rumschlumpel

joined 1 year ago
[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 1 points 2 hours ago

Weird how there's not a single comment here that says that people should never eat meat, if there's vegans in every thread.

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 8 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 4 hours ago) (2 children)

That's some fucked up capitalization in the title.

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 3 points 8 hours ago

He's probably using his funds for ~~financing fascists~~ promoting the betterment of society!

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 12 points 9 hours ago

Drinking does help with that!

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 5 points 9 hours ago (4 children)

Is this really unpopular? Rightwingers certainly seem to agree with this.

That said, there's "not being vegan or vegetarian" and then there's "eat so much meat and dairy that it's significantly deteriorating your health", and the latter seems to be the standard for most people in wealthy countries. And as a species, we can't afford to eat like this if we aren't fine with mass casualties and being a global extinction event (vegan agriculture kinda already does that anyway, but it would be much less severe).

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 2 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Similar could be said for 1940's Hitler. That guy was not doing well back then.

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 2 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago) (3 children)

Hitler was kinda already demented, especially during WW2.

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 17 points 11 hours ago

It was gay for you and straight for him. You could say it was kinky.

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 1 points 11 hours ago (3 children)

That's a very arbitrary definition of "university".

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 1 points 12 hours ago (5 children)

So they're completely separate from universities?

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 2 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago)

Judging by what I've seen so far, wealthy countries don't care for refugees even if they're well-educated people from the US. On top of that, the US is able to exert pressure on most western countries to not make them recognize the US as unsafe for asylum seekers, even if a destination country wants to do it.

Maybe something like Brazil might be an option, but it's politically volatile - next time it has a rightwing government, all the US refugees might be shipped back to the US. Seems like at this point, all the countries that are consistently willing to oppose the US are either not much better or too volatile to be sure that they won't turn on you.

[–] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 1 points 12 hours ago (9 children)

Is that not part of university?

 

geteilt von: https://feddit.org/post/18864804

cross-posted from: https://feddit.org/post/18853625

Während des Pilotprojekts werden keine Strafzettel auf Basis der Daten des Scan-Fahrzeugs erstellt, wie die Stadt Heidelberg schreibt. Die Daten dienten lediglich zur internen Auswertung der Technik und Abläufe. Die erste Auswertung des Projektes in Heidelberg wird demnach im ersten Quartal 2026 erwartet. Danach könne die Stadt über den dauerhaften Einsatz von Scan-Autos entscheiden.

Aus Sicht des Verkehrsministeriums ist der große Vorteil der Scan-Autos ihre Effizienz. „Eine Person kann mit einem Scan-Fahrzeug bis zu 1.000 Fahrzeuge pro Stunde kontrollieren, während es zu Fuß nur etwa 50 Fahrzeuge sind“, teilte ein Sprecher mit.

... So seien in Amsterdam die Kosten für die Kontrolle des Parkraums um die Hälfte reduziert worden. Aus den Niederlanden wisse man auch, dass die Kontrollkräfte durch die Technik weniger Anfeindungen ausgesetzt seien.

 
 

I use my bass amp for guitar practice at home, because I'm primarily a bass player and it works well enough. I'm currently using a Harley Benton Drop Kick for distortion plus a 7-band EQ which gets me a decent enough sound, but I'm looking for more variety. Especially something high gainy for a modern-ish metal riff tone. My current setup is unsurprisingly pretty good at stoner/desert rock stuff, though the amp is not nearly as dark as you'd think.

My guitar is a Yamaha Pacifica with a bridge humbucker, currently tuned to C standard, amp is a Fender Rumble 25, older version.

Anyone have an idea what would work well here? Maybe a Boss MT-2 or clone thereof? I read it's decent if you use the effects loop to skip the amp's preamp section (my amp does have an effects loop), but I'm not quite sure if it's the right pick for the kind of unconventional setup I have, or if it would even be a good choice for modern metal tone even if I did use a guitar amp. I'm trying to keep the budget reasonable, btw, so please no boutique pedals.

I could get a proper guitar amp, but space is a bit limited here and bedroom-sized combos don't usually do a great high gain sound on their own, anyway.

 

Ich will das unironisch haben ... Reizdarm ist ne dreckige Hündin. Aber wahrscheinlich darf man das gar nicht einfach so auf öffentlichen Straßen abstellen, und die Fahreigenschaften sind wahrscheinlich selbst vom Gewicht abgesehen unterirdisch.

 

Or: How much do you like dry vermouth?

 

I'm currently trying to find a good mixed drink that works well batched. I like drinking outside on summer evenings and getting up several times to make a new cocktail from scratch doesn't really fit with the "sit outside and relax" thing for me. The difficulty for me is that I often just don't like drinking more than one of a particular cocktail, either because it's too intense in some way or because I get bored of it. And some cocktails just don't batch well or are a little too involved for what I'm going for (e.g. hard-require shaking or elaborate garnishes).

