“notorious prick alberto del rio”
MolochAlter
- 9 Posts
- 774 Comments
MolochAlterto SquaredCircle@lemmy.zip•Alberto El Patron Arrested On Alleged Domestic ViolenceEnglish5·3 days ago
MolochAlterto SquaredCircle@lemmy.zip•AEW Dynamite (4-1-26) Discussion Thread (SPOILERS!)English4·8 days agoJericho coming in and just doing the cm punk “I’m home” thing before leaving again is probably the highest chuckle-to-word-count ratio I’ve experienced in a wrestling promo.
Brown lentils.
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Dice onions, celery, carrots, in equal volume.
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Stirfry them in a pot with some olive oil.
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Throw in a sausage or some other meat with a strong flavour, just a small amount, stirfry until the outside is seared.
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Add a can of lentils and a can of tomato chunks and sauce, cook until the chunks have rendered.
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Serve with polenta or another neutral side.
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MolochAlterto No Stupid Questions•What's the deal with people liking old devices?English5·15 days agoI picked up an old amplifier from my parents, they bought it for their day’s equivalent of 4-500 bucks to use with their LP player, which has since died.
It’s a Scott from the 70s, made in the US, and it somehow now appreciated over inflation if you look at the sale prices on ebay and the like (~700€).
When setting it up i opened it to see if it needed cleaning out, and the insides were pristine, and clearly hand soldered.
The sound is clean as a whistle, it’s compatible with RC cables, and has a standard European plug. Not only does it not need upgrading, it stands head and shoulders over what you can get today for the same price they bought it for.
Sometimes, products made before planned obsolescence were just better.
Honestly? Probably
I can’t believe she got Juice pregnant. (Shamelessly stolen from a friend)
MolochAlterto Selfhosted•PewDiePie Promoting Self-Hosting, Blocking Ads, Shorts and moreEnglish1·22 days agoSame, and I’d count that as contrarian behaviour.
MolochAlterto Selfhosted•PewDiePie Promoting Self-Hosting, Blocking Ads, Shorts and moreEnglish166·23 days agoThis is a site populated mostly by the too edgy or too contrarian for Reddit, with the same flaws in incentive systems as Reddit, why are you surprised lol.
MolochAlterto Linux Gaming•Lutris maintainer: "I've removed the Claude co-authorship from the commits a few days ago. So good luck figuring out what's generated and what is not."English2·27 days agoignoring the issue with Lutris and AI for a minute
Please by all means, I ignored it in the first place, I find this way more interesting.
If you choose not to judge your own actions by the expected consequences of those actions for everyone involved, then how exactly are you supposed to judge them?
Well, this is only half the problem. It’s a bad system because it demands the impossible of you (i.e. accurately predict the future) but it also has a really narrow interest in the dimensions of human morality.
To directly answer the question however: you judge them by a set of principles, whichever you deem right, that you apply consistently across choices.
When it comes to inter-personal choices, the vast majority of all questions can easily be answered by asking yourself “am i betraying some explicit or implicit bond of trust with someone (who has not done so themselves) by doing/saying this?” and if you are, you just stop.
And to be clear, I don’t claim to follow this principle 100% of the time, I am not a saint, but that to me is the guiding principle when there are stakes to my behaviour, and it has not failed me yet.
If you’re following some rule that disagrees with the utilitarian view, then by definition it’s a rule that in your own opinion leads to a worse outcome for everyone.
(Emphasis added)
At its core, the idea of utilitarian morality is to “maximise utility”, that is to do whatever does the most “good” to the highest number of people.
This is, IMO, a terrible metric, and as a deontologist I am perfectly happy reaching a “worse” outcome by it.
It is not particularly hard to see how, by applying this metric, you can justify any kind of scapegoating, abuse, and/or undue leniency on people that would deserve harsh punishment in any deontological or virtue based system, as soon as enough “good” is produced through it.
There is a very dark, but apt, joke about this kind of approach to morality: that 9/10 people involved in it endorse gang rape.
To me, morality is a qualitative assessment, not a quantitative one.
It does not matter how many perpetrator lives will be ruined if they have earned their punishment, and it does not matter how much happier they would be to get away with the crime than the victim would suffer, comparatively.
To do anything else would be to relinquish morality to the whims of the masses, because it implies that there is a threshold past which the abuse of the few becomes negligible due to the benefits it brings to the many.
trying to claim that all utilitarians are either stupid or evil is just incorrect.
To be fair I also stated they can be naïve; I was one too in my youth, until I learned and understood better.
MolochAlterto Linux Gaming•Lutris maintainer: "I've removed the Claude co-authorship from the commits a few days ago. So good luck figuring out what's generated and what is not."English8·29 days agoUtilitarianism really falls at the first hurdle of any kind of evaluation of a moral system.
