BestOfLemmy
- j4k3@lemmy.world captures the reality of adulthood and escapelemmy.world [tw: alcohol] My dad came home drunk today - Lemmy.World
And the last time he got this drunk, he almost killed my mom by trying to push her down the stairs. đ Letâs just say, iâm far less than pleased that he is this pissed. This time, there wasnât much of anything. He went to bed after I helped him get about and undress. Plugged in his phone and gave hi...
> Iâm 40. I never got the memo about growing up. There was never an adult moment. When I was half my age, life had a lot more promise and that commonality drives a lot of the more balanced interactions. What you canât really understand at a much younger age is how alone and lonely the world becomes with age for most people. That hopeful promise fades, and with it goes purpose and hope. Dreams and intentions pass you by and mistakes haunt you. This drives many to a hedonistic place of connections with anyone that lets the person return to a carefree time of hopefulness or anywhere but this reality.
> He likely lacks meaningful connections and turns to his only social outlet. If he has the depth, he needs a hobby or interest that helps him to connect with more stable people.
- SouthSamurai@sh.itjust.works explains illuminating facts about touch and skin tissue in /c/NoStupidQuestionslemmy.world why do our noses & anuses think different types of paper are softest? - Lemmy.World
Iâve had hemorrhoids for like 25 years, so Iâve always been very discerning about my toilet paper. this entire time, Iâve been using whatever toilet paper I have found to be the softest as facial tissue, to blow my nose, as well. my reasoning being, if this stuff is gentle enough for my hemorrhoids,...
The original comment by SouthSamurai@sh.itjust.works:
>Dammit, yet another question that I spent too much of my life on. > >It comes down to nervesand tissue (cell, not paper) types. > >The outside of your nose and the tissues of the anus are not the exact same. There's a different concentration of "nerve endings", and different types in different concentrations. > >I doubt you want the full Monty of it, but if you look up the term "sensory receptors", you can do the deep dive very easily. > >The short version is that we have specific types of "nerve endings" (that's what they're called colloquially, hence the quote marks, but I'll stop using those at this point). They detect pressure, temperature, pain/injury, etc. > >The concentrations of them (as in how many per square inch), and the assortment of them (as in how many of each type in that square inch) varies across the entire body. The easiest way to demonstrate the relative principle is to touch your fingertip to your nose, your lips, your genitals (seriously), and your leg. > >You'll find that your brain interprets the signals in an interesting way. It'll filter the less intense signals. You touch your finger to your lip, what your brain "says" is that your lips are being touched by something, and the signal from your finger takes the back seat. You touch the same fingertip to your thigh your brain says the finger is the primary sensation, and you feel the thigh via the finger rather than the finger via the thigh the way the lips worked. > >Give it a try on whatever parts of your body you want. There's going to be a shifting perception of whether it's your finger touching something ( where emphasis is placed on the signals from the finger), or it'll be the section of the body being touched by the finger (signal from the touched location being emphasized). > >The anus and the nose have different jobs. The anus, mostly, needs to detect pressure, injury, and some degree of chemical contact the nose needs less pressure sensitivity, but more motion sensitivity. So you'll get a different overall sensation with any given substance that's pushed against either, and when the same substance is moved across either. The difference may end up being minor. But both are sensitive enough that most people can tell a difference between paper tissue products blindfolded. > >Back in the day, I wiped asses for pay. The only patients I had that couldn't tell the difference between brands of TP had medical issues that interfered with nerve signals. Do a test for yourself. Find a buddy to hand you tp or facial tissues and keep a log (heh, he said log while talking about butts). There's a very good chance that every single one will feel different. You'll probably be able to tell which brand is which if you've used that brand before. > >You can probably even tell the difference with your fingers tbh. But you wouldn't likely be able to if the same products were placed or rubbed on your back > >You'd also notice that different objects will feel different when just placed on an area and pressed gently into the skin vs when you wipe the area with it. > >Skin is an amazing thing. It's armor, a sensor array, a biological filter, sunscreen, and a temperature regulator all in one! Plus other functions tbh, but shit like that gets overwhelming to read for a lot of people > >You'd be amazed what you can discover with just an hour sitting around and touching things to parts of your body.
