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Cake day: July 18th, 2023

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  • StrayCatFrump@slrpnk.nettoSolarpunk technology@slrpnk.netAmybo: Open Source Protein
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    7 months ago

    Definitely! If you want nutritional food, focus on the stuff that’s really cheap and easy to grow and makes the best use of land anyway, whether you’re doing it or consuming it after other people have done so: fresh veggies. Greens, squashes, tomatoes, various tubers, etc. (varies depending on your region, of course).

    I was just talking about the focus on protein. It is absolutely not the thing to worry about if you’re interested in “nutritious”. You’re being completely counter-productive if you do that. It leads opposite to the goal you just described.


  • StrayCatFrump@slrpnk.nettoSolarpunk technology@slrpnk.netAmybo: Open Source Protein
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    7 months ago

    Just grow and eat veggies and grains. If you’re worried about protein, you’re worried about the wrong thing (you should instead be worried about getting vitamins, minerals, and a generally varied diet). Everything that made people worried about protein on vegetarian or vegan diets is based on a study purposefully misinterpreted by the meat-and-dairy industry, where that misinterpretation was parroted for decades and disowned by the original author of the study. Just because you can fulfill the same protein profile as meat using plant proteins doesn’t mean you need to. The human body evolved to allow us to eat meat opportunistically, not to require it.

    Unless you’re on an all-fruit diet, you’re getting enough protein if you’re getting enough calories (literally no matter your exercise regimen). And if you’re not getting enough calories, you’re starving and protein is one of the last of your concerns anyway.






  • I, for one, am personally inclined to completely dismiss this statistic as either engineered by survey designers or made up completely… Why does the dairy industry desperately want us to think consumers are this dumb?

    The liberal paradigm in general benefits (i.e. serves to better protect capital and state) by convincing us that other working-class people are stupid and cannot be trusted. That way we don’t turn to each other and form movements for our collective betterment, but instead turn to the authorities—our oppressors—and beg them to take care of things for us, thereby surrendering absolutely all of our power. The “people are stupid” mythology is absolutely rampant in our society, quite intentionally.

    Just sit back and trust “the experts”—your “betters”—and everything will be okay. Maybe if you’re lucking you’ll get to go to the voting booth every once in a while and submit your protest to management, but if you don’t get heard, it’s probably because you, too, don’t know what’s good for you, and should just shut up and trust the system. 😒





  • Looks interesting. Local, resilient, community power stations are a great idea, even set apart from the dual use for fruit and veggie farming.

    I worry that in this case, since the power isn’t being delivered directly:

    Lightstar’s community solar project will generate clean, local energy that home and business accounts can subscribe to a pay for portion of the electricity generated. This generation is then used as a credit to offset utility bills.

    the existing utility company may be given far, far too much leeway to fuck people over, like in California where PG&E plays like crazy with the rates given to people pushing power to the grid from their solar panels, uses obvious rate differences based on time of day, and charges people fees just to use the infrastructure (which is absolutely fucking backwards, since every Joule of energy produced locally is a Joule that doesn’t have to be transmitted over their infrastructure from distant power plants).

    On top of creating local solutions, we need to start decoupling them from the centralized and capitalist-controlled ones, and/or regaining a great deal of political power so that we can start setting conditions of our own.






  • May take a look at the material later, though probably not going to participate in the game.

    TBH my initial thought is that it would make more sense to produce source material for an existing genre-neutral system like the Hero System than to create a whole new system unto itself. Still, I guess if the system is going to be FOSG (Free and Open-Source Gaming 😉) then it would still make sense to do the extra work.



  • StrayCatFrump@slrpnk.nettoSolarpunk Farming@slrpnk.net*Permanently Deleted*
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    1 year ago

    Yeah. TBH I have yet to see a situation in which “tons of compost, mulch, and other organic material” is not a good answer. In clay/silt, it helps to break things up so they drain better and pack less. In sand, it helps to retain moisture so it doesn’t drain too quickly. And generally it feeds and introduces those ever-important microbes, on top of the usual nutrients. Really can’t go wrong. There was even a master gardener a century or so ago whose entire care regimen was simply to add mulch to about knee-high continuously (IIRC she didn’t even water).