• 0 Posts
  • 28 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: July 2nd, 2023

help-circle





  • You cannot own food. You can purchase it, temporarily delay its decay, cook it, share it, consume it, but you don’t at any point own it. Food is a lease agreement with nature. And you will eventually give it all back in some form or another.

    I know it’s not technically correct but I just feel weird like if somebody opens my fridge and says “is that your watermelon?”. No, I am a temporary steward of it.

    The real reason you can’t have cake and eat it too, is because you can’t own cake. You only ever rented it.



  • I own two of them. They’ve been dropped many times. There are a few chips of paint off the bottom but none exposing the center plug. Lead isn’t radioactive. It’s perfectly safe as long as you don’t ingest it. I’m not happy there’s lead in the cups. But they’re still usable.

    It’s a whole systemic breakdown. The maker knew of the potential for lead - ordered them without lead from the manufacturer, and had them tested by two independent labs. Christ sake what the hell else should they do? By the way before choosing a manufacturer in China this guy tried to find one in the US. Guess what? We don’t make double wall stainless in the US.





  • As an owner of these and other double wall stainless cups made in China, I wanted more information than this paywalled article. Somebody should start a lemmy instance that bans all paywall links.

    Anyway the company was very diligent at preventing this but it still happened. See here:

    https://www.cupkin.com/pages/recall

    For anyone interested in facts and not headlines, the lead is on the exterior of the cup, in the bottom under the powder coated paint. It’s a seal disc in the bottom. Lead poses a threat to health only if ingested. For this lead to be ingested you’d basically have to destroy the cup.

    This part was interesting:

    tested the top selling household kids cup brands and found lead under the stainless steel discs for every single kids cup brand.

    I think it would be safe to assume you’ll find lead in the seal disc on the bottom of any double wall stainless made in China.


  • In a private tracker, I assume there are no narcs. If there was one they’d have to get a list of IP addresses for their intellectual property, then track down dozens of different ISPs to send them notices. If get a notice, I will delete the media, my account, etc. In court, the only proof they have is that my IP downloaded content. I will show them my public unprotected guest network, letting them know it was probably one of my neighbors. Unless they can find a copy, there’s not much more they can do. This is not legal advice. For actual legal advice see EFF.org.


  • The OP was seemingly complaining that capitalism can make an individual feel worthless, and they were reminding readers not to value their worth by what they’re compensated for. I suggested that regardless of compensation or societal system, they will feel valued and worthy by helping others. Some people, like those you’ve mentioned, will not feel valued. They will likely have mental health issues like depression accompanying their condition. Thus, it will be important for those who love them to make them feel valued some way.

    You’re taking my words way to far to suggest that I am in favor of any kind of society lacking compassion.

    Anyway, I think if people who don’t earn a lot of money are struggling to feel valuable or useful, they should focus on helping others. Many studies have shown this to be one of the easiest ingredients to happiness.


  • An infant contributes nuclear family stability and inspires extra strength from both parents - nesting instincts and other achievements. Most people who can walk are capable of basic labor like irrigation, digging, carrying or delivering items. The elderly contribute wisdom, though with dimentia, they can’t do much of that. They’ve already contributed a great deal in their lifetime, and if they haven’t, they probably won’t be taken care of.



  • In a non-capitalist environment, like living on a commune, you are still valued on your contribution to the community - fixing, building, planting, harvesting, cooking, cleaning, playing music, child care. Even without currency, you need to do something of value to others.

    Unless you want to go live on your own. In that case you’re right - you determine your own value. Though I think you may still devalue yourself if you fail to provide for yourself.