- Media Bias / Fact Check bot declares itself as unreliablelemmy.world North Korean troops in Russian uniforms heading to Kursk, says US - Lemmy.World
North Korean troops wearing Russian uniforms and carrying Russian equipment are moving to the Russian region of Kursk, near Ukraine, according to the US defence secretary, Lloyd Austin, who described the deployment as a dangerous and destabilising development. Austin was speaking at a press conferen...
- @d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz explains why we need compilerslemmy.world Need explanations about compiling - Lemmy.World
Hello, Iâm a bit new to advanced linux and programming stuffs⌠Can someone explain me why compiling exists and what this process does and how to do it in the principals situations (Iâve heard that you can use the âmakepkgâ command). Thx to everyone who replied.
- @Charger8232@lemmy.ml does the math on password crackinglemmy.world The Planck Cruncher: The universe's fastest password cracker - Lemmy.World
# Introduction Many years ago, when I was first getting into privacy and security, I wanted to see how long passwords should be in order to be secure from brute forcing. There are plenty of password strength testers [https://bitwarden.com/password-strength/#Password-Strength-Testing-Tool] already, b...
- A playlist were America almost got the point
This is older but, with things that are coming up, I feel it is even more relevant.
- Lemmyshitpost answers What is love and creates a song
It started with an earworm and a rather stupid idea for a poll...
A couple days ago I asked !lemmyshitpost@lemmy.world the question What is love?
99 shitposters say it's hurt me don't Baby
@Tetsuo@jlai.lu creates a Suno AI song with the new lyrics
It's a banger
> đľ What is love, hmm? đľ > đľ Hurt me don't, baby đľ > đľ Hurt me no more, don't đľ
Meanwhile, according to 187 shitposters the answer to What is love is Baby hurt me don't
- "Civility has become a cult."
> Civility has become a cult. > > Mods on modern websites (including Reddit and Lemmy\.world) are forced to maintain courtly behavior instead of deciding who's the asshole. They will protect any cautious troll who can politely phrase 'you're subhuman and also secretly agree with me' but jump on the obvious reasonable response: "Fuck off." Even when that curt dismissal is followed by an explanation of how a comment was dishonest and manipulative, you said the no-no word, so only you get the boot. > > And that boot will tend to be as heavy as possible, sometimes instantly permanent, because god forbid anyone learn anything. You keep permanently banning these trolls, when they can get a new account in minutes, and they keep coming back within minutes? Wow, it's almost like you've given them no reason whatsoever to stick out their ban and keep that username. Spritzing them in the face with a three-day time-out works better. This is basic Skinnerian conditioning - immediate reliable feedback is internalized and shapes future behavior.
By mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
- Lemmy's number one ambassador explains why Lemmy is an effective alternative to Redditsopuli.xyz Is Lemmy an effective alternative to Reddit? - Sopuli
What are your thoughts on the Lemmy ecosystem? Iâve been trying it out for the last week. I have my own opinions, but Iâd like to hear others and see if we have common ideas on what is good/bad/indifferent about the Lemmy ecosystem.
- Spot on argument of why Biden denouncing Israel publicly would actually hurt the democratspawb.social Netanyahu warns people in Lebanon could face destruction 'like Gaza' - Pawb.Social
Benjamin Netanyahu has warned Lebanese people that they could face âdestruction and sufferingâ like the Palestinians in Gaza if they donât âfreeâ the country from Hezbollah. âYou have an opportunity to save Lebanon before it falls into the abyss of a long war that will lead to destruction and suffer...
https://lemmy.ca/comment/12091177
Serious question: what do you think publicly repudiating Israel would do for the democrats' chances of willing the presidential election? It makes sense for them to say nothing publicly while privately trying to tie down those loose cannons.
