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assaultpotato @sh.itjust.works
Posts 0
Comments 46
Pros / cons of riding a bike?
  • Only thing I'd say (as a cyclist) is that "skill issue" is not a great reply for all cases. My city swings from +40 to -40 and it's not uncommon to see wind chills down below -50. Winter cycling is not always viable, which is why a robust transit network needs to include a variety of options.

    Otherwise, this is a good comment.

  • Pros / cons of riding a bike?
  • If you're going moderate or short distances in a city, odds are it will literally be faster to bike, even at a no sweat/leisurely pace.

    Average speed of commuter traffic in cities is sub 20 kph.

  • Why are grocery bills so high? A new study looks at the science behind food price reporting
  • I wish I could take credit, but those quotes are all directly from the linked article! I felt the comment I was replying to was incorrect about the content of the article and wanted to clarify. Truly they did write a good piece worthy of recognition, though.

  • Why are grocery bills so high? A new study looks at the science behind food price reporting
  • Not really, if you read the article in full.

    In our analysis, only three per cent of the over 200 explanations for food price changes point to grocer actions or other agency in the private sector as driving price increases. This reflects a tendency to portray food prices as erratic and overwhelmingly opaque.

    Other issues — such as the over-reliance on fossil fuels across the supply chain — also go unmentioned.

    It's really shitty wording, but they're basically saying "of the 200 proposed causes, only 3% of those proposed are about grocer decisions" rather than "grocer decisions make up 3% of the cause in rising costs".

    In the rest of the article announcing the report (it isn't released yet), they pretty clearly call out anticompetitive behaviors and price fixing:

    These reports also rarely consider the decisions that grocers and other private sector entities have on food prices. Increased consolidation and concentration in the grocery sector is a structural issue that deserves scrutiny.

    The bread price-fixing scandal a few years ago showed how a lack of competition enables price manipulation and hurts consumers. Canada’s Competition Bureau recently announced they are launching an investigation into the owners of Loblaws and Sobeys for alleged anti-competitive conduct.

    In the United States, there is also strong evidence that the private sector has been profiteering on supply chain issues and inflation. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission likewise recently found that big grocers used the pandemic as a smokescreen to pad their profits at the public’s expense.

    The underlying thesis of the article is basically "people keep asking why food is expensive but all these reports are unscientific and all but 3% of them neglect things like price fixing and monopolies".

    What we need is a new approach. Food is a human right, but a unique one in that we rely on the private sector to provision it. We should expect a higher standard than with other consumer goods, and the private sector has arguably not earned the benefit of the doubt given their history of price fixing.

    One positive step towards generating trustworthy evidence about food prices would be to incorporate transparency measures into the code of conduct the Canadian government is developing with grocers. This could include third-party audits, open data-sharing and a clear breakdown of what’s driving price changes — from the farm to the shelf.

    The article authors (and report authors) are very based.

  • They can't filter out obvious misinformation.
  • Yeah, it's kind of a measure of randomness for LLM responses. A low temperature makes the LLM more consistent and more reliable, a higher temperature makes it more "creative". Same prompt on low temperature is more likely to be repeatable, high temperature introduces a higher risk of hallucinations, etc.

    Presumably Google's "search suggestions" are done on a very low temperature, but that doesn't prevent hallucinations, just makes it less likely.

  • "You're fooling yourself, we're living in a dictatorship! A self-perpetuating autocracy in which the working classes...."
  • You know if these single issue voters could read, they're be really mad at you.

    You're completely right, and I find the fact that this needs to be explained very funny. Ancaps and ancoms are so wild to me conceptually - they want someone to enforce their will on others but hate the idea of a government. Both get really whiny when they realize that democracy doesn't mean "we get what we want" but instead means "we get what the plurality of people around me want". Sucks when you're a minority opinion, even if it's the "right" opinion.

  • I'm so tired of hearing about US police brutality and China being authoritarian. Why does it feel like everyone is a hypocrite here? Where are the posts about Chinese protests and police brutality?
  • Majority of lemmy users are US based, and the overwhelming majority are western. Similarly, the majority of lemmy users are pretty leftist compared to the average citizen.

