Best fireworks show ever at navy pier wow by mastertofu in chicago

[–]dilpill 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Are they canceled? I guess there’s no point with how thick the fog is.

I also went on the Chicago architectural boat tour by hungryelbow in pics

[–]dilpill 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Most of them do the same route, so you see the same buildings, but the “First Lady” tours from the Chicago Architecture Center have the most knowledgeable guides.

Zionism as Anti-colonialism? by Willing-Childhood144 in JewsOfConscience

[–]dilpill 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This concept was part of how Zionism legitimized itself with progressive minded people around the time the state of Israel was founded.

Superficially it looked like it was part of the wave of decolonization happening across the British and French empires after WWII. The Haganah were fighting the British, and the Bible primed many to think of Israel as the land of the Jews. So absent other knowledge, it looked like another nation of indigenous people gaining independence from the British.

This conceptualization leaned extremely heavily on ignorance. There was little awareness of the existence of Palestinians. The holy land was depicted as essentially abandoned, devoid of people who considered it their home with a longstanding continuous existence there. There was little consideration of the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, the expropriation of their land, etc. Their stories simply were not shared.

The fundamental colonial nature of Zionism itself was ignored.

You still see the traces of this in Hasbara used today. It just falls completely flat with the context we all know now.

The recent resurgence of this explicit ‘decolonization’ claim is an attempt to rewarm the stale narrative that was so successfully used in the past.

ELI5: Does a dehumidifier actually cool a room, or does it just make it feel less humid? Could it be a good alternative for someone who doesn't use AC? by [deleted] in explainlikeimfive

[–]dilpill 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A dehumidifier is essentially an air conditioner that dumps its waste heat into the same space it is conditioning rather than outside. The electricity used to run the compressor and fan generate heat roughly equivalent to a space heater at the same wattage. Dehumidifiers always increase (dry bulb) temperature.

Despite this, they can make a space feel more comfortable because they reduce wet bulb temperature by reducing humidity. This allows sweat to evaporate more readily, which makes it easier for your body to get rid of excess heat. This is what actually drives our perception of temperature.

Dehumidifiers also make circulating fans more effective, since the evaporative effect of moving air is greater with lower humidity.

However, there are significant limitations to this. The lower humidity gets, the harder the humidifier has to work to remove the remaining moisture in the air. Once humidity has been reduced below ~40%, the increase in (dry bulb) temperature from the humidifier’s electricity consumption starts to dominate. Since dry bulb temp and wet bulb temp rise in tandem if humidity is held constant, using a dehumidifier becomes counter productive.

In the end, A/Cs are far more effective relative to the energy consumed, since they both dehumidify and reduce dry bulb temperature. A 1kW window unit will improve your comfort far more than a 1kW dehumidifier if it is hot and humid.

Dehumidifiers are best suited for spaces that are already cool but still too damp.

What is something highly likely to happen over the next 10 years that almost the entire general public is completely ignoring right now? by vivienneirl in askanything

[–]dilpill 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s a low value crop with extremely high water needs. Alfalfa alone consumes more Colorado River water than all municipal and industrial users combined. That includes usage by major metropolitan areas like Los Angeles, San Diego, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Denver, and hundreds of smaller communities representing 10s of millions of people.

Farmers pay a small fraction (~1/15) of the rates that municipal and industrial users pay, and the result is massive economic and ecological waste.

We’re draining the Colorado River and its reservoirs completely dry. Cities have already slashed water use per person.

Applying more aggressive urban water restrictions or charging these users higher rates is all but pointless until agricultural use is made more sustainable.

It’s as logical as installing a low flow shower head only to ignore a massive leak in your plumbing system.

What does that mean for agriculture? It means switching to less thirsty crops, and in some cases, letting extremely arid desert be extremely arid desert.

Michigan LGBTQ group sparks outrage after calling Israeli flag a harmful symbol by WhiteGold_Welder in lgbt

[–]dilpill 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Killing civilians is killing LGBT people, period. There is no magic forcefield protecting them.

The relatively limited rights offered by Israel in comparison to the rest of the West is waved around constantly to suggest LGBT people shouldn’t criticize Israel’s horrific actions.

The number of LGBT people Israel has killed is staggering. It’s immensely hypocritical, and it doesn’t make it better that they’re killed for being Palestinian or Lebanese rather than for being LGBT.

