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InquisitiveApathy @lemm.ee
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Comments 308
Mildred
  • This excerpt from the linked Wikipedia article for the name abstractly summarizes it nicely.

    It reached the rank of the sixth most popular name for girls in the United States in 1912 and maintained that popularity through 1920, but then its popularity dropped quickly afterward.[2]

    The name Mildred was very common about a hundred years ago, but never really at any other point since. If you see the name Mildred without seeing the person in question your first thoughts will be that they are extremely old. That's really about it.

  • Saw this beautiful Hawk in the middle of New York City!
  • Mostly I was stuck between a Red-Tailed and Coopers Hawk, which is also common in this area and you're more likely to see in a city. The talon color and inability to gauge the size(Coopers are smaller) were giving me pause.

  • Saw this beautiful Hawk in the middle of New York City!
  • It is pretty cool to find it mid-city. I'd expect to see a Coopers Hawk or Peregrine Falcon, but not a Red-Tail. I lived in the Hudson Valley for a long time and they always avoided the cities in favor of the forests.

  • go on, capitulate to the enemy, nothing bad happens from that
  • I think a lot of the capitulation you're seeing is just the cascading aftereffects of the ramping up of migrant shipping policies from the southern border states(or just Texas I guess). The scale of that kind of forced some form of reaction outside the norm.

  • go on, capitulate to the enemy, nothing bad happens from that
  • Nothing has foundationally changed with the DNC position over this time period. There was no "Chad" period where they actually fought back and have always rolled over for immigration fearmongering.

    It's also just not a good meme, which is why I personally downvoted.

  • Tourists (and tourism) are a good thing.
  • You seem to be conflating two unrelated points. When people say "tourists need to go home" or "we need less tourists," they aren't referring to some philosophical argument for the existence of tourism as a gauge of economic health for the middle class.

    These phrases are almost exclusively speaking in regards to tourism's negative effects on the local environment and population. Heavy tourism has a tendency to cannibalize an areas resources and then alienate or push out the native population.

  • lemmy test how ur client handles long posts
  • That's how it shows up for me at least. Reduced aspect ratio and the top/bottoms of images are cropped to a standard size. I have been needing to wait a second for the image to fully load it's full format rather than needing to interact with a post though - it just happens automatically when it's in view on the screen.

  • Anybody know the species of this fledgling?
  • They're pretty loud in general so you would probably know, but they don't tend be like to hang about indoors. Might just be house sparrows if you're hearing them on the warehouse floor.

    You should download the Merlin ornithology app. It's built by the Cornell ornithology lab and has picture and sound ID features for birds as well as just a lot of generally useful identification information.

  • Anybody know the species of this fledgling?
  • They're perfectly nice birds unless you're a farmer, leave out trash, or conveniently have an open dryer vent for them to loudly nest in like I do.

    For those that don't know, they're a common nuisance bird because they nest in enclosed cavities like tree trucks or the siding of your house or any open vents. If you're from the US (At least the Midwest or East Coast, not sure about the western states) and have seen very large flocks of small black birds dancing in the air like schooling fish, behavior called murmations, those are Starlings.

  • Anybody know the species of this fledgling?
  • European Starlings were introduced in the US about 100 years ago by a misguided fool in Manhattan. They are invasive, but absolutely everywhere around the US at this point and that's definitely a European Starling fledgling.

  • Cost by Protein Source
  • I used a firm tofu, purely because the only other option was over four times the price and the chart specified they used the cheapest price/weight possible. The soft tofu does have about 30% more protein per serving for the same weight, but the price would likely make it an outlier.