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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • See, this is the less entitled, more thoughtful way of saying what OP said. There’s no question that road planning is haphazard and ridiculous, and further that a lot of such planning is done on dark patterns like maximizing income from legal penalties. But that is what should be fought, not “HOW DARE YOU MAKE ME SLOW DOWN NEXT TO WHERE IMPULSIVE SMALL HUMANS WITH THE ATTENTION SPAN OF A GNAT ARE LIKELY TO BE RUNNING AROUND!?”









  • Way back when, when speciality cable became a thing, the big appeal to all these cable packages was “no ads, unlike regular television channels”.

    Everybody started buying cable packages. And it was glorious! You could watch a show or a movie WITHOUT getting interrupted by stupid bullshit ads.

    Then they started putting ads in between episodes or shows. People grumbled, but hey, it was between not during so … nobody pulled out (statistically speaking).

    Then they’d put an ad in the middle. Just a short one. People grumbled, but hey, it was short. So nobody (statistically speaking) pulled out.

    Over time, using salami tactics (one thin slice after another), ads got injected into all these speciality packages. In the end you got exactly the same as what you’d fled from. Only you paid ten times as much for it.

    And nobody (statistically speaking) pulled out.

    So guess what Youtube Premium is going to be doing? (Hint: history doesn’t repeat, but it sure as fuck rhymes!)




  • The logic here doesn’t work for me. Moon cakes are generally eaten only in the week surrounding the Mid-Autumn Festival here in China. It’s traditional, see. Yet they’re incredibly yummy and were they available at other times they’d likely be consumed cheerfully. In Hubei there’s a special dish of “birthday noodles” eaten basically only on your birthday. (And only by you; the rest of your family doesn’t get them.) They’re also incredibly delicious … and literally eaten only once a year.

    The fact that something is eaten only seasonally or by special occasion doesn’t mean that it’s not tasty. It means that it’s special, nothing more.


  • I ate turkey in Germany in the '80s already. It wasn’t super-common, but it was there. My family tended to have goose at Christmas dinners, but turkey was an option that was frequently used by others.

    Wackypedia says:

    • Turkeys are traditionally eaten as the main course of Thanksgiving dinner feasts in the United States and Canada, and at Christmas dinner feasts in much of the rest of the world (often as stuffed turkey).
    • Turkey was eaten in as early as the 16th century in England.
    • While the tradition of turkey at Christmas spread throughout Britain in the 17th century, among the working classes, it became common to serve goose, which remained the predominant roast until the Victorian era.

    Here’s a turkey farming operation in Ampfing, Germany. That one operation slaughters and sells 3000 tons of turkey a year, apparently.

    Turkey consumption per capita statistics show that Germany, for example, is about 3.4kg annually per capita vs. the USA’s 7.5, Hungary’s 9, and Israel’s (?!) 13.

    Unfortunately statistics on this seem a bit incomplete. The first site lists 11 nations only. Over here they list 7, but barely have any overlap with the first site. More information gives some solid figures on the production and export of turkey meat. … And so on and so on and so on. So yes, turkeys are raised and consumed worldwide.