Honestly I suspect it would do the opposite, Lemmy is a bit of a echo chamber and while users here heavily skew towards favoring Palestine in this, or at least condemning what Isreal is and honestly has long been doing to them, the US as a whole, even the base of the democratic party, has long been at least mildly friendly towards Isreal, and a large fraction will see Hamas's attack as justifying Isreali action. It's a bit of a damned if you do, damned if you don't situation for the dems I think where their current path angers progressives on the left, and actively sanctioning Isreal would probably anger the more center-right side of the party, and they need both to turn out to win. They probably figure that at the end of the day, the left either is mostly younger people that don't vote as reliably, or will bite their tongues and vote for them, because, well, if you're given only two possible futures, both evil, and a choice between them, one has a moral obligation to choose the lesser evil, no matter how evil that lesser is, just because by definition, the greater evil is worse. But the center-right, they probably figure, probably don't care about what is happening as much, and will feel much less uncomfortable about just voting for the republicans instead if the dem candidate doesn't do what they want.
That being said, it doesn't really much matter, ethically, if not helping kill tens of thousands of innocent people makes it slightly harder to win political power for yourself, it's still a pretty horrible excuse. Nobody sitting in a jury would let someone go free if they were accused of being an accomplice to a murder, if that accomplice's defense was "well, I'm running for mayor, and if I didn't help the murderer, his friends probably won't vote for me". Like I get that Kamala isn't really calling the shots on that, being only vice president currently, but she doesn't seem like she intends to change how Biden has handled the situation much.
Don't get me wrong, I am voting for her, I'm not one of those people that thinks that it is somehow noble to just let the greater evil win if it means not taking an action that helps the lesser evil beat it, I think that the going for the best outcome plausibly available is always the right thing to do and that doing the reverse because "well my hands are clean" is a misguided and self centered way to do ethics, but like damn people (to which I mean the people that actually side with Isreal in this, and the DNC I guess, not they they see my tired internet ranting), just because the other option is as close as the country has come in a century to "literally Hitler" does not mean that you have to emulate Churchill refusing to help the Bengalis.
- @IMNOTCRAZYINSTITUTION@lemmy.world recounts how they quit hexbear
> well. to my everlasting shame it was the very website this post features. I got hooked in when it was still part of reddit. I was an angry young adult coming out of a terrible home situation and their collective ârighteous furyâ was appealing. after the move to a separate website, it just got worse and worse. hexbear, formally known as chapochat, had destructive drama outburtsts every single week right from the start. > > I think it started with thousands of active users and rapidly dwindled down to only a few hundred because of how hostile and rigid it was. I was one of the few who stuck around because my warped sense of the world didnât reveal how bad it was yet. I thought about quitting during many of these ridiculous âstruggle sessionsâ as they called them. but something kept me hooked. > > when the current ukraine-russia war started, the cracks were widening. a subsection of hexbear started to dominate. they were more openly bloodthirsty. they stopped pretending to care about the common people, which is what I cared about, and were cheering on the killing of civilians and conscripted soldiers. they posted videos of ukrainians getting shot and blown up accompanied with the siteâs absurd emojis and weird in joke phrases. they were also just extremely hostile to anyone who wasnât lockstep with their view. they would use vicious insults and accusations against naysayers and the mods would almost always rule on their side. > > I rarely ever participated in the arguments up to that point because I didnât see a reason to, but I got in fights with people about this. they were treating war like a football game and it really rubbed me the wrong way. but then that subsection of the site started to contain themselves mostly to the ânews megathreadâ which I could easily ignore. > > I became less and less interested in hexbear as time went on. I think other people were noticing these disturbing trends too because the number of active users dwindled down to around 150-200. the remaining users were the worst of the worst. so fucking mean and nasty, in that abusive family type of way. they proclaim themselves to be friendly, proclaim hexbear to be a welcoming and caring community, tightly knit, when behind the curtain they are horrible to each other. of course I had only ever known that type of life so I didnât see it for what it was and continued to use the site. > > I finally had a breakthrough internally and got the courage to go to therapy and try to reckon with the damage my upbringing did to me. and once that started to work, hexbearâs rose tint rapidly faded. > > now I look back on my several years as a hexbear user with so much embarrassment. I canât believe how much hatred was in my heart. I try to forgive myself and remember that I was young and broken and taken advantage of by malicious people online but I was old enough to know better. once in a while Iâll check hexbear out just to remind myself of how much Iâve grown and improved. I see people in there who claim to be in their 30s and 40s and i feel disgust at how they are manipulating young adults and even kids as we see here. I feel sad for them too. I donât think anyone that old would be part of such a group if they didnât have a seriously damaged worldview. > > wow. sorry to dump on you. just seeing someone so young get roped into hexbear brought up a lot of feelings.
