MMbhJkpW3a3i

joined 1 year ago
[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 5 points 9 months ago
[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 25 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (2 children)

I played golf for the first time recently, it's not as boring as it looks... basically a fun way to be outside with friends and do something challenging.

The course I played on maintained the local geography and incorporated it into its holes. That made for a gorgeous landscape, and, as an example, one hole required a shot over a forested ravine, both a tricky shot, and a nice way to keep the natural landscape, flora, and fauna as intact as possible.

I confirmed that they only use non-drinkable water for irrigation, and there were no vast spans of grass, only patches that used to be empty land beforehand. That only made the course more challenging.

All in all, what I'm trying to say is that this sport can be done in a way that's overall fine. Sure, replacing native flora with grass isn't good but it's ok if done in small patches and responsibly. Golf has become a symbol of classism but it's something anyone can enjoy if they have access to it, it isn't even particularly expensive. It isn't great but, done morally, isn't bad either.

And there is a risk in making it a symbol in that way: it makes for a wrong target and a waste of resources. Activists filling up holes makes a point but there's much more important stuff to do. If you're an environmentalist or an urbanist, cars and oil companies should be pretty much your only concern; golf courses can be dealt with later.

[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I've been a patreon for a bit and I've watched all the videos about his set and having to recreate it in Blender for the Vaccines and Oof videos. So I noticed the shine on his head was a bit too green, and I was like "you won't get me this time." He's still two steps ahead, perfectly played. I am going back and rewatching the reveal and laughing all day.

[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

How do you literally, literally run head-first into the point and still miss it?

[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 85 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (33 children)

Can't tell you how strongly I disagree. It feels like the first people on Lemmy are the most insufferable know-it-all and holier-than-thou types from Reddit. Say anything about Microsoft or Windows? Here's 15 commenters telling you how much better they are for having Linux, and 2 commenters on topic, only to be called inferior by the Linux users. Same for Photoshop, same for social media, same for any paid software.

And everyone who has an opinion must insult anyone who disagrees like it's political Twitter, only by people who think they're smarter cause they were never on Twitter.

Lemmy is so toxic it's delaying its development. People lurk cause there are too many assholes talking over everyone else.

The only thing that's better is there are less of those "um ahcktually", pedant types. If you say "everyone", people mostly understand you don't literally mean "everyone."

[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 17 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Here's H. Jon Benjamin making fun of himself for that on family guy.

https://youtu.be/IBDJF4EryN0

[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

And there you go, early brake duct failure caused severe downforce loss and instability on Ricciardo's car, said Tost.

[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

Guy broke his hand and is just back in a car he hasn't driven ever before, with one hour of practice, while Tsunoda has, what, 3 weekends' worth of experience (talking about the updated AT)? He fucked up his qualy with track limits, no argument there, but that's all he did wrong this weekend.

[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 18 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (7 children)

Yeah not like the team completely botched his race with a terrible strategy. He was 3 secs behind Tsunoda before the first round of pitstops started.

E: and the reason he dropped back, we now know, was a brake duct failure.

[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

According to local reports, the bomb contained almost no explosive material, caused no damage to anything, exploded at 01:40 and was placed 30m from the embassy. The people arrested were 17-21 years old. Sounds more like barely adult assholes blowing up what was effectively a firecracker in an act of self-perceived protest. It is definitely not a terrorist attack.

[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I think a lot of people hear Red Light District and visualise a neighborhood of a few blocks... It's literally a 500m stretch of a canal and a a few tiny alleys, mostly on one side. It is very close to the main train station (literally across the street from one end of the station, but, to be clear to any Americans, the station is mall-sized), but that's the whole thing. It's filled with curious tourists so much that you can't really walk because of the foot traffic. It's... underwhelming. It's the kind of place you go to, spend half an hour walking a block back and forth because of the traffic, say "that's it?" and go do something more interesting.

[–] MMbhJkpW3a3i 0 points 1 year ago

It can be interpreted as sarcasm, as in "tell me more, I could care even less."

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