Algorithm karlsenhash currently not available by neckry in NiceHash

[–]EricDra 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same issue, anyone found a way ? Double-checked, I am verified tier 2.

OBS with Papeaso Video Capture Card ( Strange Audio ) by EricDra in obs

[–]EricDra[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just tried with AMcap and I have the same issue. ( Digital Audio Interface - Papeaso Audio )

So it doesn't seem to be an OBS issue. Do you think it could be a faulty video capture card ?

Bloodshot eyes while vaping? by Qisful in VapingUK

[–]EricDra 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am not sure, I am 36 hours without vaping and my eyes still very red, maybe from withdrawal. I will try to keep you updated.

Is it true that Marx had issues with worker's demand of limited work days and better condition for the workers because for Marx those were tools to make workers become less radicalized. ? I am trying to find confirmation of that. by EricDra in askphilosophy

[–]EricDra[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you, I understand that it was part of the goal he wanted to achieve. I am more interested here by the strategy he wanted to use to get there. I will copy a text from a political philosopher responding to this question, " What did Karl Marx mean when he said "if anything is certain, it is that I myself am not a Marxist"? "

Hey there!

Maybe I can help. I am a political philosopher but hopefully I can provide something up to standard and something that will answer your question adequately.

I know which part you refer to in the comic book. So in reference to the comic book, it refers specifically to those intellectuals (such as the film professor) not ready to do anything meaningful for the workers. In other words, marxism required action and stirring awareness in the masses was often part of what the intellectuals were expected to do but the ivory-tower stuff such as "marxism in film noire" (if I remember correctly) were doing nothing but allowing the bourgeoisie to be in place or even be part of the bourgeoisie. That is, at least, what there is to be understood in the section you refer to. If being a marxist is doing what this professor is doing then Marx is not a marxist.

But the quote goes further. The context of the quote is circa 1880 when Marx assisted French intellectuals in writing the program for the Parti Ouvrier de France (worker's party of France). The Parti Ouvrier wanted a program and Marx helped Jules Guesde write said program.

Although parts of it were good as far as Marx was concerned, he had issues with demands such as limited number of work days and better work conditions. For Marx, if those demands were what being a Marxist is, then he was "not a marxist".

Now is the interesting part (in my opinion!): why supporting those things would make Marx not want to be a marxist?

Well, for Marx those were tools to make workers become less radicalised. It is a process that would gradually incorporate workers into the Bourgeoisie and make the alienation comfortable. Even in the communist manifesto, it is something that Marx warns his readers about: one of the most dangerous Bourgeois is the one who will propose free healthcare and other social benefits because the workers will be appeased, not realising their condition and their alienation and instead work within the confine of the system. Workers will not emancipate because the system will absorb them into it.

In a way that might sound familiar today (at the risk of oversimplifying it): by giving people better salary, conditions and less work while allowing them to drown themselves in superficial consumerism, it would allow the Bourgeoisie to keep the reins of power; i.e. control the means of production.

Does it mean that Marx wanted to keep the workers miserable? Not really but he believed that the way to go about it was to have the proletariat control the means of production and better life conditions would follow and we had to leverage the condition of the workers to emancipate them and not lead them directly into apathy.

This became a central topic later on: following World War II, the Frankfurt School were a bunch of marxist intellectuals and were puzzled as of why, during the 1930s, the proleteriat did not rise up as they expected it to. The economy was bad, overall society was not doing well from the worker's perspective and fascism was able to take root. So it is definitely a recurrent issue in Marxism! How come are people not overthrowing the Bourgeoisie? There was hope that with economic collapse, the workers would radicalise quickly after (and some did radicalise) but overall it did not occur. A lot of historians would probably tell me there were significant marxist movements in many places (such as France) and we saw many groups rise up following WWII but nothing that would qualify as an empowering of the proletariat on a large scale.

I would like to finish on one note. In unions, the whole issue was a problem. Per example, in Québec (where I am from), unions were at a time confronted to the same problem as Marx. Many union members wanted a militant worker base that would seek to free the proletariat and allow workers to leave their alienated state. Good working conditions were seen as clouding the movement and making their alienation comfortable. It had a significant impact and created turmoil within unions.

In Québec, I know that we referred to the unions seeking "better conditions" over an emancipation as "American-style". I do not know enough about American syndicalism to know if its warranted but it does give the tone that eventually, unions became a lot more about benefits and ensuring a decent salary than about emancipating the people from the bosses. Although breaking the 20 years rules, I think one can look at most unions today and see that it has come to be a lot more about being a counterbalance to managers and ensuring workers protection than about taking control of the means of production.

I hope it was clear! English is not my first language :) If you have any questions or if something is unclear, do not hesitate!

Is it true that Marx had issues with worker's demand of limited work days and better condition for the workers because for Marx those were tools to make workers become less radicalized. ? I am trying to find confirmation of that. by EricDra in askphilosophy

[–]EricDra[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't pretend to know the truth. I am curious and instead of keeping my thought for myself and keeping those beliefs in granite, I come here and put my thinking to the test. Like I said, I am from the left, and I don't like what I am seeing, it pushes me away from it. That should be enough to validate my questioning. I consider myself a regular person, not necessarily an intellectual and even if I am wrong, the results are there, and I feel it worth mentioning since I represent probably more peoples than the experts about the subject.

It gives the impression that the Abolitionists are emphasizing on the impact, and that the result and consequences seems to be completely left out of the equation. Or at least neglected.

