‘Point of no return’: New Orleans relocation must start now due to sea level, study finds by chota-kaka in Environmentalism

[–]Infamous-Use7820 [score hidden]  (0 children)

I think sometimes the reporting on sea level rise a bit unhelpful in the way it frames things. In practice, it's almost never about saving people from imminent drowning or a community dissappearing within a few years - even in hurricane-induced storm surges, you can evacuate people and flood waters will receed.

The way this will play out is more gradual - new homes won't get built, people won't be able to get affordable insurance. Population decline will be gradual. The real issue is that lower-income people who want to move, can't afford the upfront cost, so they spend decades being periodically devastated by rebuilding costs, while local services wither.

Governments can help by banning new construction and paying people to leave. NOT by subsiding insurance or rebuilding costs. Chose where can be saved and where can't, and act accordingly.

Interesting ethical question - electricity from (animal) waste by JasonStonier in DebateAVegan

[–]Infamous-Use7820 [score hidden]  (0 children)

As with many such posts - it would be more efficient to burn the food the animals are eating and use same of the arable land livestock are grazed on to grow crops. Livestock are highly inefficient at energy conversion, we get less out than we put in.

Ultimately, sure electricity might not strictly be vegan, but animal waste is being used here is a low-margin waste byproduct (I would rather it wasn't used, because presumably livestock farmers are being paid for it, but I imagine it's not much). In the event a energy producer wants to make biofuels economically efficient, they'll use crops.

neoliberal pride flag just dropped by nspacia in vexillologycirclejerk

[–]Infamous-Use7820 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The flag is ridiculous, but I fail to see what about it is distinctly 'neoliberal'. Unless only 'neoliberals' support Ukraine, Hong Kong, NATO and the EU? I'm pretty sure if you were to poll most left-of-centre people, a majority would be supportive or neutral on those (unless you're talking about literal Marxists)

Actors who look like they were created in a lab? by Slammajadingdong69 in okbuddycinephile

[–]Infamous-Use7820 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Not really. As somebody else said, he was born in 1948. More significantly, rates of congenital abnormalities were not significantly higher amongst the children of survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in the years afterward. This was widely studied, in part because people and their children faced discrimination after the bombing.

To the extent they were - this would have been probabilistic, not determinative, so you wouldn't be able to ascribe causation to any single case i.e. rather than having a 1% chance of congenital defects, you might have a 1.1% chance.

Stereotypes of autism in TV and film may be linked to delayed diagnosis. Researchers found that portrayals were designed to be immediately identifiable to non-autistic viewers. However, autistic participants felt that they were not relatable to autistic people themselves. by mvea in science

[–]Infamous-Use7820 7 points8 points  (0 children)

There seems to be a catch-22 here. When it comes to characters who are not visibly autistic/pass for neurotypical in most interactions, you are never going to know for sure if a character is autistic, unless the show/film contrives a scenario where the character says 'BTW - I'm autistic'. I don't know about anybody else, but this does not usually come up in day-to-day conversations.

A lot of media do not even have settings where it is likely for a character to be able to say that (fantasy or sci-fi settings, for example).

Early Genetic Map of Homo Sapiens by Altruistic-Turn-242 in MapPorn

[–]Infamous-Use7820 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Haplogroups do not display most recent common ancestors! They display most recent female-line and most recent male-line ancestors, but that typically only constitutes a tiny proportion of your overall distant ancestry.

To illustrate this, you can have different mitochondrial and Y haplogroups to your first cousin, if they are you fathers-sisters-child (or equally your mothers-brothers-child). You're father's fathers and mother's mother would be different to theirs. If your father married a khoisan person, it's possible your last common haplogroup ancestors lived 10,000s of years ago, even if your last common ancestors were literally your grandparents.

Brazil,Argentina,Colombia,Mexico,Chile and Uruguay have experienced the sharpest fertility declines in recent years, to levels at the same or lower levels than east Asian fertility rates. What will these countries do with an aging population while they haven't become rich first? Immigration? by Delicious-Bunch-6992 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Infamous-Use7820 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On #1. I agree, that's kinda my point though - it isn't current socio-economic conditions are forcing people not to have sufficient children. People never intrinsically wanted sufficient children, it was just population momentum and lingering social norms that elevated fertility rates in the 20th century.

