EpsomHorse
EpsomHorse t1_j96g276 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Climate change and the projected savannization of the Brazilian Amazon threaten most land-based mammals that live there, new research shows. The “savannization” here refers to when lush rainforest gives way to a drier, open landscape that resembles savanna but is actually degraded forest. by MistWeaver80
> When you have few opportunities a job is a job even if long tern that job ends up being bad for you and your family. You still do what you have to.
True but irrelevant. The poor, shirtless peasants of Brazil do not have access to the bulldozers and chainsaws necessary to cut down the Amazon, the massive trucks required to drag out trees, the markets to sell them in, nor the mercenaries needed to murder the indigenous people who live there.
The rape of the Amazon is being driven by Brazil's rapacious oligarch scum. The poor they employ to do some of the dirty work are mere pawns.
EpsomHorse t1_j96fdgc wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Climate change and the projected savannization of the Brazilian Amazon threaten most land-based mammals that live there, new research shows. The “savannization” here refers to when lush rainforest gives way to a drier, open landscape that resembles savanna but is actually degraded forest. by MistWeaver80
> Better policing and policy is great and all but if poor people are still poor left with no other way to better themselves what else do you expect is going to happen? With no other option people will exploit local natural resources to better themselves.
You're thinking like a WEIRDo - western, educated, industrialized, rich and democratic.
Almost all of the inhabitants of the Amazon are uncontacted or barely contacted indigenous peoples who don't share a single one of your values or aspirations. They largely live today as their ancestors lived in the stone age and they are quite content to do so. This means they live in small bands of no more than a couple hundred, build transitory shelters that they use for no more than a year or two, hunt and gather for food, and then move on to greener forest. The damage they cause to the environment self-heals in a couple years, and so their lifestyle is sustainable.
They do not premise their lives on infinite growth and accumulation, the core requirements of capitalism. They do not exploit resources more than is necessary to live their lives.
The Amazon needs nothing more to thrive than to be left alone by Brazilians and other western neighbors.
EpsomHorse t1_j7elgni wrote
Reply to comment by AstarteHilzarie in Lead Plates and Land Claims in North America and Europe: When did the practice begin of burying lead plates to establish ownership of land, and why did it die out, and was it ever used successfully in a court of law to establish ownership? by whyenn
I appreciate the answer!
EpsomHorse t1_j7elf1r wrote
Reply to comment by Sawendro in Lead Plates and Land Claims in North America and Europe: When did the practice begin of burying lead plates to establish ownership of land, and why did it die out, and was it ever used successfully in a court of law to establish ownership? by whyenn
Thanks. I hadn't considered bad faith actors.
EpsomHorse t1_j7dwhnh wrote
Reply to comment by duncan345 in Lead Plates and Land Claims in North America and Europe: When did the practice begin of burying lead plates to establish ownership of land, and why did it die out, and was it ever used successfully in a court of law to establish ownership? by whyenn
> Surveyors have been burying metal markers to establish boundary lines for a long time.
Why would you bury things that are supposed to serve as markers? Why not put a plaque qt ground level, or drive a pin down vertically until it's half buried, or use a stone marker above the ground?
EpsomHorse t1_j77rtje wrote
Reply to comment by Dumguy1214 in [OC] Three Latin American countries are among the 5 most unequal on Earth. More so than so-called Gulf states and even Russia with its oligarchs. by latinometrics
Your source says nothing like what you say it says:
> He said protesters from his small activist group, the Committee to Mobilize Against Dictatorship in Haiti, will continue to level their allegations - so far all unproven - if the Democratic candidate wins the White House.
EpsomHorse t1_j75t9ao wrote
Reply to comment by Dumguy1214 in [OC] Three Latin American countries are among the 5 most unequal on Earth. More so than so-called Gulf states and even Russia with its oligarchs. by latinometrics
> Hillary pocketed 2 billion dollars of relief cash and as the leader of operations she gave her friends mining permits on protected land.
Any source besides your ass?
EpsomHorse t1_j75t6sw wrote
Reply to comment by NarcissusLovesEcho in [OC] Three Latin American countries are among the 5 most unequal on Earth. More so than so-called Gulf states and even Russia with its oligarchs. by latinometrics
> I wonder what percentage of that top 1% in the DR is baseball players?
Just the smallest handful.
Every single country in Latin America except Cuba is dominated by a small number of oligarch families that own just about everything and everyone of any value. Most of these families have been in this position for centuries.
This is the legacy of Spanish colonization, and its why the entire continent of South America is way less developed than it should be.
EpsomHorse t1_j75stuf wrote
Reply to comment by atraviliario in [OC] Three Latin American countries are among the 5 most unequal on Earth. More so than so-called Gulf states and even Russia with its oligarchs. by latinometrics
> ... any country colonized by Spain will look like that.
You need to do some backpacking!
Argentinians are indeed mostly European, because (1) there was almost no slavery there, (2) the country carried out a genocide against its indigenous population between about 1870 and 1890, and (3) it received massive numbers of European immigrants between about 1880 and 1930.
The average Chilean, on the other hand, has about a 44% indigenous admixture and a 55% European one, with 1%-2% African DNA.
Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Paraguay and much of Central America is even more indogenous than Chile.
The Dominican Republic's population is almost entirely of African descent.
And so on.
Latin America is tremendously heterogenous.
