muddi

joined 4 years ago
[–] muddi@hexbear.net 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

There is cooklang which I use in Obsidian. Maybe there are shared repos out there. They have a discord server you could check on

Honorable mention: https://www.completefoods.co/

[–] muddi@hexbear.net 9 points 5 months ago

Living next to a straight major road is annoying. I've lived in a couple places like this near the richer neighborhoods. Rich assholes keep racing their sports cars very late into the night.

I brought it up with neighbors but they just turn into Karens and call the police, who do jack shit. I've considered throwing some spikes on the road lol but I don't wanna screw up the tires of everyone who passes by

[–] muddi@hexbear.net 27 points 5 months ago

To keep it simple, humans are a social species. Perhaps the most social in existence, given we developed language, sciences, and civilization...all of these have a base assumption of social relations.

It's a false dichotomy to pretend that the struggle is between the individual vs collective. Because the average individual is always part of society, and society functions for the sake of its members. The two developed interrelated, from before humans were biologically humans.

Ignoring this fact and portraying it like you need to choose one is wrong. This is the problem of idealism. Idealism just picks and chooses some idea because it sounds good at the time eg. "individualism" but refuses to acknowledge the historical context and dynamics.

A dialectical view would reveal that people tending towards individualism are reacting to the current dynamic which only appears like individualism vs collectivism. But stepping back and looking at this dynamic shows it's not really an eternal duel between dualities. They're not even dualities.

That's why we can predict a new stage in history, not just another move in a duel. Socialism is not collectivism getting its turn after individualism has its day. It's breaking past this false duality when people realize individualism in a vacuum doesn't work.

[–] muddi@hexbear.net 10 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

Yes! I grew up with Indian style porridges like khichidi and upma with Indian pickles, but went through a phase preferring sweeter Western style breakfasts. But lately I'm turning back to savory. I think the heartiness makes me feel more full and for longer

One Western combo I came up with and really like:

  • Oatmeal
  • Chopped Field Roast vegan apple maple sage sausage
  • Fried onion
  • Fried garlic
  • Generic Western herb mixes (Italian blend, herbs de provence, table blend, etc.)
  • Some vegan savory flavorings and salts (soy sauce, MSG, yeast extracts, mushroom extracts, vegetable stock or bouillon)
[–] muddi@hexbear.net 4 points 5 months ago

Sounds like you might enjoy people being honest to you rather than enjoying compliments or criticism. Criticism is more blunt when said to someone's face, but compliments can seem disingenuous, so maybe you don't believe the compliments subconsciously

[–] muddi@hexbear.net 5 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Lucifer's Hebrew name is Helel!

[–] muddi@hexbear.net 21 points 6 months ago

Europe and European colonies have been in wars constantly since the fall of the Roman empire. The first and second Hundred Years, the Napoleonic Wars, the first and second World Wars, the Cold War, the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars....

Not to mention capitalism has brought itself to its knees pretty consistently every decade or so in recessions and depressions

They really think they're unique from the rest of the world but can't admit that the USSR and China are the real exceptional ones in history

[–] muddi@hexbear.net 16 points 6 months ago

I'm glad India owns the islands. Not that India is some champion of indigenous peoples, in fact they are an imperial power in their own right. But it would have been worse if some Western nation owned it (like they still do other islands in the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic oceans, wtf)

The Sentinelese make obvious that lustful chauvinistic gaze of the West that I haven't seen in other countries, except maybe imperial Japan, which was copying the West anyhow. The whole idea that the world is there is be "studied" and that places like the Sentinel islands are some final frontier is fucked up.

I understand the linguistic and anthropological curiosity a little, though I think researchers should be more humble. Most are humble actually, it's the general public that still has chauvinism.

The missionaries bother me the most. Christianization has killed off many local cultures, claiming to liberate them but not saying the quiet part about control and whatever prophecy about the end days where everyone needs to be Christian I think. In India, the lower castes and pariahs mostly are Christian, with the promise of equality, but in reality they still have the caste system within their communities and are just pariahs in different ways at large now. So not much has changed. I am also brown and live in the US, so I have felt the lustful gaze of missionaries throughout my life here. I get missionaries banging on my door every week now. It's kinda scary, considering the KKK were around only a while ago here.