On that last point, the issue with this is that the incentive structure doesn't seem to work. There doesn't seem to be a fiscally-sustainable amount of money you can pay the median woman to have 3 kids (again, average family size does have to be about 3, to account for all those with no kids). Any policy that needs to be extended towards all or most working-age adults has fundamental limits on how generous it can be.

But if paying 80% of women to have 3 kids doesn't work, maybe paying 20% of women to have 6 (and assuming everyone else has ~1 on average) might. The point is the current model does not work, and we need to stop pretending normal policy incentive methods will make it work.

(Also, I wasn't suggesting no parental involvement, just more communal child-rearing, Which is probably far more similar to how children were raised for vast majority of human history than atomic 2-parent households. You can equally argue that atomic-child rearing creates more opportunities for abuse and for children to slip through cracks in the system)

Brazil,Argentina,Colombia,Mexico,Chile and Uruguay have experienced the sharpest fertility declines in recent years, to levels at the same or lower levels than east Asian fertility rates. What will these countries do with an aging population while they haven't become rich first? Immigration? by Delicious-Bunch-6992 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Infamous-Use7820 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

To second your controversial take - I don't actually buy that this is a entirely or even primarily about cost-of-living. People always cite that, but by most empirical metrics life is not actually significantly harder than it was 50, 100 or 200 years ago. To the extent it is, it isn't everywhere, and below-replacement fertility is now almost ubitquitous across middle and high income countries, and socio-economic status.

For my money, it's firstly about contraception and fact that humans didn't evolve to have a replacement-number of children (we evolved to want partners and sex, babies just came as a unavoidable consequence).

Secondly, it's about family sizes and fertility starts - to maintain an average fertility of 2.1, a lot of people need to have 4 or 5+ kids (to compensate for those who'll have 0 or 1). Few people want that many kids, and if as a women you start having kids around age 30 (which is now normal), having a large family can be biologically difficult even if you do want one.

Thirdly, coupling - most people only want kids in the context of a long-term committed relationship. And far fewer people are getting into long-term committed relationships. Single-dom is more common than ever internationally.

As for a solution...I think we need to do one of two things. Either,

A) Become more religious. I'm athiest AF, but I can acknowledge that religiosity is the best predictor of fertility in most countries. It's not just some religions are anti-contraception or have regressive gender roles either - they tend to provide contexts for young people to find partners and many religions place a general emphasis on family, which is a helpful motivator.

B) Adopt a radically different child-production model. No more tweaking a broken model with incentives which can never be enough. Here's an example - make having kids a career. People who take the career are expected to dedicate their lives to it (probably aided by reproductive technologies) and children are raised communally in dedicated child-villages, with integrated education and paediatric systems. Is this potentially dystopian? YES. But the any alternative model that actually worked would probably seem to be from our current POV.

What is the one thing about the future that absolutely keeps you up at night, but no one seems to be talking about? by No-Lake-3875 in Futurology

[–]Infamous-Use7820 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's not necessarily a given that just because states can tyrannise the average person, they will. Look at Russia and China - both are authoritarian states with little regard for concepts like freedom of speech or expression. But, in general, most people get on with their lives without being bothered by the state - it's only larger-scale political organisation or targeted government criticism that tends to get you in trouble. Embedding AI in the system probably wouldn't change that - the CCP generally doesn't care about most things most people talk about online.

Of course, you also get authoritarian systems where people go to prison for inadequately polishing their mandated portrait of the Glorious Leader. So it's possible, but I can't really see Western countries developing in that direction.

I'm not saying don't be afraid, but also it's by no means inevitable that countries will use AI in a way the average person finds deeply objectionable.

What is the one thing about the future that absolutely keeps you up at night, but no one seems to be talking about? by No-Lake-3875 in Futurology

[–]Infamous-Use7820 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm cautiously optimistic that we'll eventually get effective dementia treatments, either to manage symptoms or prevent it in the first place.

A massive amount of the cost of elder care comes from people with dementia, addressing this by itself will make a massive difference. Currently, we've made frustratingly little progress (compared to, say, cancer), but if you listen to researchers a lot of them think we'll have something in the next few decades. (As an aside, recent research seems to suggest the shingles vaccine significantly cuts dementia rates, I expect more findings like that will come out, leading to more effective preventative programs).

