bernieecclestoned

joined 1 year ago

Ah, a classic correlation is not causation situation. Thanks!

[–] bernieecclestoned@sh.itjust.works 2 points 10 months ago (4 children)

So would you say that vaccines are still needed for all, or just for people like me who are immunosuppressed?

Of course, if you're not getting an actual pay rise. Then you strike until you get a better deal or start making money without exchanging it for units of time.

[–] bernieecclestoned@sh.itjust.works 2 points 10 months ago (7 children)

Ok just going to make the counter argument if that's ok?

They are new compared to traditional vaccines like polio and smallpox

Their view is that vaccines are now unnecessary because of herd immunity, (I've got them to concede that hospitals or the economy would have collapsed without vaccines), and that they are just being used up because govts signed contracts.

Their view is that the side effects risk is now higher than the benefit.

[–] bernieecclestoned@sh.itjust.works 3 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Unfortunately I'm at the age where more friends are dying than I'm making new ones lol

[–] bernieecclestoned@sh.itjust.works 17 points 10 months ago (15 children)

Thanks, that's what I thought. They always point to the recorded side effects and I always counter with the fact that the disease is a lot lot worse than the cure, and that it's a classic trolley problem. If the equation is kill one to save a million, you always kill one.

Or am I missing something?

 

I have a friend who is anti mRNA vaccines as they are so new.

Are they?

[–] bernieecclestoned@sh.itjust.works -1 points 11 months ago

Sorry, but you are trying to argue that black is white. It's pointless.

Do you not understand what sorry means?

[–] bernieecclestoned@sh.itjust.works 0 points 11 months ago (2 children)

I'm not insulting you. You're just wrong and you don't have the capacity to admit it.

Here's an example

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Severn_Crossing

It was built by a french company that specialised in bridge building.

The maintenance was not performed by the same company

Specialisation of skills is how you utilise capital efficiency

[–] bernieecclestoned@sh.itjust.works 0 points 11 months ago (4 children)

Sorry, but you are trying to argue that black is white. It's pointless.

You then present my argument back to me that it is expensive to have two specialised teams.

A maintenance crew does not build bridges. It would be too expensive to have architects and engineers sitting around waiting for a bridge to be built

It's an inefficient use of capital, which was my initial point... Just saying socialism fixes all problems is naive at best.

[–] bernieecclestoned@sh.itjust.works 0 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (6 children)

They are two different things you moron.

https://www.bigrentz.com/blog/how-are-bridges-built

https://bridgemastersinc.com/approaching-bridge-maintenance-efficiently

I have worked in civil engineering, maybe when you finish high school you could too!

You really don't understand why it would be more expensive to have two completely different crews?

🤦‍♂️

[–] bernieecclestoned@sh.itjust.works 0 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (8 children)

Lol. How many maintenance crews are pouring thousands of tons of steel reinforced concrete?

How many architects are maintaining bridges?

It's ok to admit when you're wrong you know?

1
Time out error (sh.itjust.works)
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by bernieecclestoned@sh.itjust.works to c/boostforlemmy@lemmy.world
 

First of all, thanks for bringing the best Reddit app to Lemmy.

Anyone else getting this on Boost?

Submitting a link and get a time out error so it looks like the post hasn't worked.

Sometimes it has posted and sometimes it hasn't 🤔

 

Rod MacGregor, Founder of GlassPoint, is a lifelong serial entrepreneur whose career trajectory changed after he read ‘An Inconvenient Truth’ by Al Gore.

“I read ‘An Inconvenient Truth’, as did one of my co-founders, and I thought, ‘We are engineers, we can help with the problem.’ We were inspired to make a difference at scale. That’s how we entered the industrial heat market because that’s where you can make the biggest difference the fastest.”

In the mid-1980s he entered the startup game as a young Scottish entrepreneur, and went on to build 5 venture-backed high-tech companies, resulting in an IPO on Nasdaq and some trade sales. But from 2009, he turned his attention to the climate crisis, tackling the tough-to-disrupt industrial heat market which is the largest end-use of energy, responsible for more CO2 emissions than electricity and transport combined.

The beauty of GlassPoint’s breakthrough solution lies in its simplicity: a wilderness survival technique involves using a magnifying glass to concentrate the sun’s heat to light a fire. GlassPoint amplifies the magnifying glass technique to dimensions never before seen. It captures and magnifies the sun’s heat in giant purpose-built greenhouses, using large, curved mirrors that concentrate sunlight onto pipes, causing the water inside them to heat til they reach boiling point and generate steam.

“We built GlassPoint up from just my living room to about $100 million in revenue, $400 million in enterprise value, and 300 employees worldwide. We have manufacturing in China and projects around the world,” says MacGregor.

From barely evading bankruptcy when struggling to secure investment in GlassPoint’s early days, to reaching $100 million in revenue, to being fired from the business by investors to being asked to come back as CEO to restart the company and redesign the business model after it went bankrupt during the pandemic, MacGregor has had both a rock and roll green techpreneur journey and an outsized impact on combatting climate change.

Today, GlassPoint is the only industrial solar thermal solution proven at scale critical to help the massive and underserved $444 billion industrial heat market meet net-zero goals. It recently closed an 8 million Series A round which it will use to develop the world's largest solar thermal project with Saudi Arabia's national binding champion, Ma’aden. The scale of the project is unlike anything the world has seen before, with GlassPoint greenhouses that span 6 kilometres in length and width.

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