Also interesting fact, the Andaman and Nicobar island were home to British jails for political prisoners. Indian rebels and revolutionaries met in jail there and even founded parties for independence and socialism. In a way, the islands are a birthplace of Indian revolutionary spirit

[–] muddi@hexbear.net 6 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Curry is kind of a generic term but based on the butter chicken I assume it's a gravy of veggie pulp and spices like garam masala? If so I think North Indian and Thai curries are your best bet. Any veggies and greens go well with those.

I was going to suggest some South Indian coconut based curries like avial if you are looking for something milder. They require a different base though. There are some traditional veggie pairings too.

But that's the beauty of curry. The word "kari," "kura," etc. is the Dravidian term for curry, which is its original etymology. It just means vegetable or vegetable dish. You can really do anything. We usually just finish off what we have in the fridge or pantry.

[–] muddi@hexbear.net 4 points 7 months ago

Yes definitely, in D&D as a player you get all the details about what and where, and you only have to fill in the how. For example, the character sheet is basically a template with slots and points that you can find precalculated examples for. The only thing you fill in is your backstory, and take actions during the story.

The DM is also usually helpful to suggest hints or ask leading questions in case you still are stumped during roleplay.

[–] muddi@hexbear.net 11 points 7 months ago (5 children)

Oddly enough and ironically, structure and restrictions can open things to creativity. It's kind of like distilling a project to just the creative portion.

Personally I used to do a lot of writing, worldbuilding, and language construction when I was younger before I burned out in school. I wanted to get back to that but couldn't come up with any ideas like I used to. But then I decided to lay down some rules. D&D was mentioned, which is a great example for this: you get a highly developed setting and specific scenarios, but it's up to you to find the solution to the problem.

It's not exactly play as you asked. But maybe you could consider play as part of what I'm talking about. The first part, when you're entertaining all sorts of ideas, before picking a solution, feels like play to me. Although I like the next part more, when everything and everyone clicks on a solution. It feels like a bonding experience ig

 

Yes, I am still watching the show, and even this episode is edgy, but it was edgy in a more scifi short story kind of way? if that makes sense. It's clearly based on some dystopian scifi stories like Soylent Green and Never Let Me Go, and there was a very obvious vegan message that impressed me.

spoilers, TW: death, suicide, gore

They eat some nice spaghetti, but it turns out to be dead people from another planet, and Morty is mortified. The planet learns about this and begins factory farming their own people for profit.

Morty tries to get around the moral anguish after learning the truth in different ways, just like carnists will try to eat meat and not cry about it: say it is consensual, they had a good life, maybe they can bioengineer alternatives, etc.

The solution was actually good IMO. In the vein of Impossible burger et. al. Rick says to kill just one more person and he can synthesize spaghetti without harming anyone more. But the killing machine also broadcasts the person's life as it flashes before his dying eyes, and everyone becomes disgusted by the concept of eating spaghetti as a whole and gives up on even the "harmless" alternatives.

That is my position on vegan meat and dairy engineered alternatives...we don't even need the category, and trying to keep it around only halters the fundamental goals of veganism. It seems to still be a controversial opinion among certain groups of vegans. So I was pleasantly surprised to see Rick and Morty of all places have a reasonable take.

The last scene has the family eating steak after giving up spaghetti, willfully ignoring their new moral doubts. Rick hints at the fact that it is just as bad if not worse, but everyone just laughs and continues eating. Kinda a typical Rick and Morty final scene, but also hits differently in this episode.

I recommend watching it! Just beware the TWs, it is an edgy show still...

vegan-liberation-rad

 

porky-scared frothingfash

I feel like I'm losing my mind there, a lot of people struggling to comprehend a diet where "protein" isn't a category, made from animals or plants otherwise.

Btw Impossible burger etc. are not vegan, they do animal testing: https://impossiblefoods.com/blog/the-agonizing-dilemma-of-animal-testing

CW animal testing

But we were confronted with an agonizing dilemma: We knew from our research that heme is absolutely essential to the sensory experience meat lovers crave. Replacing animals in the diets of meat lovers would absolutely require heme. So without the rat testing, our mission and the future of billions of animals whose future depends on its success was thwarted. We chose the least objectionable of the two choices available to us. We used the minimum number of rats necessary for statistically valid results.

Yay capitalism lets us have our treats, and only a few animals had to suffer! brainworms

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