- root_beer knocks a billionaire down a peg in stylemidwest.social Elon Musk's Appearance at Donald Trump Rally Mocked: 'Cringing' - midwest.social
Musk, the billionaire owner of X, formerly Twitter, and CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, joined Trump onstage in Butler on Saturday to show his support for the Republican and state that he is ânot just MAGA â I am Dark MAGA.â A number of people have mocked Muskâs appearance at the Butler rally on Saturday o...
- My inbox has been all forearms for the past 24 hours thanks to this post, and it's absolutely hilarious.
Behold the matching forearms of Lemmy:
https://lemmy.world/post/19983744
- Heartrending account of a poster's experiences with Israelis and Palestinians
> I visited for the first time around this year. It was incredible. The people were so nice. The Palestinian children I met in Israel were incredibly rude and surprisingly well-dressed considering we were all playing on a playground. My aunt and cousins were translating what they were saying to me and encouraging me to say rude things back that theyâd translate. Reflecting on that: weird fucking experience and incredibly sad overall. > > The people within Palestine were so polite, accommodating, and eager to share their culture. Many of them appeared to have meager means, but seemed so happy. > > I saw an old Jewish man fall from a chair and hit his head on the stone ground near the western wall. Blood sprayed out and began quickly pooling. His family rushed to his side, but most of my fellow Jews ran away. Some to seek aid, most to flee from the inauspicious event at this holy site. But the most people who rushed to directly help this man weâre Arabs, presumably Palestinian, using their nicest holy garments to help a bleeding stranger and offering him water. > > Years later, it hit me: the rude rich Palestinians I met at the playground werenât acting that way due to cultural or religious differences, itâs because they were rich assholes repeating rich asshole shit. And their presence at the playground was only because their family could afford to live in Israel. But my aunt and cousin? They absolutely were making everything about race and religion. It had been trained into them and they were trying to train me. This was all pre-Netanyahu. > > When my cousin got older, he started taking classes to learn Aramaic and Arabic so that he âcould understand the enemy betterâ for intelligence purposes and tell them in their own language that he was going to kill them. He became a volunteer police assistant so that he could get gun training. Then he was allowed to police areas with high Palestinian populations. > > It was during this that he learned how incredible Palestinians were and that most of their aggression was due to misinformation and fear. He never killed a single Palestinian and eventually became a more vocal advocate for their human rights. He knew that, given the chance, theyâd kill him in a heartbeat but he also recognized that the impulse was driven into them by oppressive regimes. He even got the rest of his family to recognize the fraught existence of being treated like an unwelcome guest in your own home. A fugitive for merely existing⌠> > When I visited Israel years later, I was being driven out to the military base to visit another cousin. Israel had expanded its borders; next to the highway where we were traveling, I saw fenced off vacant homes with tanks driving through them. âOh cool!â I said, âare they doing training over there?â My cousinâs parents sadly explained to me that I was looking into Palestine. The people had been temporarily evacuated from their homes and the Israeli government was ensuring that âthey wonât have homes to return to.