• TipRing
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    6318 days ago

    Probably wrapping and cooking our food in volatile plastics.

  • @jordanlund
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    5618 days ago

    Allowing Israel to get away with shit.

    • Maeve
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      518 days ago

      We have to arrange that for wealthy/corps first.

    • @[email protected]M
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      1918 days ago

      Single-use plastic, yeah. Things like Tupperware will stick around unless we go back to using asphalt for food preservation.

      I think we’re going to see single use wax-paper or similar displace the plastic and Styrofoam for your delivery order.

  • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
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    18 days ago

    I’m not a doctor.

    But possibly there will be a better way to treat/cure cancer, and thus chemotherapy will be seen as similar to how we today see bloodletting or lobotomy.

    • @FinnFooted
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      1618 days ago

      Poison the cancer slightly faster than the whole organism! My dad cancer treatment gave him liver disease that eventually turned into a cancer that was way more deadly than his original cancer.

    • @dingus
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      18 days ago

      20 years though? That’s incredibly generous and unlikely imo.

      People are refusing to tackle the infrastructure issue of people charging their cars who do not own single family detached homes. It’s a significant population of people for which owning an electric vehicle is a huge inconvenience. Public charging stations exist, but take significantly longer than the 2 minutes it takes to pump gas.

      The second big thing is that people simply don’t replace their cars that often. Might be pulling this out of my ass, but I had read recently that the average person replaces their vehicle every 7-12 years…and it is often not with a brand new vehicle. Considering how electric cars still make a very small percentage of those on the road, I can’t see 100% removal of gas vehicles in 20 years in only a few generations of vehicle ownership change.

      The Nissan Leaf came out around 15 years ago as the first big name, somewhat popularish electric vehicle. Yet in 2025 electric vehicles are nowhere close to even 50% of vehicles on the road.

      In the more distant future? Sure. 20 years ain’t happening tho.

      But we’ll see!

      • @[email protected]
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        318 days ago

        I don’t think 17% is “a very small percentage”

        And I believe 90% of new cars sold in Norway this year were electric

        Remember to discount any stats from the US, they’re always at least a decade behind on everything

        • @dingus
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          17 days ago

          I just looked up your source. That is of new vehicles sold. While a good start, you’re skipping my latter part about people not replacing their vehicles for a decade. Only 3% of vehicles globally on the road are EVs per the source.

        • @AA5B
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          116 days ago

          It’s a far different view from this continent. The percentage of EVs is much lower, legacy manufacturers are backtracking on building new EVs, our new fascist regime wants to ban them, and somehow the answer to keeping up with the world is to block it with tariffs. Only like a dozen US states have committed to no new ICE cars after 2035, and that starting to seem very unlikely I’m sure there are already people planning on hoarding dinosaur burners

    • @[email protected]
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      618 days ago

      Even wilder than that will be some form of social compromise in fully-autonomous vehicles.

      People won’t want to part with the flexibility of driving their own cars, and once things are standardized and safety records are proven, people will eventually find acceptance in automated vehicles.

      I hypothesize that major thoroughfares/highways will be fully-automated and only surface streets will be self-driving. This is a sort of hybrid-solution which generally addresses a great deal of traffic issues.

      • spicy pancake
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        18 days ago

        As many people as there are who won’t want to hand over control to the car computer for various reasons, there are A LOT of people who would rather be on their phones than drive (many of whom currently try to do both simultaneously 😬)

        • @[email protected]
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          18 days ago

          There are parallels to when autopilot first began to proliferate in aviation. I’d have to do some research to confirm, but I am certain there was at least a segment of people who would have said they trusted pilots to fly more than autopilot. Now it’s 99% autopilot. The pilots of scheduled air services typically hand control to autopilot fairly shortly after departure, and for quite a long time before arrival. In some cases there are even autopilot-coupled approach to landings… and nobody bats an eye.

          We collectively spend millions of hours in traffic, and lose thousands of lives to preventable accidents (like drowsy/sleepy/influenced driving).

          Aviation made the switch to save lives, and eventually drivers will, too.

          When we look back, we’ll wonder how we were such savages about insisting we drive manually.

      • Björn Tantau
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        518 days ago

        I bet at least 50 years after autonomous driving works correctly manual driving will be outlawed and only be done by enthusiasts on dedicated race tracks.

        Or maybe not outlawed but most people won’t have a license. Seeing a normal car might be a similar novelty as seeing a horse carriage.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 days ago

          99% agree. We will find it as absurd as considering horse-drawn carriage as a contemporary mode of transport, and while legal overall, their use is prohibited on interstate highways, as will be manually-driven vehicles. And we might not even have to wait 50 years!

        • @[email protected]
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          218 days ago

          Nope, autonomous driving will probably evolve into a drive by wire system, where you drive the computer that drives the car, that means that you are kept in a safety bubble where your inputs are validated to be safe by the computer before they are performed.

          Similar to that of fighter jets today.

    • @[email protected]
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      218 days ago

      Not in 20 year mate.

      Oil has a massive problem, it is just too fucking good at what it does, energy density of a battery is far, far below petrol, and require complex infrastructure at the point of sale, while petrol can even be dispensed without electricity.

    • @[email protected]
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      018 days ago

      Unless something drastic happens, there will be a decent number of cars on the road in 20 years that are already on the road today.

  • Call me Lenny/LeniM
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    3518 days ago

    People probably wouldn’t believe we sold water in plastic water bottles or shopped with disposable plastic bags.

      • Call me Lenny/LeniM
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        518 days ago

        Where I live, plastic bags and styrofoam are already rare now. Now we just have to wait for people to realize water is free.

