albertcardona

joined 2 years ago
[–] albertcardona@mathstodon.xyz 2 points 6 months ago

@ajsadauskas @degoogle

And just now, as seen at the bottom of a blog post:

"Post a Comment
Unfortunately because of spam with embedded links (which then flag up warnings about the whole site on some browsers), I have to personally moderate all comments. As a result, your comment may not appear for some time. In addition, I cannot publish comments with links to websites because it takes too much time to check whether these sites are legitimate."

[–] albertcardona@mathstodon.xyz 4 points 6 months ago (1 children)

@ajsadauskas @degoogle

Yes to all. For a while I've been de facto using a miniscule subset of the web. My gateway to other, relevant websites are via human-to-human recommendations, primarily in a place like this.

[–] albertcardona@mathstodon.xyz 1 points 9 months ago

@szakib @silence7 @neanderthal

When externalities in beef production in the US get internalized into the cost to consumers, meat will become unaffordable, the whole industry would collapse. Likely a good thing.

Consider subsidies to oil exploration, oil production, oil transportation, corn, corn processing, and tax cuts to all of these.

[–] albertcardona@mathstodon.xyz 2 points 9 months ago (2 children)

@silence7 @neanderthal

I've heard that back in the day when rivers where polluted as hell, there was this simple idea that made it into policy: an industry must draw water downstream from where they dump their liquid waste. If they wanted clean water, they had to filter it before releasing it back into the river.

Could a simple rule like this be enforced: if an industry is to dump anything into the atmosphere, they must intake any air consumed from that same spot.

Applying this to ICE cars would stall the engine. When applied to the cabin, it would kill the passengers. Diluting it into the air only postpones the problem. This "externality" has come due and it's expensive. Best to cut losses and stop pouring exhaust fumes into the air.

#WarOnCars #CO2