Erismi14

joined 1 year ago
[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 8 points 7 months ago

This person has never heard of tavern style.

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 22 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Slippery slope aside, I think reducing unnecessary consumerism would be beneficial for our most vuneral populations. There would be a lower barrier of entry into the economy and more resources would be available at a lower cost for people who cannot afford them

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 15 points 8 months ago

Stock price is not inherently tied to profit. That is why p/e ratio exists. Also different industries can have different p/e ratios. Not even this holds though. Tesla's p/e is OOM more than Toyota, but Toyota has higher profits and sells more cars.

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 4 points 8 months ago (7 children)

Wear a raincoat or winter jacket, much cheaper than a car.

I have a trailer that can hold 40 kilos. That's enough for anything I need regularly. I rent a moving van for the once in a couple year big item hauls.

Cars spread things apart making places take long to get to not using a car.

When you say takes long to get anywhere by bike, it is a self report you don't live anywhere meaningful with anything fun around you

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 5 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

As a disabled person, I am lucky to ride my bike. I know other disabled people who can't. But I know plenty of disabled people who can't drive too. When people advocate for human centric cities instead of car centric cities, disabled people benefit the human centricity. Less cars on the road makes it convenient for other disabled people to get around in their cars. Also bike lanes are wheelchair accessible.

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 0 points 8 months ago

A car crash would injure an elderly person just as much. Cars claim they are safer by just getting bigger. But when big car hits big car, injury and death will inevitably happen

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 5 points 8 months ago

What about the people who can't even afford a car they are even worse off? Society should not waver on its social services, or sociietal norms to only meet the needs of unhoused people with cars. Many managers won't hire housed people who don't have a car, or even share a car with a spouse. Societally mandated car ownership just makes everyone more poor and hurts those who cannot afford a car.

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 10 points 8 months ago

So let's build more urban heat islands and parking lots. Exactly what a +40 C environment needs. Biking might be unpleasant in 40 C weather, and the cyclist might get a bit sweaty, but all of the positives are true. And cars are just going to make the planet hotter.

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 5 points 8 months ago

I bike to work when I go into the office, it's about an 8 mile ride. I go at a speed where I'm not sweating. I'm not a pro athlete or anything either

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 16 points 8 months ago (3 children)

You may live in a place that is the result of building car dependent infrastructure. To achieve a "bike city" op is describing, it would take decades, if not a century in your area for it to make sense to just bike everywhere. It takes time.

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social 2 points 9 months ago

Unfortunately for most Americans, this is the situation. All of those places have a mediocre chicken sandwich because all of the restaurants are chains. Small businesses struggle with how new commercial areas are built, and chains run on such thin margins it is hard to compete.

I live in a Chicago neighborhood and have access to many delicious, reasonably priced chicken sandwiches. I have not had the need or the craving to go back to chic fila a since

[–] Erismi14@midwest.social -3 points 10 months ago

Convert the parking to housing and business. Build a nuclear reactor instead.

 
 
 

I brewed this with 1 gal water, 1/2 gal pineapple juice, 10 fl oz lime juice and 1lb of sugar. I used a package of Omega lutra kviek yeast and it finished fermenting in 30 hours!

 

 
 
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