fiat_lux

joined 1 year ago
5
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by fiat_lux@kbin.social to c/aww@lemmy.ml
 

Photo is a bettong that has been caught by researchers. The good news is their population has maybe tripled over the last few years in Australia's largest nature preserve that is free of introduced predators - it has 45km (28mi) of 1.8m (just under 6') tall fencing to keep it that way. Just 3 years ago they were reintroduced to the area after 60 years of local extinction.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2024-05-31/brush-tailed-and-burrowing-bettong-populations-thrive/103898216

Burrowing bettongs have little underground communities. Their cousins, the brushtail bettong have a prehensile tail they use to collect nesting material. The researcher thinks the burrowers are cuter, but the prehensile tail is adorable in its own right, I think.

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 3 points 4 months ago

Good news, everybody! Turning your cremation ashes into diamonds is pretty close to being mineralized? https://www.lonite.com/cremation-diamonds-from-ashes they claim close to 99.99% ash carbon, but who knows.

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 2 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Hm, 5 year old journal, with the editor board, funding and half of the authors all from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, but significant hospital contribution. I remain skeptical of the headline but hopeful of the science.

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 6 points 4 months ago (1 children)

They really shoehorned the online aspect into that article. If you just add the phrase "including cyberbullying" to any reference to all bullying, you too can write an article about online trends that distances your target reader demographic from feeling culpable for a huge long-standing cultural problem.

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 4 points 5 months ago

I'm likely infertile, and no thanks. I'm having enough trouble existing and being employed with long covid on top of pre-existing medical issues for which i have long run out of medical options, certainly all that are available under Medicare. Maybe I would sort of want children if I weren't struggling to just eat, work and sleep? Or maybe the bleak future of humanity would still be enough to convince me not to condemn another person to it.

Falling birth rates might be a little more than just an IVF cost issue. Perhaps we should look into that instead of slapping on a subsidy bandaid and hoping it cures the symptoms.

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Many of us are getting banned from other instances because there is a bug where kbin is sending way too much traffic per interaction. I know that was affecting federation (according to other instance admins) so It might have something to do with that. The content on kbin does seem to me like it's not in sync at all, but I haven't measured it.

All we can really do for now is hope for a fix and not interact with posts from other instances.

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 3 points 6 months ago (2 children)

If you're talking about the 404 when you try to go to kbin.social/sub , you can get around it with kbin.social/sub?p=1

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 2 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Good people are indeed dying now, which begs the question of why we would double down on it with accelerationism in the hope that the remaining humans have a change of heart somewhere along the way. That's the stuff of movie plot lines, not reality.

Some form of radical change is necessary, definitely. But doing more of the current system isn't going to lead to better outcomes. It leads to the same outcome, just faster.

What else do we have? There have been multiple revolutions and regime changes in human history of varying success and violence. We could learn from some of those what makes a revolution more helpful or harmful and attempt to replicate that. It's worth a shot before we just accept the sacrifice of society's most vulnerable in the hopes it somehow increases empathy among those who were always fine with those people suffering.

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 12 points 6 months ago (3 children)

Spoken like someone who is certain that they won't be the first to suffer and die.

Accelerationism leads to a bunch of good people dying, when we need all hands on deck to fix this broken mess. Especially the people who have the most experience with making something work from almost nothing, and experience in being part of a community. Accelerationism also only keeps around those who are willing to exploit others to get ahead. And then humanity starts the next dark age with neo-feudal warlords and the people who survived as their pawns.

Humans don't even have collectively long enough memory to not repeat the evils of the Holocaust within living memory of its victims, let alone maintain any theoretical level of post-collapse enlightenment. Good thing I'll be one of the first to die!

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 4 points 6 months ago

Sounds like we had the same programmers. I feel you, Kairos.

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 5 points 6 months ago

Why would I give them a vote of confidence with my money so that they can use it to convince investors that they're popular and they should pony up a billion dollars for Spez's pay?

They're relying on gullible people who think either Reddit is legitimately a good investment or gullible people who think they can beat the market and won't be left holding the bag. I'm nobody's bag holder, let alone Spez's.

if I can quickly make a couple of bucks and then cash out, that might be worth it.

Said every gambler ever.

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 2 points 7 months ago

My rule is that if you intend to touch the butter/spread/sticky stuff with a utensil, that utensil cannot touch the bread. You just drop the portion on the bread from a height until you think there's enough to cover it, and then you can spread it with that utensil, but if you need to revisit the jar, you need another fresh utensil.

You can't get crumbs in there if there's no cross contamination from the equipment to begin with!

You get better at estimating over time, but having one extra piece of cutlery to wash occasionally is less infuriating than unexpected stale crumbs and food that spoils more quickly from the contaminating yeasts and other organisms.

[–] fiat_lux@kbin.social 90 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I feel ashamed of how I used to think and act.

Hey friend, I would like to offer you a reframing of this situation. Despite being exposed to some of the strongest cultural indoctrination into warmongering and the military, you made it out and embraced empathy and learning. That's huge. I'm proud of you, that's a positive change most people never make. You should be proud of it.