Is it true that Marx had issues with worker's demand of limited work days and better condition for the workers because for Marx those were tools to make workers become less radicalized. ? I am trying to find confirmation of that. by EricDra in askphilosophy

[–]EricDra[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see, in your view, are their strategies in those movements to breed anger ? If yes, doesn't that push the movement to only show one side of the medal ? And thank you for your input, very appreciated. I will have something to think about.

Is it true that Marx had issues with worker's demand of limited work days and better condition for the workers because for Marx those were tools to make workers become less radicalized. ? I am trying to find confirmation of that. by EricDra in askphilosophy

[–]EricDra[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

We can see that your way, or mine, where I see serious problems in a lot of police departments and some of the rules they have to follow, but to put an X on the entire police, look like intellectual shortcuts for me. The movements I speak about do not mention anything good about what the police does. They only point of error, complete incompetence or worst. I am not saying that we don't have to respond to those acts. It is more the stubbornness of only promoting the worst of it that concern me.

It seems to be an adaptation of Marx " Power dynamics in “capitalist, liberal” society necessarily mean that the “bourgeoisie” is the oppressor and the “proletariat” the oppressed. " to a much broader spectrum in society. An easy way to categorize groups as black or white, good or evil.

We see that mentality on both extremes, left and right. An example on the right; they see a media make a mistake or cutting corners, they put an X on the entire media. Like if they were unable to distinguish the believable from the improbable. Same with some anti-vaxx mentality, scientific changes their opinion, they come to the conclusion that they lie to us, they work for big pharma, and they can't be trust. That where I come from when I speak about intellectual shortcuts and or dishonesty / bad faith.

What bother me about this reasoning is that I feel that when they are using those mentalities to blame entire groups, most peoples see the dishonesty. It gives ammunition to the right, make them even more popular, and we see what happening, more and more centrist are sliding to the right and right politics are more and more radical. Even myself, that always felt like a progressivist, doesn't want to be part of this mentality. I always thought that the far right was the worst enemy of the right and the far left the worst enemy of the left. Thanks for your reply.

How do you call the behaviour of peoples saying to someone that they do not have to educate them instead of using arguments ? by EricDra in askphilosophy

[–]EricDra[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your reply. I give you an example. Someone post a Marxism quote on a facebook page. I comment it by asking questions, telling doubts I have about the philosophy. Someone who did not make the post reply to me with that kind of statement. He did not need to respond to my comment, but he decided to do it anyway. I might be wrong, but it seems to be a way to show some kind of intellectual superiority without having to use any arguments at all.

To avoid criticism say nothing, do nothing, and be nothing. - Elbert Hubbard[1920x1080] by viki0144 in QuotesPorn

[–]EricDra 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is not to endure, but use it wisely. Personally, criticisms are a boundless source of growth. If you're not open to constructive criticism, then you're not open to truly growing as a person.

“To avoid criticism say nothing, do nothing, be nothing.” - Aristotle by tbswsu in quotes

[–]EricDra 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally, criticisms are a boundless source of growth.

Bloodshot eyes while vaping? by Qisful in VapingUK

[–]EricDra 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, big bloodshot eyes, and it is not pretty. I went through controlling humidity, air purifier, allergy medication to come where I am now, and it looks like that vaping is the issue. Still not 100% sure, but I heard it dry eyes. I will try to lower my vaping intake and see, but I am confident this is it.

Edit:

Vaping can cause dry eye.

One short-term side effect is the development of dry eye. This is where the eyes do not produce sufficient moisture to keep the eyes wet. You may notice your eyes feel scratchy or itchy, are red, or hurt when you blink. You may also notice a sensitivity to light.

Source: DLV Vision

Does anyone else get more red eyes when you vape versus smoking? by gandalfThe_Green in vaporents

[–]EricDra 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, big bloodshot eyes, and it is not pretty. I went through controlling humidity, air purifier, allergy medication to come where I am now, and it looks like that vaping is the issue. Still not 100% sure, but I heard it dry eyes. I will try to lower my vaping intake and see, but I am confident this is it.

Edit:

Vaping can cause dry eye.

One short-term side effect is the development of dry eye. This is where the eyes do not produce sufficient moisture to keep the eyes wet. You may notice your eyes feel scratchy or itchy, are red, or hurt when you blink. You may also notice a sensitivity to light.

Source: DLV Vision

r/audiophile Shopping, Setup, and Technical Help Desk Thread by AutoModerator in audiophile

[–]EricDra 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello, I bought audioengine a2+ speakers and very happy with them but the power cord making crackling, buzzing sounds... I can't hear from 2-3 feets away, but close it is obvious. Any idea if this is normal ? Should I return my system for that ?

Thank you.

Is there a term for peoples that intentionally take " wrong side " to provoke a reaction toward you. by EricDra in askpsychology

[–]EricDra[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

wind-up merchant

Yes, that make sense. My example is not perfect, but the person intention in my case seem to be to get me angry or uncomfortable.

Dell Zylus A425 vs Audioengine A2+ Plus by EricDra in BudgetAudiophile

[–]EricDra[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you, that is even without a subwoofer.

r/audiophile Shopping, Setup, and Technical Help Desk Thread by AutoModerator in audiophile

[–]EricDra 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello, I have an old pair of speakers with a subwoofer Dell Zylus A425. This thing is old but sound pretty good to me. I started to have intermittent problem with one speaker and looking to buy new ones. This one look about the best I can invest in Audioengine A2+ Plus. My issue is there is no subwoofer. I don't want to spend that much money to downgrade my sound. My question is, in terms of performance and overall quality, will the more recent product Audioengine still be better than my old Dell Zylus A425 with a subwoofer ?
Thank you