        • @[email protected]
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          418 days ago

          You should go on street view and check out Asia, whenever I visited Thailand and see a backroad, there is a huge number of used plastic bottles lying next to the road.

          They still get drinking water from bottles.

          Weather that is the case in large cities like Bangkok I don’t know as I haven been there enough to learn.

    • socsa
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      1118 days ago

      I legitimately do not understand why so many people refuse to drink tap water. I get that an occasional bottle of water is convenient when traveling or something, but some of my neighbors seem to only drink bottled water even at home. The city will literally test your water for free if you don’t trust it for some reason.

      • @PugJesus
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        116 days ago

        Tap in many places has a distinctive ‘taste’ to it. A cheap filter is WAY more useful (and way cheaper) than bottled water though.

    • @[email protected]
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      818 days ago

      Nope, I can’t see this happening either, unless bides take over.

      Toilet paper is actually rather effective, it is cheap, easily processed, effective enough at removing most of the crap, it does not require added water infrastructure (I would not clean my ass with grey water) and simple to teach new users

      • MrKurtz
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        1218 days ago

        If you happened to touch shit with literally any part of your body other than your asshole, would you be happy with just wiping it with a piece of dry paper, or would you immediately go wash it?

        I have no more questions…

        Btw, don’t even get me started if you have a hairy butt.

        • @Blumpkinhead
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          617 days ago

          It’s like trying to wipe peanut butter out of a shag carpet.

          • @foggenbooty
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            015 days ago

            So you’re OK with your asshole having some shit remaining on it because it only touches your underwear?

            I feel for your SO.

            • @[email protected]
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              115 days ago

              Ok, this is fascinating.

              This thread was about wiping with paper after going to the toilet, this was not a thread about general cleanliness.

              I shower every day, this obviously includes wasing my asshole.

              So now, I want an answer to this question.

              What in this entire thread gave you the impression that I never wash my asshole?

              I stand by what I wrote, wiping after using the toilet is fine, it obviously is a temporary solution until the next proper shower, but that is fine.

              • @foggenbooty
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                115 days ago

                I think the main takeaway here is that you recognize washing is the appropriate thing to do, but are OK with a temporary wipe until your next shower. People are saying with a bidet you don’t have to wait, you use wash each time.

                I agree it’s gone off the rails and I’m partly to blame. I just don’t understand peoples reluctance to use bidets.

      • @[email protected]
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        1018 days ago

        Added water infrastructure? My guy, the connection for the cistern is right there. The added infrastructure is literally a tee piece and the hose.

        • @[email protected]
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          118 days ago

          That is fair, though in places with unreliable water I doubt that using water to flush or a bidet would be the first priority.

          • @[email protected]
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            417 days ago

            This is just my experience, but that experience includes travelling through some remote areas in less developed countries. Water to wash is usually the first upgrade on the tech tree- It’s unlocked right after you dig a hole in the ground. Grinding xp to get plumbing will make life nicer, but to start with you just need to gather enough resources for a bucket.

  • sunzu2
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    3118 days ago

    US health insurance industry… Either we get single payer or all of us will be in poverty.

    • @pdxfed
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      18 days ago

      Well, we’ve tallied the votes and…sigh

    • @Sirfedora
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      618 days ago

      Brother, US is never changing, you guys hate each other too much.

      • Dizzy Devil Ducky
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        918 days ago

        If there’s one thing Saint Luigi has taught us, that the Corpos hate, it’s that we can all agree we want them dead. At least a lot of people do.

        • @AA5B
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          216 days ago

          They’re using our hatred to divide us, but our hatred can also unify us to demand actual change

  • @MTK
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    2618 days ago

    Hopefully, single use plastics would be a ridiculous thing in the future, maybe they will look back at it like we look back at asbestos.

    Here is a funny asbestos ad from the past

    • Soulifix
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      517 days ago

      God, I wonder how many people got those and used them regularly who are now having issues because of them?

      • @Alexstarfire
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        517 days ago

        Probably not many. Asbestos is bad when it gets into the air. If it’s within an oven mitt, even if cut, how would it get into the air?

      • @BeMoreCareful
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        117 days ago

        I’m pretty sure they put asbestos in basically anything back in the day.

        • MrsDoyle
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          216 days ago

          Our ironing board had an asbestos pad at one end for sitting the iron on.

    • @[email protected]
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      117 days ago

      what do you mean by this specifically, are you talking about the way it’s just taken willy nilly, or how they won’t be as strong in the future?

      • Kraiden
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        317 days ago

        C) All of the above.

        I hope it will be considered insane that we pump livestock full of them as a preventative measure, rather than as a treatment, while also prescribing them for every little thing.

        When our current antibiotics are no longer effective at all, I hope that we’ll be able to find new ones and that we’ll be much more responsible with their use. I hope that people in the future will be as incredulous at our current use of them, as we are of using arsenic in makeup.

  • aviationeast
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    2118 days ago

    Social media, at least in the current form.

    • @[email protected]
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      818 days ago

      That’s true. They already evolved and most of us didn’t even realize. News feeds were added and gradually evolved to use information they know about is to push our buttons and affect our behavior and beliefs.

      They still needed content, but with generative AI that’s no longer necessary, this is why social media companies are so invested in it.

      Social media is no longer social it became a platform to manipulate people. It is much worse than traditional ways of propaganda, because each person gets their customized feed tuned to issues that are more likely to influence them.

  • Like the wind...
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    18 days ago

    Car centric infrastructure 🤣 lol back in the 2020s they had to travel in slow ass crowds of cars 🤣🤣🤣 nobody liked driving but they settled for it because it was the best they had! Although I wish I could have bought Tears of the Kingdom when it was new, I don’t even want to know what cars were like.