• @[email protected]
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    272 days ago

    I saw that the other day too. It’s just that 35 years ago, everyone still raked their lawns. Same as 35 years before that.

    • @[email protected]
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      452 days ago

      We are in the middle of an insect apocalypse.

      Remember when you were little how many fucking moths there were? Couldn’t keep the porch light on at night or they’d get in the house and you’d be finding moth carcasses all summer.

      Now there’s just a few. Hardly see any anymore.

      Same for house flies, and bees. I used to have to go and spray for wasps every spring, I don’t remember the last one I saw.

      • @5too
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        232 days ago

        Remember when you needed a bug shield to drive on the highway?

        • @[email protected]
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          262 days ago

          Yes and yes (to the person you replied to). All I’m saying is that that narrative seems to be coalescing around “it’s because people raked leaves.” Does that play a part? Probably. But there’s no way it’s just that. It’s far too pervasive to be “personal actions.” The root cause has to be systemic.

          • @[email protected]
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            222 days ago

            It’s not just the leaves, it’s humans fucking with the environment, on a macro and micro scale. But that’s harder to convey in a single panel

            • @[email protected]
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              152 days ago

              Agreed. But as someone who grew up with the Crying Indian, I am very wary of this kind of oversimplification. It was always, “make sure to cut the rings from the six pack of cans so the turtles don’t get stuck,” and not, “stop manufacturing death traps,” or, Primus forbid, “stop treating the ocean and waterways in general like free waste disposal.” It’s still being actively astroturfed to this day (see also plastic straws). Case in point: a few years ago there was an “accidental chemical waste discharge” into a tributary of a major regional river that is used as a water source for much of the area. This was posted about in a lightly trafficked regional subreddit where a “hot” post might accumulate a few dozen upvotes over the course of a day and a handful of comments. This one reached over a hundred comments within hours.

              It’s only x gallons, the river moves y gallons every minute. Nobody would have noticed until the media made a big deal."

              The same stuff is used in cosmetics and people put it on their face every day. It’s harmless.

              And so on.

              Messaging is important. The corporate class understands this. Hence trying to shift blame for every single systemic issue onto individuals. Plastic straws. You don’t have the right to swim in clean water. Plastic bags. Fuel efficiency. Overnight delivery. Vote with your wallet. Overproduction. Recycling. And now raking leaves.

              Want all that in a single panel? Zoom out from the raked lawn and show the silhouette of a factory belching smoke into the air and vomiting waste into a river in the background.

          • @Bytemeister
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            21 day ago

            Raking leaves, expanding suburban sprawl (and therefore lawns), and the over-use of poisons, pesticides and fertilizers.

          • @[email protected]
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            152 days ago

            It’s also humans continually expanding and building in previously undeveloped areas. It crowds out other species.

            30 years ago it didnt matter if you raked your leaves because there were still plenty of areas for lightning bugs to migrate in from. But when everyone’s surrounded by miles of suburbs the lightning bugs have further to go for you to see them

      • Match!!
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        122 days ago

        i tell this to people all the time and they do not believe me

      • @[email protected]
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        82 days ago

        Grasshoppers too. I used to fill buckets with them as a kid. I haven’t seen more than a few in the last decade.