EpsomHorse t1_j0eka5h wrote
Reply to comment by PoopMobile9000 in TIL Europe's wine owes its existence to the grafting of vines to American grape root stock that weren't vulnerable to a species of aphid that was destined to wipe the industry out. by salton
> Naw, NorCal wines have been better than Europe for years.
Those snooty Europeans just can't replicate the subtle brilliance of Gallo or Thunderbird.
EpsomHorse t1_j0ejno8 wrote
Reply to comment by italageordie in TIL Europe's wine owes its existence to the grafting of vines to American grape root stock that weren't vulnerable to a species of aphid that was destined to wipe the industry out. by salton
Fascinating. But explain this to me - if Europe's grape vines have been being grafted onto American rootstock that is immune to this pest for a century or so, why has the pest not died out? Where is it hiding and biding its time?
EpsomHorse t1_j0cok6b wrote
Reply to comment by Nmaka in [OC] Over the last decade, Chile has risen to become the world's third-largest producer of cherries, only behind Turkey and the United States. 🍒 by latinometrics
> a) youre wrong in general
The article says I'm right as rain. Do you happen to have some proof of your opinion, because "youre [sic] wrong" doesn't really cut it.
> b) if you were right, you would still be wrong. it would be your boss' fault you got laid off, not the immigrants'
I never said it was the fault of the immigrants. It's the fault of immigration. Not the same thing.
EpsomHorse t1_j09tlx1 wrote
Reply to comment by schlitz91 in [OC] Over the last decade, Chile has risen to become the world's third-largest producer of cherries, only behind Turkey and the United States. 🍒 by latinometrics
> Italy is like “We got some cherries. You want some? They are over there.”
Calm down, Padre.
EpsomHorse t1_j09tg6g wrote
Reply to comment by latinometrics in [OC] Over the last decade, Chile has risen to become the world's third-largest producer of cherries, only behind Turkey and the United States. 🍒 by latinometrics
> These immigrants, mainly from Haiti and Venezuela, have driven labor costs down...
Interesting. We always hear that those who oppose more immigration or want less of it do so because they're racists or xenophobes. Turns out they just don't want to be driven into poverty and/or unemployment.
EpsomHorse t1_ixw1eo5 wrote
Reply to comment by Ok-Lobster-919 in Researchers say e-cigarettes and similar devices are associated with a higher risk for dental cavities by giuliomagnifico
Indeed. This study is fatally flawed.
I kind of wish posting alleged discoveries was banned, and only replications could be submitted. Because most things posted here as new discoveries will not pan out in the end.
EpsomHorse t1_iw7ztit wrote
Reply to comment by BackOnTheMap in 1986. my friends, 7Seconds sleeps over my boyfriend's house. still love them all like brothers, still with the boyfriend- married 34 years. that's us, 1st and 3rd from the left. by BackOnTheMap
Wow! Are you the one second from left?
EpsomHorse t1_iw7azbz wrote
Reply to 1986. my friends, 7Seconds sleeps over my boyfriend's house. still love them all like brothers, still with the boyfriend- married 34 years. that's us, 1st and 3rd from the left. by BackOnTheMap
So did the two skinheads on the left photobomb you there? I can't explain their presence otherwise.
EpsomHorse t1_iuqcdat wrote
Reply to comment by ultranothing in Does Science Need History? A Conversation with Lorraine Daston by Maxwellsdemon17
> It's such an obvious question to answer that I can't imagine the discussion being anything more than a three-second clip of the lady going "uh, duh?"
And yet watch the protests and groans when you tell a science major he needs to take three or four history classes. And witness the shrieks of terror when you tell a history major he needs to take three or four science classes.
So I'd say it ain't obvious at all.
EpsomHorse t1_iu941z7 wrote
Reply to comment by zerocolorado in TIL that Richard Feynman, one of the greatest theoretical physicists ever, was rejected admission to Columbia University because of his Jewish ancestry and instead went to MIT. by icbm67
> He fixes radios by thinking
Feynman didn't fix radios. Radios fixed themselves in his presence.
EpsomHorse t1_iu93uga wrote
Reply to comment by rmphys in TIL that Richard Feynman, one of the greatest theoretical physicists ever, was rejected admission to Columbia University because of his Jewish ancestry and instead went to MIT. by icbm67
> And his students.
Who are we to judge the consensual activities that adults choose to partake in?
> He'd have been canned for sexual harassments almost instantly today
No he wouldn't. Even in the puritanical America of 2022, relationships with students are perfectly licit as long as you're not currently teaching them.
> The man was a menace to women in science
Nonsense. There hasn't been a single accusation against him for derailing someone's career, preventing them from getting scholarships, or any other abuse of power.
EpsomHorse t1_jan9m4t wrote
Reply to Royal Astronomical Society announces all journals to publish as open access from 2024 by magenta_placenta
This move is actually deceptive and scummy. Yes, articles will be free to read, but only because publishers are shifting their profit mongering to shake down authors rather than readers and libraries. To wit:
> With this move to OA the journals will no longer charge subscription fees and will instead be supported by Article Processing Charges (APCs)...
So now, to finance the unpaid editors and unpaid reviewers, publishers will charge the unpaid authors thousands of dollars to publish their papers. This is literally paying to work for someone, and it's exploitative as hell. And it's furthermore a massive barrier for scientists in the developing world, as well as less privileged developed-world institutions. It's a massive assault on actual DEI.
This scam should not be called Open Access.