the girl you like after fighting to try to stop the bombs from blowing up the buildings. People never seem to remember the last two parts of Fight Club, but the fact that they're there makes it a much more complete story imo.

I actually found out from the story of spruce beer. British colonists in America learned from Native peoples that spruce needles could help prevent scurvy, so they decided to make a beer out of it. But they misunderstood how it worked. To make beer, they boiled the mash with spruce needles—unfortunately, this destroyed the vitamin C. So while it was tasty, it didn’t help with scurvy.

The Indigenous method was more effective because it protected the active compound. Sometimes they’d make a spruce tea, but it was only gently heated—never boiled. They also made a lightly alcoholic, fizzy drink using maple syrup and wild yeast, but again, no boiling, and fermentation was short. That preserved the nutrients.

Not all nutrients are created equal. Some survive boiling. Some don’t. Some are enhanced by heat, others destroyed by it. Some dissolve in fat, some in water, and some barely dissolve at all. You can’t just heat things and assume the good parts will still be there.

Herbal teas aren't used as sources of Vitamin C. If they were, then the British wouldn't be known as "limeys" for carrying around fresh limes on their ships to prevent scurvy, they'd just use herbal tea.

Pretty sure that was something we got wrong, if you hear it up a lot of the important nutrients are destroyed. including the vitamin c.

"Expectedly, I'm Eminem!

Sexually, I like men!

My Pronouns are They and Them!"

SJ Zero

just now

I occasionally come over to hilarious-chaos because local users are cool, but most people on the lemmyverse really are exhausting.

In a lot of ways I think Americans need to learn more history than just World War 2.

The current situation has many historical parallels that are more interesting than just Hitler Hitler Hitler.

I think there's a lot of things besides World War 2 that help us understand the current moment in time.

One example is about 80 years before the end of the Roman Republic. Tiberius Gracchus was a member of the Populares faction, populists in opposition to the aristocracy, the Optimates faction. Gracchus' populist reforms caused increasing tension in the senate. In 133 BCE, he was assassinated, and it would go down in history as one of the first assassinations in a practice that would become increasingly common in the republic. 84 years later Julius Caesar would cross the Rubicon River, a moment indicating the end of the Roman Republic. In this context, consider the venom with which the word "populist" is thrown around as a pejorative term, and the unprecedented actions taken against the candidate who is running for president under that banner presently.

Another example is the time right before the beginning of the French revolution. King Louis was printing money at a rapid rate, and it was creating a huge bubble for those within the fold of the government, but mass harm for those who were not. It was a time of extreme inequality, and many people were rushing into the capitol to try to get in on the gravy train causing overcrowding among the have-nots. Contrasts between the American revolution and the French revolution are quite important, given that the former led to a world superpower, and the latter led to an unstable nation that is today on I think it's fifth republic.

Yet another example is the Spanish empire during the exploitation of the new world. Spain treated South America like a true colonial holding -- unlike the United States where colonies became places people lived and built their lives, South America was a place primarily centered around exploitation of the local populations and natural resources. One result of this was a massive influx of silver to the Spanish government, which minted more coins and released them into circulation, causing high inflation because there was more money chasing the same amount of goods. Ultimately, this was one of the factors that brought one of the two most powerful empires on the planet into becoming a relative backwater.

Of course there's more things to learn from regions other than Europe. The Song dynasty in 9th century China and the Brahmins in India around the same time both had regimes that were more interested in writing poetry about how bad the invaders were or building more temples, respectively, leading to both countries losing considerable territory during this period.

Wang Mang in China around the 1st century became emperor through virtue signaling about Confucianism, and his incompetent rule based on an ideology that had massive holes led to tens of millions of deaths in a world that only had a couple hundred million humans.

In spite of the progressive paintjob on the modern bureaucracy, we have millennia of history from Imperial China about the risks of bureaucracy, including deep conservatism. The English reached china trying to trade clockwork that was centuries ahead of anything the Chinese had made, as well as guns and other technologies. They were turned back, a situation that ultimately led to the century of humiliation and the end of Imperial China.

The Islamic world has a few cautionary tales. The Islamic golden age saw the Muslim world as the center of the world in terms of much science and technology, as you can see from our use of algebra and the name of chemistry derived from alchemy, and our use of a numbering system out of the Islamic world. All of it came crashing down due to various factors leading to the Islamic world that once thought it would take over the world becoming a playground for other empires.

In the Mediterranean and the modern middle east, the bronze age collapse showed us most of the civilizations of the era being destroyed. Only a few civilizations remained, and some such as the Minoans were erased so thoroughly that we didn't even know they were real until shockingly recently in history when someone decided to look up the locations mentioned in Greek myth.

Around the same time period, the Harapan civilization, also called the Indus valley civilization in India tells us the entire self-contained story of a massive civilization that was born, rose, survived for ages, then declined and totally disappeared.

So to focus solely on one tiny piece of history is to really make a huge mistake. We have more than one case study, more than one lens to look at the world through, and not all of these lenses reveal the same story. Sometimes they reveal quite different stories.

Googleless searx ftw.

I even have a yacy instance so I'm getting distributed non-corporate search alongside several companies from several countries.

For google it all comes back down their search. Don't use that and their power over the internet becomes infinitely diminished.

At first I'd stop it, but after a few seconds I'd have to commit suicide to prevent the shame from spreading to the rest of my family.