â > > After October 7, the first cousin I talked about hasnât been the same⌠His unit was one of the first reactivated and mobilized; he was at the site within half an hour of the attack. What he saw of the dead and mangled still haunts him. The things heâs seen and done that go completely against his moral compass⌠The guy who used to laugh and tell me stories about getting stabbed by a Palestinian at a checkpoint and only arrested her because heâd do the same in her position; the guy who has caught and thrown grenades avoiding casualties; the guy who was arrested for refusing to needlessly fire into a crowd of protesting Palestinians. His clean conscience appears to be gone and sometimes he just disappears into whatever dark images he canât seem to shake. > > The place you see in that photo probably is gone. The people are gone. They were gradually eroded away. Any hope I had to see them again disappeared after October 7. The Israel I remember is gone, too⌠Itâs been fanned into an inferno of hated that will likely last generations. The spirit of the Palestinians canât be erased, though. I hope someday to see that spirit reflected in their society. I hope to see the warmth I remember of Israel shared once again by its people. > > I hope that the next time I see my cousin that he remembers all the good heâs done and that heâs accepted what heâs done. I imagine heâd sooner go AWOL. I wish Israel and Palestine could forgive and reconcile, but Iâve lost about all hope to see humans treating each other humanely in that region within my lifetimeâŚ
- Very well-stated (& calm) response to what is turning into a heated discussion about users on the hexbear.net instance
(The title you see below mine is the wording chosen by the OP of the full post - I hope I do not cause offense, but I cannot control it showing up here as it is linked.)
- Chemistry of saturated, unsaturated, monounsatured, and polyunsatured fatslemmy.world What are the differences between unsaturated, saturated, monosaturated, polysaturated, and transaturated fats? - Lemmy.World
And how are those differences relevant to our nutrition and diet?
- Tal goes in-depth on why Pac-Man could not eat a Ring Wraithlemmy.today Could Pac-Man eat the Ghost of Christmas Past? - Lemmy Today
Presume he had just ate a power pellet, of course. Followup matchups for your consideration: 1. Slimer, from âGhostbustersâ 2. Sadako, from âThe Ringâ 3. Freddy Krueger, from âNightmare on Elm Streetâ 4. The clown from âItâ 5. A ring wraith from âLord of the Ringsâ
- A story on how u/Lost_My_Mind didn't use the toilet while sleeping.
Hilarity Ensues
Edit: Swapped link to a screenshot Link to post: https://lemmy.world/comment/11837413
- DisneySea Electric Railway @ Tokyo DisneySea (+3 pics) (OC) - Lemmy.Worldlemmy.world DisneySea Electric Railway @ Tokyo DisneySea (+3 pics) (OC) - Lemmy.World
(Sorry, maxso216, but this is truly the shortest functional train line in Japan.) The DisneySea Electric Railway is a 2-station line coming in at less than half a kilometer in total length (0.48km). Even at the relaxed 15kph speed of the trains, it only takes two and a half minutes to traverse the e...
Great knowledge by the OP and a commenter!
Thanks!
- Well-researched objective summary of American health insurance marketplacesh.itjust.works Why doesn't the American market provide efficient and effective health insurance like it does for car insurance? - sh.itjust.works
Car insurance is relatively simple. I shop around, telling them how much coverage I want. They request my driving history, and give me a quote. At any time, I can shop around and change insurance policies without any problems. Once itâs time to collect payment, itâs a relatively simple matter. What ...
- A comment on ordinary people and totalitarianism, the case of Tsar Nicholas II
> ... I think learning about Nicholas II really contextualized fascism for me. The tsar was a traditionalist authoritarian rather than a fascist, but he really shows, I think, how ordinary people can hold totalitarian beliefs and still be âgood peopleâ (note that I would never call the tsar a good person, but bear with me). Oftentimes people say âX is fascismâ but quickly backpedal if real-world comparisons are drawn between family or friends. âTheyâre a good person!â they object, âJust misguided! Not like the other rubes!â > > But Nicholas II shows the face of genuinely conservative authoritarianism. The face of the mediocre man, who puts no deeper thought into his beliefs than to parrot what he was raised with and stubbornly resist all challenge to that. He was not exceptionally cruel in terms of personality. I think probably a significant minority of âniceâ people, in Nicholas IIâs circumstances, would have turned out just as big a piece of shit as he was. ...
see here for the full comment by @PugJesus: https://lemmy.world/comment/11418466
- The French are still fighting for the US democracy.