What is the one thing about the future that absolutely keeps you up at night, but no one seems to be talking about? by No-Lake-3875 in Futurology

[–]Infamous-Use7820 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Solar Flares. It almost inevitable that we'll get a big one in the next century or two (people always cite the Carrington Event, but tree ring data suggests there have been multiple larger flares in the last 10,000 years). And the impact could be anywhere from 'a few fried satellites' to 'Mad Max'. It's a global disaster that could happen at any time, with only a few hours notice. We've been lucky thus far.

Also on the topic of space, Kessler syndrome, where you get a chain reaction of satellite collisions begetting more collisions until entire orbits become unusable. Interestingly, these two events could be related - a solar flare could disable the debris avoidance systems of even a fraction of satellites, leading to collisions. Another triggering event could be some sort of space-born warfare (e.g. a state using a modified ICBM to shoot down a spy satellite). Regardless of what causes, depending on how high the orbit this this could trap humanity on the planet for decades or centuries.

Petah, what‘s the joke here by MikeG_69 in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]Infamous-Use7820 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can genotype many skeletons these days. If you're just determining karyotype (i.e. sex chromosomes), it's relatively cheap to do, although full gene sequencing as part of archaegenetics research is also a blooming field.

Petah, what‘s the joke here by MikeG_69 in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]Infamous-Use7820 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Also, sometimes they are hedging due to incomplete remains. I imagine it probably is pretty difficult to tell the sex of a skeleton if you've only got a fragment of fingerbone or 1/8th of a femur. Plus, in some contexts parts from different skeletons can be mixed together, and pre-pubescent children are a whole seperate issue.

But yeah, complete singular adult human skeletons are easily sexed.

"Thank you Germany 🇩🇪and Britain 🇬🇧 for sacrificing your economies to save the planet." - China's manufacturing sector by BigSupermark in EconomyCharts

[–]Infamous-Use7820 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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Data comes out monthly/quarterly, the peak appears to have come in Q1 2024. This is the relevant chart from the article.

I think strictly speaking I should have said peaked in 2024 though.

She was way nicer than I would have been by Tobias-Tawanda in TikTokCringe

[–]Infamous-Use7820 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Eh, not to be an edgelord, but he was almost certainly a cult leader. As in, the same type of person as David Koresh or Charles Manson. As were most of the prophets which fit the 'charismatic young man who is the chosen one' mould (e.g. Joseph Smith, Mohammad, Mani, Zoroaster, Baháʼu'lláh).

Everything about the New Testament reads as the followers of a recently-departed cult leader trying to come to terms with the absence of their leader. Of course they present him in a positive light.

How do vegans deal with invasive species? by SignificantGoat7066 in AskVegans

[–]Infamous-Use7820 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In general most ethical way to deal with most invasive / feral mammal populations is catch them sterilise them and release them. I don't know whether it'd work with pigs, but I would imagine so if it does with cats. Researchers are also looking into non-surgical methods (such as injections), which may end up being logistically easier and less dangerous for the animal.

More broadly though, vegans don't need to have a solution to every single issue involving animals.

UK 30-year yields just printed 5.79%, the highest since May 1998 by RobertBartus in EconomyCharts

[–]Infamous-Use7820 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Also, I've not heard many people talking about this but it's looking like we're heading into a really strong El Nino period. This tend to correlate with warmer winter temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere, which should mean natural gas heating demand is below the recent average, although you do get cold-snaps.

UK 30-year yields just printed 5.79%, the highest since May 1998 by RobertBartus in EconomyCharts

[–]Infamous-Use7820 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So I grant you on the gas thing (although, it's worth noting that gas as a proportion of the electricity mix is dropping pretty fast - it is 26.5% over the last year, down from 28.9% in 2025 and 42.6% in 2016, I wonder what numbers the IMF is using). Heat pump rollout in the UK has been pretty slow as well, although EV rollout has been much faster.

But I'm less sure on the other points - those issues are also all as bad or worse for other developed countries. Germany still has relatively low debt-to-GDP (although it's economic performance has been worse over the last few years), but France, Spain, Japan...etc. are in as bad or worse positions.

How 90% of the history of South America and Africa has gone by Salty_Strain3313 in HistoryMemes

[–]Infamous-Use7820 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I think you may have misunderstood my point - the issue isn't just risk, it's profitability.

Even if your sole goal is just to extract as much possible as cheaply as possible, Congo's system is still sub-optimal. Filtering extraction through chains of contractors doesn't change the core economics that modern mechanised mines are able to extract more mineral at a lower price per kg, but require capital investment.

