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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: August 7th, 2023

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  • I agree it’s not the supermarkets’ fault but it’s an industry problem. Why is everything wrapped in plastic? Even bananas and cucumbers and things that don’t need plastic?

    One thing we could do is have refillable containers and just reuse them! Why are bulk aisles just a thing for nuts and grains? Why can’t we come and fill up milk or shampoo or other things in our refillables?

    Anyway, the bigger story is that there are too many humans. We don’t have a plastics problem, we have a human overpopulation problem.





  • I’m not sure what a solution is but I do think that we should encourage people to not have children, stop handing out the baby bonus, and reduce immigration. I feel these moves can provide a (non-genocidal) way to relieving the pressures of human overpopulation. For example, Japan is doing great work in reducing their population, a trend that will reduce the strain of housing and services in that country.









  • I.e. you see your home as an investment from which you expect to see a positive return, but now you are afraid that it may lose some of that value.

    No, I don’t see it as an investment. The way the system works sees it as an investment. We’ve created a system whereby housing is overvalued because it’s meant to have inflationary payoffs.

    My parents didn’t see our home as an investment. They just bought homes at random that were close to where they worked and seemed good for kids.

    There’s no option for me to buy a place that isn’t an investment because that’s the very nature of the market.



  • I feel this is highly inaccurate because it would imply these faults are on the slave and not on the system. It’s not about the job, it’s about the slavery itself.

    I found through personal experience that the prestigiousness of the job is highly irrelevant; it’s the working that sucks. It’s the mandatory devotion to literally anything that sucks one’s soul from one’s body. And yes, that does become repetitive, and leads to some of the symptoms described above.

    But much of the above list are based on factors that are forced upon all of us:

    • Working, for no explicable reason in a modern society where we are grotesquely wealthy and have a surfeit of everything
    • Commuting, a pointless and punishing exercise, often in transportation systems that are lazily thought of and constructed, mostly for cars and not human beings
    • Exhaustion, mental and physical, from the toil of slavery, preventing the inspiration of new activities and hobbies
    • Having to fake one’s personality at work in order to conform to a social order so that one can participate in a capitalistic society one doesn’t even want any part of
    • Uses substances to cope with trauma, such as coffee, cigarettes, alcohol, or drugs
    • Is too tired on the weekends, using them to recover from the cycle of work
    • Mental illness from trauma, unresolved because of a lack of health care funding for mental health, leads him to consider extreme options

    It’s about the system, not the slaves.


  • Sorry, you misunderstand slightly.

    I don’t mean investors in the sense of speculative parasitic humans who are devaluing life by overvaluing housing.

    I mean, people like me who have worked from the age of 15-49 and now own a very modest sized apartment that is grotesquely overpriced and has quite literally enslaved me to mortgage payments for years to come.

    If we devalue my apartment, why did I spend decades of sweat and toil to purchase it? Then it feels like I was playing the stock market.

    And this isn’t the same argument as the “why should people get free school when I had to pay student loans” since one doesn’t affect the other. In this situation, if the value of homes come down too significantly, it’s literally devaluing my work.

    I didn’t create the horrible dystopian system we live in but I do unfortunately have to abide by its rules. And now that I have a tiny piece (on paper but owned by the bank) I am hoping (like most Canadians) to take that piece and cash out to retire on in 10-15 years time.

    What I’d really like to see is some kind of national housing strategy that guaranteed people basic housing regardless of their income (even if it’s “zero”). That housing wouldn’t impact the market but it could slow down the unhealthy growth of the valuation of housing.

    If we could totally slow housing valuation growth to the normal 2% inflation, while also creating affordable housing for lower income/no income earners, then the system could adjust and that could be a true win win.