• Wanderer@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    I think I’m a fun guy that does fun things. Then when someone asks me what I did last weekend I just say “oh I had a quiet one this week” then I realise it’s normally like that.

    I came do the decision yesterday we don’t need a 4 day work week we need short workdays so we can do stuff after.

    Life should be like uni, more free time, meeting more people, having more friends, doing more sport.

    • Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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      8 months ago

      All this automation should be going towards doubling the amount of jobs at half the hours for the same pay.

      If pay kept up with productivity by now we could be doing 4 hour work days. Morning people could get their work done early and chill the rest of the day, afternoon people could sleep in and stay up late, night people could just have shorter nights and more time to do whatever they do.

      • Asafum@feddit.nl
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        8 months ago

        The problem is ownership.

        The boss owns the machines that increased the production so they are/feel entitled to all of that increase of profit. “You” didn’t do anything more so why do you deserve more especially if you’re actually doing less now?

        I can understand this line of thinking, I kinda hate it, but I can totally see it even from a moral perspective. Yes if you dig deep enough you could argue that their exploiting of your labor afforded them the ability to buy the new machines, but we also agreed to be exploited by agreeing to work at the place to begin with.

        I’m not one of these temporarily embarrassed millionaires that sees themselves as that boss, we just need to think of this in terms of what opposition we’ll face if this argument is pushed.

        • Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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          8 months ago

          Oh my statement was more of a hindsight observation; what to do now? I don’t know. Burn it all down and start over?

      • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        “All this automation should be going towards doubling the amount of jobs at half the hours for the same pay.”

        Yes but it is very important how this is done. Some people on the Internet have catastrophically bad ideas like taxing automation.

        What I think needs to be done to name a few:

        • Maximum work hours reduced to say 30 (and decrease overtime) before automatic overtime is a thing (salaried workers included).
        • No out of hours work or big restrictions. What you do in your time is nothing to do with work.
        • Min wage increases.
        • Temp workers need a whole lot of changes.
        • Prevention of offshoring of some work.
        • Reduction of immigration that keeps wages down and stops on the job training.
        • Reduction of economic migrants.

        The other big one is UBI which could lead to a decrease in minimum wage but benefit everyone.

        Also the housing situation needs a big revamp.

        • Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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          8 months ago

          Sounds good.

          I’m just saying in the past… there was that cash register analogy that was going around a while back…

          Like a dude buys a cash register - needs 1 cashier instead of 3, but pays the one cashier the same. Business owner dude should be paying that remaining cashier at least double.

          Just spoutin’ some hindsight or whatever I dunno.

          • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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            8 months ago

            No strong disagree.

            If that was the case we wouldn’t ever have economic growth. Businesses need to be competitive and make competitive decisions.

            If two people are out of work and one the same then so be it, the system needs to pick them up in a different way. Automation and competition is good.

              • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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                8 months ago

                Society can be better at dealing with competition.

                How much do you think a farm labourer should be paid out of curiosity? Half of what has been saved in wages? That’s a hell of a lot of money.

                • Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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                  8 months ago

                  You’re damn right it is. The exact math isn’t important for our conversation, but the point is that the savings gained through automation should be shared with the workers.

      • LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        My job is 4 hours a day 3 days a week, and guess what? Such a little amount of work doesn’t pay enough to survive.

        So be careful what you ask for.

  • Vespair@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    Bro I love cheese. I used to work at a cheese shop. I’ll talk cheese with you

    • Deconceptualist@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      Yeah dude tell me about cheese. I learned that gruyere can be a good one to mix with other cheeses to make the combination melt better and not overwhelm the flavor. Any others like that?

      Also, any cheeses that melt nicely but are low in lactose? I have intolerance and it’s nice to not have to play the guessing game with enzyme pills.

      • Vespair@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        Any others like that?

        Yes, definitely! My top recommendation is Raclette du Valais (aka just Raclette), a tremendous melting cheese that is flavorful but extremely “cheese” in flavor (as opposed to having grassy notes, or nutty notes, or any other more unique and distinct characteristic you might find in other cheese). Raclette is damn near perfect for this request, just don’t tell any Frenchmen you’re using it as a blending cheese rather than serving it in the traditional elaborate preparation. My second recommendation is probably Havarti, which is a very buttery-mild cheese (to the point of being a bit bland on its own) that melts effortlessly-well and thus is a great blending cheese.