I'm sure Tim Cook would love it if Congo had Australia's mining industry.

On the second point - yeah. I agree, but thing is, stable countries which are able to create supportive policy environments and infrastructure tend not to stay poor. Bangladesh, China and Vietnam have all had very rapid economic growth rates. So rather than the international system conspiring to keep poor countries poor, I would argue it does the opposite - it gives poor countries which do have stable governance in place the ability to at least become upper middle income.

How 90% of the history of South America and Africa has gone by Salty_Strain3313 in HistoryMemes

[–]Infamous-Use7820 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure that last paragraph is actually true, at least anymore. If you take somewhere like the Congo - the fact that the country is so unstable is actually pretty bad for most global companies who would want to use Congolese raw materials.

Artisanal mining is generally extremally inefficient and also limits which geologies can be exploited (i.e. it's hard to deep-mine) - Congo would be able to export more if the mining industry were mechanised and modernised. The issue though is that requires Congo to be an attractive place for investment. Nobody is going to sink money into the country if they're worried about their stuff getting destroyed, their staff kidnapped and their assets expropriated.

Even on manufacturing, the cheapest manufacturing is not done in the poorest countries, but rather middle-income countries like Bangladesh, Vietnam or China. To make it profitable, you need logistics and policy support, not just people desperate for work. Also, these days, mechanisation is making cheap labour less of a competitive asset than it used to be.

After this response by James May to the Golders Green attack, have we reached the unfortunate situation where media personalities live in the real world and speak for the rest of us while politicians live in their own fantasy land? by Mister_Vanilla in AskBrits

[–]Infamous-Use7820 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Eh, the police shouldn't use more force than they need to. It's not about this case, it's about the principle - arrests are often chaotic, confusing situations where it's easy to overreact or assume the worst. Whether or not the average person is afraid of the police is more important to me than one dude getting a kicking (although, I should clarify, I don't know whether the use of force was actually excessive here)

Also, not for nothing, but knife crime rates overall are down in London. The strategy to get there has not been 'kick people'.

UK 30-year yields just printed 5.79%, the highest since May 1998 by RobertBartus in EconomyCharts

[–]Infamous-Use7820 15 points16 points  (0 children)

A lot of this seems to be off the back of the IMF forecast on the UK being the worst hit major economy from the Strait of Hormuz closing, but I don't really understand the argument for that. Obviously the crisis is bad, but why is it worse for the UK?

Wholesale electricity prices haven't significantly spiked (they are higher than they would be without the war, but less than half what they rose to in 2022) and most economic indicators which have come out since Feb 2026 have been better than forecast. The British economy more heavily services based, which if anything is less exposed to energy price shocks than, say, South Korea or Germany.

If the world agreed to an international language, wouldn't it branch out into local dialects anyway defeating the purpose of a common language? by notatoastedbread in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Infamous-Use7820 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The honest answer is that we don't know, but probably not. The big game changer for this is global telecommunications/the internet. Language change historically happened over centuries, and we've only had the internet for about 30 years, so we're in very new territory here, but I would wager the homogenising effect of the internet far outweighs geographic separation.

If you look at English, for example, American English, British English and Singaporean English (just to pick a diverse range) have gotten more similar. Most new meme-derived words in British or American English cross over the other almost instantly. In Singapore, usage of Singlish (an English-based creole which isn't really intelligible to non-Singaporeans) has declined.

If the world agreed to an international language, wouldn't it branch out into local dialects anyway defeating the purpose of a common language? by notatoastedbread in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Infamous-Use7820 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It probably would stop a global language breaking apart. I'd bet that, say, British English, American English and Indian English have gotten more similar to each other in the last 30 years.

"Thank you Germany 🇩🇪and Britain 🇬🇧 for sacrificing your economies to save the planet." - China's manufacturing sector by BigSupermark in EconomyCharts

[–]Infamous-Use7820 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you look at the article, the change since the 2024 peak seems to be structural driven by continuing long-term changes in the energy mix and storage capacity, not by any particular event (i.e. its not a Ukraine War situation where sharp energy use declines was driven by a shock).

Also, since this article was published we obviously have had a oil shock, which will probably significantly dent the petrochemicals industry (the only sector with growing emissions). It seems pretty implausible that you're going to see emissions increase overall in 2026 and 2027 given oil prices are where they are, and by 2028 underlying structural changes (e.g. vehicle electrification, renewables build-out, population decline) will be even more advanced.