The French may not have the first democracy, may not have the best democracy, but they have had to fight harder than most for their democracy.
- paraphrasing from an audio tour by Rick Steves, I think.
Edit: oops, i flipped words in the title
- Lemmy user succinctly explains why Prom became such a prominent US teen traditionlemmy.dbzer0.com Gaza : Au Royaume-Uni, les blocages dâusines dâarmement se multiplient - Divisions by zero
I just donât get it⌠Why is that important, especially for kids now, that feel like they need to do a YouTube video asking for a date or doing some meme stuff. Some teens even hire the hottest celebrity or ask them to appear in their prom? This is so bizarre for me, all that just for a frivolous nig...
A really good explanation that I felt deserved to be highlighted.
- @sempiro@lemmy.world's Comprehensive guide to drum & bass and jungle styles and subgenreslemmy.world Comprehensive guide to drum & bass and jungle styles and subgenres - Lemmy.World
I originally posted it on Reddit a couple years back and people rated it a lot. I decided to share it here as well. - Jungle [early 90s-present] - the genre that predates dnb and laid foundations for the genre. It ranges between 160-168 BPM and focuses on rearranged and chopped breakbeats sampled fr...
- @potate@lemmy.ca educates on us why Calgarians were eventually likely to have issues with their water system and why they're now having to conservelemmy.ca 'We are at risk of running out': Calgarians asked to use 25% less water than yesterday - Lemmy.ca
After a major feeder water main break plunged Calgaryâs water supply into a critical state, city officials are now asking Calgarians to use 25 per cent less than they did yesterday, sounding the alarm that the city is at risk of running out. The Bearspaw south water main â which is 11 kilometres lon...
- Are you a 'tankie' - Lemmy
Originally a light-hearted post poking fun at and doing a survey to gather input, but it has turned into a thought-provoking deeper dive into what it really means to be someone that people would call a "tankie". Note that to some (die-hard conservatives), we all are "tankies" on the Fediverse, but is there a meaning beyond the pejorative of merely "holding a belief that I do not personally agree with"? Come and join the fun, or read about the community consensus even long into the future?
- Discussion about lemmy.ml admins abusing Fediverse moderation tools (with proof)lemmy.world Lemmy.ml tankie censorship problem - Lemmy.World
I feel like we need to talk about Lemmyâs massive tankie censorship problem. A lot of popular lemmy communities are hosted on lemmy.ml [http://lemmy.ml]. Itâs been well known for a while that the admins/mods of that instance have, letâs say, rather extremist and onesided political views. In short, t...
https://lemmy.world/post/16211417
Lemmy.ml, like lemmygrad.ml and hexbear.net, has consistently been accused of improper Federation practices and many instances have decided to ban one or both of the latter by default, with many individual users having already gone further to block the former as well. However, many individual users on lemmy.ml seem unaware of the accusations of the practices of their admins, and some people go so far as to see lemmy.ml as a sort of default instance on the Fediverse.
This discussion promotes wider knowledge of the situation and what might be done about it in the future, in order to e.g. not turn away new potential Federation members (Fedizens?:-) that could otherwise associate what happens on that instance as something relating to the Fediverse as a whole.
- Lemmy user /u/FatTony fills in as your personal search engine while DuckDuckGo is down.lemmy.world Now that DuckDuckGo is out. Give me your search prompts and I'll answer them as best I can. That includes images (based on what I have saved on my PC). So what is it you wish to know or see? - Lemmy.World
Edit: Due to popular demand FatTony Search servers are down for the time being. but has gone open source just in time (Yes thatâs how it works đĄ) . You may now get responses from other users. Servers will be back up some time later.
He's doing a great job.