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ArseAssassin@sopuli.xyzto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is a 'social rule' that we all follow but nobody ever actually agreed to?
11·14 days agoIt helps you balance when you’re leaning forward to look at something.
ArseAssassin@sopuli.xyzto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•If you could magically form new nations, which would you break away or unify? (non-serious)
2·16 days agoEver been to Greece? 'Cause we’re going back to city states, baby!
I think the author might have accidentally flipped the panels.

My guess is they have no one telling them “no.” I’ve yet to find someone who didn’t go more than a little crazy in that kind of environment. I suppose being a billionaire tends to induce occupational psychosis.
My apologies, didn’t read the sidebar.
Tell your brother that I enjoyed that 👍
Nothing Is Too Small Not to Be Wondered About by Mary Oliver
The cricket doesn’t wonder if there’s a heaven or, if there is, if there’s room for him. It’s fall. Romance is over. Still, he sings. If he can, he enters a house through the tiniest crack under the door. Then the house grows colder. He sings slower and slower. Then, nothing. This must mean something, I don’t know what. But certainly it doesn’t mean he hasn’t been an excellent cricket all his life.
ArseAssassin@sopuli.xyzto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•How come most celebs/influencers go broke with in a short amount of time earning a couple million? Why not invest in local stores or offer money for a percentage of said store why not perpetualy money
1·1 month ago78% of NFL players are in financial trouble couple of years after retirement. I imagine there’s something similar going on.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_finances_of_professional_American_athletes
According to a 2009 Sports Illustrated article, 35% of National Football League (NFL) players are either bankrupt or are under financial stress within two years of retirement and an estimated 60% of National Basketball Association (NBA) players, 78% of NFL players,[2] and a large percentage of Major League Baseball (MLB) players (4x that of the average U.S. citizen)[3] go bankrupt within five years after leaving their sport.[4] Originally the statement “60% of NBA players go bankrupt within five years after leaving their sport” was released by a representative of the NBA Players’ Association in 2008.[5] A Fortune magazine article states, however, that a working paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research found that the percentage of NFL players who go bankrupt after two years is a much smaller 1.9%, climbing to 15.7% after 12 years.[6]
With the caveat that I’ve blocked all news and politics communities… not saying you’re wrong, but can you give a practical example of the kind of opinion you’d like to see voiced here?
To me the Lemmy userbase seems rightfully distrustful of corporate curated talking points and it’s easy enough to see those by going to any social media platform. I don’t know who you’re talking to in real life, but after meeting hundreds of AI tech bros (and many others too polite to vocally disagree with them) that seems like a breath of fresh air.
I could do without the endless barrage of guillotine references though. Anyone who thinks of the French Revolution as the ideal model for societal reform would be wise to take a moment to read up on it.
ArseAssassin@sopuli.xyzto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Why is traveling such a big deal for people?
3·2 months agoTravel is the perfect product.
It can be luxurious, yet is affordable enough for most people in some form. People love to tell everyone the places they’ve visited; some people, given the chance, will talk about nothing else. It’s endlessly novel and requires little physical investment. It’s literally impossible to run out of places to visit. There are practically no limits to how much money you can spend on travel.
That is to say, it’s consumerism dressed up as virtue.
ArseAssassin@sopuli.xyzto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is a much bigger threat than initially presented?
1·2 months agoJust try to make sure you don’t end up as narrow-minded as they are.
ArseAssassin@sopuli.xyzto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is a much bigger threat than initially presented?
4·2 months agoI don’t know, guys like Elon Musk can’t seem to shut up about it.



Don’t remember the details but the Mythbusters tested this. I think this was the episode.