• 0 Posts
  • 23 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 14th, 2023

help-circle



  • htrayl@lemmy.worldtoMemes@lemmy.mlviolently cries and sobs
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    21
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    2 months ago

    If only sex was as simple as a selection of gametes. There is a wide range of chromosomal, hormonal, genitalia, and physiological variation in human sex characteristics, and it is much more common than you think. And that is ignoring much more subtle variation and overlap between the sexes - cognitive, emotional, psychological - that are just as much a part of the natural variation of human sex as any other.

    And before you come back with an argument about some rhetoric about “conditions” or what ever - all of evolution starts as a rare variation that becomes common in a certain population. Certain eye colors are nearly the same rarity.

    Finally, there are plenty of animals that have individuals that do not reproduce. Examples are naked mole rats. We aren’t a eusocial species, but it isn’t to say we don’t have some very early characteristics of it.



  • htrayl@lemmy.worldtoMemes@sopuli.xyzeuphoric recall
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    Things that have been improving:

    • Global poverty rate (going down)
    • Global average lifespan (going up)
    • Global literacy rate (going up)
    • Global internet access (going up)
    • Global infant mortality and maternal mortality (going down)

    The reality is, most of the world by many metrics is getting better over time. There are things that threaten this (climate change and increasing authorititarianism) and it has slowed, but overall we are still generally positive trajectory wise. In fact, I would say that in most metrics that matter, we are improving.



  • htrayl@lemmy.worldtoMemes@sopuli.xyzFuture of American Dream 🏡
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    7 months ago

    They are astronomical because we build too large. That accounts for the vast majority of home ownership cost increases. The average home size is up 230%+ from the 70s, or 300% per person.

    This makes up the vast majority of the difference in prices seen since that time.

    Other direct causes are that we add two or three car garages (30k+) and increased home construction standards ( which add cost up front but often save money long term).

    When looking at a price per area, the price is almost static (after accounting for inflation).



  • It’s the same thing with recycling, companies trying to sell the idea that climate change is a personal failing of every single person even though said companies are responsible for like 90% of carbon emissions.

    God I wish this talking point would die.

    1. Companies emit on the basis of your consumption. This is not arbitrary, emit out of no where.
    2. Individuals being unwilling to tolerate even minor inconveniences or adjustments to their lifestyle makes systemic change impossible. Government and industry won’t change until collective individuals are willing to deal with it.
    3. Meat consumption, housing size, housing location, voting patterns, vehicle choice and use, are all individually driven decisions.



  • Meh, this is not a great take. Resistance training is unambigiously great for the heart, nearly as good as aerobic in isolation. A runner who doesn’t do resistance training is in roughly the same position as a weight lifter who doesn’t run (both seem to reduce risk by 30-70%)

    However, aerobic and resistance together seem to be better than either in isolation.

    Additionally, resistance training has a number of additional health benefits outside of cardiovascular health, to the point that I would say that doing resistance training in isolation is functionally a better use of time for your health than aerobic exercise.

    Ideally, you should do both.

    The only time this is not true really is when the individual is taking PEDs which do increase risk of heart failure.







  • A 200 page tome filled with questionable arguments for the veracity of his religion written by my grandfather after he got cancer. I did give it a chance and read through large portions of it (minus a large section on a theory he had regarding the location of the mythical events in the religion). It was… Unfortunately poor.

    Then it was a balance of not trying to tear apart one of his proudest pieces of work and not pretend I believed it until he passed away.

    Yes, for those guessing - - I grew up Mormon and that is the religion in question.