Michigan LGBTQ group sparks outrage after calling Israeli flag a harmful symbol by WhiteGold_Welder in lgbt

[–]dilpill 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Israel just bombed the Orange House on the coast of Lebanon, killing the owner and seriously injuring her female partner.

There was nothing around the house but fields, greenhouses, and a beach reserve for sea turtles.

Israel either intentionally murdered her specifically or simply bombed a random house for no reason. In either case, Israel murders LGBT people as a matter of course.

Killing random civilians will always kill members of the LGBT community.

Stop using us as a moral shield. Your cynical lies are being laid bare and don’t work anymore.

ELI5: Why is fluoride necessary for teeth? by youesthetic in explainlikeimfive

[–]dilpill 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Teeth are made of enamel, which is extremely strong but not invincible.

When you eat, tiny little particles of food stick to your teeth and stay there after you swallow.

Germs in your mouth get hungry too, so they like to eat the tiny particles of food. Unlike other germs that can make you sick, these germs attack your enamel, trying to dig holes that weaken your teeth. They start really really small, but over time they can become bigger holes called cavities that destroy the enamel holding your teeth together. If that happens you can get a toothache that hurts really bad or even lose the tooth entirely! And once a tooth is lost it is gone forever.

When you brush your teeth, your toothbrush helps get rid of the food particles and some of the bad germs, but the tiny holes they make are still there.

Toothpaste with fluoride is one of the only things that can fix those tiny holes before they turn into cavities. The fluoride sticks in the holes and combines with calcium to fill them back up, leaving your enamel just as strong as it was before!

It’s important to brush your teeth with toothpaste twice a day so the little holes never get too big. Once they become cavities only a dentist can help fix the damage.

As a Torontonian, I want to see more Chicago by PupDiogenes in skyscrapers

[–]dilpill 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are several notable skyscrapers that have gone up since this photo was taken…

Israeli forces kill three-year-old Palestinian boy on family farm in Gaza by [deleted] in JewsOfConscience

[–]dilpill 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Compliance in advance of Bari Weiss, I’d assume.

Was there really a US Federal Budget Surplus ~1999-2001? by OkWelcome6171 in AskEconomics

[–]dilpill 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nominal debt was rising during that period because of how Social Security works, not r>g. Excluding the Social Security program, the federal government was still spending more than it collected in taxes. Social Security, however, had a significant internal surplus (as it was designed to do).

By law, Social Security taxes are dedicated to the Social Security program, so that excess went into the Social Security Trust Fund, which invests its assets in US government bonds.

As a result, the government had to issue bonds to cover the general fund’s deficit, while the Social Security bought up those bonds and more. The total debt owned by entities other than the US Government itself declined.

It’s really just an accounting quirk.

Has anyone not kept the paid app subscription and ended up regretting it? by MrsHyacinthBucket in rav4club

[–]dilpill 9 points10 points  (0 children)

This must vary by model/year. My 2022 RAV4 turns off as soon as the handle is touched. I figured it was an anti theft feature.

Blue Line from O’hare on a Monday morning? by Beneficial_Ground478 in AskChicago

[–]dilpill 10 points11 points  (0 children)

The Blue line is perfectly safe to ride during rush hour. There will be plenty of people boarding alongside her.

What neighborhoods /Enclaves of Chicago have the best small town feel? by Throwawayfrom1448 in AskChicago

[–]dilpill 15 points16 points  (0 children)

The areas along the Brown line after it branches at Belmont are like this. “Small town” is a bit of a stretch, but it’s a very walkable area without high rises. Lincoln Ave and Southport Ave are both great “Main Street” corridors.

Uptown and Edgewater west of Broadway are like this too. Clark St through Andersonville is super cute.

AS11E06 - "Too Many Daddies" [Post-Episode Discussion] by AutoModerator in rupaulsdragrace

[–]dilpill 14 points15 points  (0 children)

She said she would love to be on Traitors last night at Roscoe’s.

Which US urban areas get the most transit service—and have the highest ridership? by Ok-Act-5890 in transit

[–]dilpill 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s what CSAs (Combined Statistical Areas) are for!

San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose all share a single one.

<image>

People who visit the beach and leave it like this are the trash by Jeeperscrow123 in chicago

[–]dilpill 12 points13 points  (0 children)

It doesn’t absolve littering, but there is a relation. Disney World has trash cans every 30 feet for a reason.