        Also, any cheeses that melt nicely but are low in lactose? I have intolerance and it’s nice to not have to play the guessing game with enzyme pills.

        That’s a bit tougher… You may already know this, but in case not, more and more lactose in cheese is converted as it ages, so in general the older and harder/dryer a cheese is, the lower the lactose content. Unfortunately hard aged cheeses aren’t often the best melters, but there are some exceptions. Probably my biggest recommendation for a good-melting cheese with low lactose would be to look for a very aged cheddar. And no, I don’t mean the “12 months aged extra sharp” orange blocks in the grocery dairy section, I mean like this 4 year aged Widmer cheddar or this incredible 5 year aged Grafton cheddar that I personally adore. Not only will these be lower in lactose, if you’ve only experienced mass-consumption cheddar then I also promise the flavor and sharpness of these premium cheddars will absolutely blow your socks off too.

        Beyond that, another good lactose tip is that while sheep and goat’s milk cheeses may not have “less” lactose, but the individual lactose globules (for lack of a better term here) are inherently smaller than in cow’s milk, so many people who find cow’s milk intolerable are able to process sheep or goat’s milk with little to no problems, and thus can also enjoy most goat and sheep’s cheeses without the issues that come along with cow’s milk cheeses.

        Hope that helps some! Lemme know if you’ve got any other questions or requests 👍

        • Deconceptualist@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          Hell yeah, thanks for the advice wise cheese guru!

          For some reason I’ve only had Havarti by itself (to my knowledge) so I’ll definitely try blending it. And I never thought about melting aged cheddar, it’s so good as it comes I always just eat little slices hehe

          And yes my guts and everyone around me thank you for the tip on goat and sheep cheese. Merci beaucoup.

          • WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            While it’s not a high-end cheese, Cabot Cheddar melts pretty well, has good flavor, and is lactose free.

            Also, if whatever cheese you’re buying has nutrition facts, check the amount of sugar. That’s rarely “added” sugar, that’s lactose, which is a sugar like sucrose and glucose; it just happens to be a sugar the vast majority of the adult population of the planet have trouble digesting.

            So if it has 0 grams of sugar, it is lactose free. And generally the amount of sugar then can also give you a sense of how lactose-y a particular cheese is.

            • Deconceptualist@lemm.ee
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              8 months ago

              Ok that’s really useful, thanks! I would have just assumed '‘sugar’ here meant sucrose or fructose like most products but that makes sense.

              • WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                No prob! I went into a little more detail about in a comment above if you’re interested.

                My parents, two of my siblings, and my gf are all lactose intolerant lol, but we all love cheese!

        • WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Beyond that, another good lactose tip is that while sheep and goat’s milk cheeses may not have “less” lactose, but the individual lactose globules (for lack of a better term here) are inherently smaller than in cow’s milk, so many people who find cow’s milk intolerable are able to process sheep or goat’s milk with little to no problems, and thus can also enjoy most goat and sheep’s cheeses without the issues that come along with cow’s milk cheeses.

          Sheep and goat’s milk do in fact have less lactose (sugar) on average than cow’s milk. It has nothing to do with the size of “lactose globules,” it is because the overall lactose content is typically lower and because many cheeses made with sheep and goat’s milk are regularly aged longer and use less whey in the cheese-making process due to the difference in flavor between the milks.

          The more important determining factor is how much whey, which contains most of the sugars, is left with the curds in a given cheese-making process and style of cheese.

          The reason aged cheese has less lactose is the same reason it is typically desirable (and the same reason beer “wort” has more sugar content than the final beer itself): over time the (lactose) sugar is broken down by bacteria and the byproduct of that process creates additional complex flavors, like lactic acid.

          Same idea in beer brewing, except typically this is done with yeast instead of bacteria, though not always. “Sour” beer styles usually get their flavor from the introduction of lactobacillus bacteria.

  • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    8 months ago

    Turns on phone to scroll through meme collection … Hey, have you seen this one?

  • Mossy Feathers (She/They)@pawb.social
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    8 months ago

    Me when I like a broad variety of things, but I struggle to talk about things in depth because my grasp of any single thing is as broad as the ocean and as deep as a puddle.