I'm going to try a batch of Jungle Bird today - it's better shaken, but it's still good just poured on ice with a little sparkling water for dilution. Remains to be seen whether I'll want a second and third one.

Sometimes I also enjoy a mix of whisky, Lillet blanc and a little still water (1 part whisky to 3 parts Lillet), it's easy-drinking but doesn't get too boring. The spirit + fortified wine thing seems like a great option, but I haven't found a mix that I'm really into right now.

28
Fairy Sugar Mama (feddit.org)
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by rumschlumpel@feddit.org to c/cocktails@lemmy.world
 

I've been getting into tiki cocktails lately and came across this one on a German-language spirit review blog (https://schlimmerdurst.net/2019/04/09/saarwhisky-absinthe/). It's a weird concoction with absinthe as the base liquor and I love it! I'll have to upgrade my 0.2l bottle of absinthe to a full-size one.

original recipe:
1 oz absinthe,
⅓ oz Campari
1⅔ oz pineapple juice
¾ oz lime juice
⅔ oz orgeat
shaken
served up
garnished with mint

my recipe:
15ml La Fee absinthe,
5ml Aperol,
5ml Cynar,
25ml pineapple juice,
11ml lime juice,
10ml orgeat,
shaken,
dirty dump on cracked ice

I did it this way because my Campari was all the way to the back of my cupboard, but I dug it out later for a Jungle Bird and after trying the original version I prefer my version with Aperol and Cynar; Jungle Bird is pretty much the only drink (that I tried) where I actually like Campari. Part of it might be that my bottle of Campari is pretty old, though - it's still very bitter, but the secondary aromas were too muted to stand up against the other ingredients. I also made it half size, because that's how I roll.

I also tried it with Ricard pastis (increased the amount to account for the lower ABV), this brought in some licorice notes that I'd rather do without. Looks like I'm not getting around buying that full-size bottle of absinthe!

And one of these days, I'll stop being too lazy to make a proper garnish.

Update: I tried batching this. Even just 2 hours later, the anise and Cynar bitterness have considerably mellowed (I blame the pineapple enzymes). Don't batch it unless you want to be bored.

 

geteilt von: https://slrpnk.net/post/22590468

The European Union’s landmark anti-deforestation law could fail to deliver on its environmental promises if enforcement authorities disproportionately focus on small importers while missing less obvious violations from major commodity firms, according to a new analysis by U.K.-based investigative nonprofit, Earthsight.

The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), which comes into force Dec. 30, 2025, aims to prevent new tropical deforestation from Europe’s supply chains for soy, beef, palm oil and other commodities. To do so, it will require geolocalized data from indirect and direct suppliers that prove their products didn’t contribute to deforestation since December 2020.

The largest importers “will submit due diligence statements accurately and on time. They will have due diligence systems in place. They will have correctly identified risks. They will have traceability systems of some kind in operation,” the report’s authors write.

“The problems with these importers will lie deeper. Their mitigation measures will be weak. Their traceability systems will have fundamental flaws, but these will be well hidden,” they added.

In February, Cargill, one of the largest exporters of soy from Brazil’s Amazon Rainforest and Cerrado savanna, took advantage of the EUDR to weaken already existing anti-deforestation agreements. The agribusiness pushed up its deforestation cutoff date from 2008, the year established by the soy moratorium, to 2020, the cutoff date set by the EUDR. That would allow the company 14 more years of deforestation without consequence.

“There is good reason to be mistrustful of such firms,” Earthsight’s analysis writes. “Unfortunately, there are reasons to fear they will nevertheless get an easy ride when EU Member States start enforcing the new law.”

In the Ivory Coast, Earthsight’s data show, the top 10 importers buy up 83% of the local cocoa. In Brazil, the largest 10 multinational import companies ship out 64% of the nation’s soy exports.

Small companies will have an additional six months to comply with the law after it comes into effect, but producing accurate paperwork may be more challenging. They often lack the financial and technical resources necessary to quickly set up comprehensive due diligence systems with all the data points required by the law, experts say.

According to a report by Profundo, the relative cost for EUDR compliance is three times higher for small and medium-sized importers than large importers.

Europe’s enforcers will need to focus more on the quality of the largest importers’ reports, Earthsight said, rather than simply check bureaucratic boxes. “Going after such small firms will be much easier … and [authorities] will be tempted to focus most of their energy on this,” the group writes. “For the law to achieve its aims, it is essential that [they] avoid falling into this trap.”

archived (Wayback Machine)

view more: next ›