Skip Navigation
Do you donate money? How, why, why not?
  • I prefer to donate time. I'm now president of one local non-profit (in addition to my paying job), and a regular participant in another. Sometimes I'll donate supplies that we need, but never money.

    If a time comes when I have little time and a lot of money, maybe I'll switch. Donors are necessary. But I know that we need hands more than dollars.

  • What if Everyone Did Something to Slow Climate Change? Researchers are looking at the impact that individuals’ actions can have on reducing carbon emissions — and the best ways to get people to adopt
  • Why do you think BP produces emissions? They may be evil, but it's not out of malice, it's for profit. People, like the 26 million residents of Australia, pay BP to give them more fossil fuels.

    A top-down response, where governments just outlaw all extraction and burning of fossil fuels, would be a lovely, quick solution to the climate crisis. By all means, try and make that happen, but I wouldn't hold my breath.

    One thing you can do today to make an impact is to adjust your lifestyle to give less money to the fossil fuel industry. An individual carbon footprint is small compared with a company, just like the money they give to BP is relatively small, when compared with their total profits. But when you add up all the customers, their money adds up to the revenue of the industry, and their carbon footprints add up to the footprints of the relevant companies.

  • I have been down, i wanna hear about how u r all doing lol
  • I'm doing quite well. About a month ago I broke up with my ex, but since then I've done the following:

    1. Signed up for a performance dance class (I was already dancing, mostly to get more social)
    2. Made a connection there, so now the son of a woman I dance with is helping me fix bikes to give away
    3. Hosted two groups of guests riding their bicycles past my home (strangers, who I've enjoyed talking with)
    4. Put in more hours with the bike rescue, building some stronger bonds with people there
    5. Found out that one newish friend is planning on moving away. Boo hoo
    6. Completed a lot of DIY work for a kitchen remodel

    So I am single, and likely to remain that way for a while. But I feel quite fulfilled, and I feel like I'm in a position to develop more, stronger friendships, platonic or otherwise. It has been an effort to get to this point, and the journey is far from over, but I'm happy to see progress.

  • It's fracking.
  • Midland is a small city, and many of the residents make their paycheck through the oil industry, directly or indirectly. They're making enough money that they could probably buy the whole city and relocate the population elsewhere. Look up the Eagle Ford region if you want to learn about fracking closer to more humans.

  • Why Biking to Work Might Be the Best Decision You Ever Make
  • According to their study, cycling commuters had:

    A 47% lower risk of dying from any cause. A 10% lower chance of ending up in the hospital for any reason.

    So statistically, it's safer than sitting on your ass all day, even including the risks.

  • Men with 'toxic masculinity' are more likely to make sexual advances without consent, study finds
  • I had one interesting experience when it came to explicit consent. I walked to the date, she drove. No alcohol was consumed by any parties.

    She offered to give me a ride home, which I politely declined, and then accepted when she pushed. I asked her if she wanted to come inside, and she said yes. I asked her if she wanted to come upstairs, and she said yes. We went up to my bedroom, did the deed, I asked her if she wanted to take a shower together and she said yes. I asked her if she wanted to go for round 2 and she said no. She left, shortly thereafter, and I was pretty confused when she told me she had felt pressured into sex and didn't want to see me again, when I thought I had intentionally given her lots of opportunities to say yes or no.

    I still don't think I need to get a legally binding document agreeing to engagement in sexual intercourse, but that experience really demonstrated to me that an extra awkward question or two is better than the alternative.

  • A cool guide to the carbon footprint of major travel methods
  • Oil companies sell oil and manipulate national policy to promote its use. Consumers buy it and support policy to promote its use. There's at least a bit of room for personal responsibility there.

  • Airlines Vs. Plastics: Water Bottles Produce 2.5X More Greenhouse Gases Than Flying
  • "The plastics industry" is a lot bigger than just disposable water bottles. Not to say you should use disposable bottles. According to the UN, 36% of plastics were used in packaging (which includes packaging of beverages, ie disposable water bottles).

  • Ford is working on a $25,000 compact EV
  • Uhaul and Home Depot (among others) rent trucks. When I moved, I had no furniture and no car. I biked past a yard sale with a bunch of things I wanted, told them what I wanted, rode to Uhaul, rented a truck, and brought a couch, a desk, a table, and 4 chairs home with me, for a rental fee of $30 as I recall, and not much more to buy all that furniture.

  • [discussion] …. But can you walk the walk
  • That's valid.

    I do think it's reasonable to have an interest in what kind of development is approved and funded. I wouldn't support developers who wanted to build McMansions, and luxury condos are less appealing than affordable housing. I expect there could be some extreme, unrealistic case in which you too might oppose a specific development, even if it was high density.

    Aesthetic appeal (and yes, NIMBYism) is what kept a lot of small cities in North America, including mine, from being replaced by strip malls.

    Of course, this line of reasoning could be continued to oppose anything and everything.

  • [discussion] …. But can you walk the walk
  • Pointing out that the proposed development would be out of place does not make you a hypocrite. Maybe you and any like-minded neighbors can explain your viewpoint, emphasizing that you would be happy with a smaller apartment building.

    It may be that in a few decades, such structures will not look so out of place in your neighborhood. Developers seem to think there's a demand. You live in a desirable location.

    I can commiserate. I'm in a similar area, with a mix of single family homes, duplexes, and small apartments, a few blocks from a walkable downtown. I don't think a 6 story building would be aesthetically pleasing next to the 2-3 story structures near me.

    With that said, I emailed my representatives, and hope to attend the city meeting in support of a new zoning plan allowing for more apartments and businesses, without parking minimums in my neighborhood.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)NO
    nofob @lemmy.today
    Posts 0
    Comments 12