    It shouldn't be surprising that we're not hearing much about bad stuff happening in China. And that's not even accounting for the difficulty in getting trustworthy information out of China.

    If you want examples of semi-recent stuff from China that largely got passed over, take a look at the civil unrest regarding the apartment fires during China's COVID lockdown, the forcible repatriation of Chinese citizens abroad, suicide rates in major manufacturing hubs, the huge economic hits in real estate and public/private transportation infrastructure, etc.

    There's a lot going on that we simply don't hear about because people tend to share what relates to them.

  • Climate Protestors Storm Tesla's Gigafactory in Europe
  • Ok, I make this comment in complete good faith as an urban cyclist from NA who desperately hates the modern car industry...

    Why not storm the VW plant or an ICE car manufacturer? Going after car manufacturers is kinda based, but from what I can tell the main problem with Teslas is build quality and the scam of FSD, not anything particularly environmental. Is it because they sell their carbon credits to other auto manufacturers, bypassing the point of them? Or is it because they're cars and encourage unsustainable growth patterns inherently?

    Wouldn't shuttering an ICE factory be better than shuttering an EV factory, even if neither are good?

  • The Turk nationalist from his apartment in Berlin
  • Eh, its like how love of the US/"patriotism" is kinda culturally baked into the US... Turks are very similar. My partner and I only ever had one fight, caused by a friend of mine who brought up Armenia early in our relationship. My partner is more liberal than I am, like almost Fox News strawman liberal, but having left Turkey a couple years prior was still deeply entrenched in "Turkey has never done anything wrong". Complete genocide denial, which caused a bit of a blowout hearing a very liberal, freedom-to-the-people person say "what were we supposed to do?". North occupied Cyprus, occupied Syria, Kurdistan are all deeply sensitive topics, even for the most western/liberal Turks. Luckily she chose to educate herself on Armenia, etc. and it's not a problem anymore, but it was a journey.

    The whole history of democracy essentially being gifted to Turks by Ataturk, the creation and assignment of last names, etc. really results in some interesting cultural quirks. Amazing people, great food, but man do they hold onto grudges and history!

  • The Turk nationalist from his apartment in Berlin
  • Eh... my partner is Turkish and I gotta say, there's some truth to the meme. From a psychological perspective it's tough to critique your tribe with an outsider, so not exclusively Turkish, but outside of Americans, Brazilians and Turks I've never met someone so willing to wave their own flag. Considering many expat Turks continue to vote for the parties that are causing the inflation, corruption, etc. the post is somewhat accurate (especially given the explicit callout to German Turks).

    Not every critique of a demographic's behavior comes from ignorant western superiority.

  • Canada Post closes loophole for Nunavummiut to access free Amazon shipping
  • I agree. Sadly, I think it's poorly implemented right now.

    I'd have to find the news article about it, but I'm pretty sure this program exists already. I think an external study on the program shows that the Northwest Company is pocketing something like 60% of the subsidy for Northern grocers and only passing on 40% of the value to lower consumer prices. I saw this article perhaps 6 months ago? Let me go looking.

    E: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/rising-food-prices-canada-north-1.7122481

    From this article, I got the numbers backward: 60% goes to consumers but 40% goes missing.

  • Russia leaves thousands of planes without GPS in northern Europe
  • Igor Shushko should not be trusted for OSINT. He has claimed repeatedly that the FSB was going to stage a coup, etc. since the beginning of the invasion. He also just makes stuff up pretty frequently.

    He's in the "completely ignore" category in the OSINT community.

  • Loblaw reports $13.58B in Q1 revenue, as Reddit group's boycott kicks off
  • Revenue was up 4.5% and profit was up 10%... so they cranked up their margin, nice. Greedflation indeed.

    Would love to see the same figures for Sobeys/Safeway and others, cause I swear their veg has doubled in price in 3 years.

  • China decries fresh US military aid for Taiwan
  • Yeah, the US military has been built since WW2 explicitly with the intention of being able to fight in Europe and in the Pacific at the same time and win both.

    Ukraine has basically just gotten ammunition + existing older US equipment, it's not like we're draining our military capabilities supporting them right now.