It has no real prescriptive power because it demands you be able to correctly foresee the outcome of your actions, something literally addressed by “The road to hell is paved with good intentions”, an adage of at least 400 years ago, and yet people will still gravitate towards it as if society did not explicitly caution us about that mindset forever now.
At this point I can’t help but look down on those who genuinely identify as utilitarian as either too young, too stupid, or actively malevolent and trying to find a way to justify their bad behaviours as errors rather than malice or negligence.
Oh, I was convinced it was specifically bladed, as opposed to armi contundenti.
You always learn something new.
Yes, it’s the literal translation of our term for bladed melee weapons.
Bold of you to assume that Italian highschools have a shop class, the 3D printer is probably part of the computer lab.
Source: am Italian.
Personally I prefer my software to give me options, I hate when stuff like this is picked for me when equally valid options exist
MolochAlterto SquaredCircle@lemmy.zip•Antonio Inoki Human-Like Robot Being CreatedEnglish5·1 month agoAntonio Inoki shaped terminators is very much within my comprehension, and I wish it weren’t.
MolochAlterto Games•Overwatch 2 Is Just 'Overwatch' Again And Five New Heroes Arrive Next WeekEnglish12·2 months ago“Jetpack cat”? Really? That desperate, huh?
MolochAlterto No Stupid Questions•How does capitalism differ from crony capitalism?English2·2 months agoOk, I know this will be a bit of a read, but:
Capitalism vs Croney Capitalism
In an ideal scenario, a “free market” is a market that may be regulated but not in such a way that the state uses its institutional powers to play favourites.
Either a good or service can be provided on the market, which means that within the limits of the law any group or individual can provide that service, or the service is banned, meaning it won’t be allowed for anyone to provide.
Depending on who you ask, even simple barriers such as licenses to operate and OSHA guidelines are forms of interference with the free market; the reality is that in practice perfect information does not exist and society at large prefers limiting the ability of the incompetent to do harm accidentally or through negligence, rather than having them punished after the fact.
Croney capitalism is when these barriers are not only present but erected (typically by the government, but it could also be done by other regulatory bodies) in such a way that they deliberately privilege certain preferred entities (the aforementioned cronies) over others.
This, much like redlining was discriminatory to black people despite mentioning them explicitly, does not have to be an explicit bias, it can be as simple as tuning requirements to make them prohibitive to companies not already established in the market to prevent new competition from coming into existence.
The US definitely has a big issue with this at multiple scales.
What is the best solution
I find the best approach to markets is to look at their elasticity.
An example of a highly elastic market could be videogames. Nobody needs videogames to survive, nobody needs a specific videogame to exist, it’s entirely driven by preference and unnecessary voluntary spending, you have full access to the entire market regardless of where you are provided you can pay the price of admission.
Perfect field to build a market around, the client will naturally gravitate to whatever offer they find provides the best value for money, companies will read the signals and adapt, etc.
A highly inelastic market is, for instance, emergency healthcare. Whenever you are in the market for it, you definitionally have an urgent, time sensitive, geographically limited need for the product. You can’t shop around beyond that range and failure to find the product usually means permanent consequences potentially as severe as death.
In that case, a market is a terrible solution to the problem, as markets have no incentive to capillarise at a loss, and want to price their goods and services based on the value to the client, which in this case would be infinite.
A market handling healthcare without a non-profit option competing with it is a recipe for disaster, while flanked by one it becomes extremely beneficial.
Italy and France, 2 of the best healthcare systems in the world in terms of cost per capita and outcomes, are mixed systems where you can go to the state healthcare system for anything and pay a nominal amount (to deter timewasters) or you can get private insurance or pay out of pocket for private alternatives that have to follow the same standards as the public sector at minimum. This helps treating niche conditions or skipping the line on severe common conditions, meaning those who can afford private treatment will lessen the load on the public sector, reducing queues for those who can’t afford it.
In short: The best approach is looking at each market category and making tailored solutions that best fit the kind of good/service being dealt with.
Some markets, like security, are better left in the hands of a few strictly regulated entities, other are better served by a fully free approach (like luxury goods), most important things fall somewhere in the middle, where some state interference/mediation objectively leads to the best outcomes.
MolochAlterto Games@sh.itjust.works•Ubisoft Closes Halifax Studio Just After Employees UnionizedEnglish3·3 months agoVery fair lol
MolochAlterto Games@sh.itjust.works•Ubisoft Closes Halifax Studio Just After Employees UnionizedEnglish1·3 months agoTheir games have been reheated bongwater broth for more than a decade now, more predictable than even Sony and far less competent in execution, did you need more reasons?
Tbf, of all consoles, PlayStation games are the easiest to actually dump legally owned copies of, all you need is a bluray reader and you can do all of them.