I just hope that is makes it’s way down the ranks

You have a powerful and important story. Sharing it like you did just now helps more than hopes can. Keep sharing it, you never know who might be reading it and encouraged to question the lessons they were taught.

 
 
 

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has announced a new pact with the low-lying island country of Tuvalu, allowing residents facing displacement from climate change the ability resettle in Australia.

Key points:

  • The deal is the first time Australia has offered residence or citizenship rights due to the threat posed by climate change
  • The US and New Zealand have similar agreements with other Pacific countries
  • Mr Albanese described it as the most significant agreement between Australia and a Pacific island nation ever

I think it's also worth noting that in return they're handing over their foreign policy / security decision autonomy, so colonialism once again manages to mar an otherwise humane decision. The IMF is getting their own policy pound of flesh too, they love a good bit of disaster capitalism.

 

Urine samples collected from wild chimpanzees in Uganda over decades have revealed older female chimps undergo hormonal changes much like those in menopausal humans.

 

Title changed from original for better internationalisation, because the ABC hates assuming you see their articles outside of their specific site categories.

Original linked article title:

"Pride, but also grief': Government to start taskforce following disability royal commission final report

Linked article lead paragraph:

After an inquiry lasting four and a half years, the royal commission makes 222 recommendations for change.

Some numbers from the Inquiry itself:

  • 222 recommendations (mostly for federal government)
  • 32 public hearings
  • 7,944 submissions from the public received
  • 17,824 Phone enquiries
  • 1,785 Private sessions held

Some of the findings:

  • There are around 4.4 million people with disability in Australia, or 18% of the total population. Reflecting that disability increases with age, the number of people with disability falls to 2.4 million when we look at people aged under 65 years. This is 12% of this age category.
  • Around 35% of First Nations people under 65 had disability in 2018–19, nearly three times higher than the general population. Children accounted for 24% of all First Nations people with disability.
  • As at 31 December 2022, there were 573,342 participants in the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS).
  • Across all age groups, people with disability experience considerably higher rates of violence than people without disability. People with disability also experience violence more frequently. This is unacceptable.
  • Rates of violence are particularly high for: Women with psychological or intellectual disability, First Nations women with disability, young women with disability.
  • Neglect of people with disability occurs in multiple forms and across different stages of their lives. We heard of many instances of people being deprived of necessities of life and assistance with daily activities. We also heard of systemic failures to provide an environment for each person to maximise their potential.
  • The data on exploitation of people with disability is limited. However, people with disability shared with us experiences of both sexual and financial exploitation by other individuals.

Some of the recommendations (my summary):

  • A new Australian Disability Rights Act
  • Intersectionality, especially with First Nations peoples
  • Legal obligation to prove 'unjustifiable hardship' as reason for not making accommodations for a person with disability
  • Alter the migration act to prevent systemic disability discrimination, (amongst many other laws)
  • Requiring the government to provide interpreters, both spoken language and sign language
  • Transitioning to non-segregated education settings
  • Transitioning to removal of 'group homes'
  • Creating a National Disability Commission as an independent statutory body to monitor outcomes, with a majority leadership by people with disabilities
  • Legal obligations for guardians to show they're attempting to act in the best interests of their guardee
  • An extra $36 million in funding for disablity advocacy and insurance programs
  • Making a number of restraint techniques and solitary confinement illegal in health, justice and education settings
  • laws to prevent non-therapeutic permanent non-consensual sterilisation of people with disability
  • Increased housing protections for tenants with disability
  • teacher, police and healthcare worker training and requirements, especially around cognitive disabilities
  • a registration system for disability support workers that defines their roles and requirements and gives them benefits like sick leave and retirement savings
  • lots more data and reporting being published by the government
  • way better complaints processes and investigations
  • targets for disability employment at all levels of public service, including executives
  • so many more, ~~read the article or inquiry links if you're keen.~~

Edited to add: A better breakdown of recommendations by category instead of my casual list

 

Title changed from original for better internationalisation, because the ABC hates assuming you see their articles outside of their specific site categories.

Original linked article title:

"Pride, but also grief': Government to start taskforce following disability royal commission final report

Linked article lead paragraph:

After an inquiry lasting four and a half years, the royal commission makes 222 recommendations for change.

Some numbers from the Inquiry itself:

  • 222 recommendations (mostly for federal government)
  • 32 public hearings
  • 7,944 submissions from the public received
  • 17,824 Phone enquiries
  • 1,785 Private sessions held

Some of the findings:

  • There are around 4.4 million people with disability in Australia, or 18% of the total population. Reflecting that disability increases with age, the number of people with disability falls to 2.4 million when we look at people aged under 65 years. This is 12% of this age category.
  • Around 35% of First Nations people under 65 had disability in 2018–19, nearly three times higher than the general population. Children accounted for 24% of all First Nations people with disability.
  • As at 31 December 2022, there were 573,342 participants in the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS).
  • Across all age groups, people with disability experience considerably higher rates of violence than people without disability. People with disability also experience violence more frequently. This is unacceptable.
  • Rates of violence are particularly high for: Women with psychological or intellectual disability, First Nations women with disability, young women with disability.
  • Neglect of people with disability occurs in multiple forms and across different stages of their lives. We heard of many instances of people being deprived of necessities of life and assistance with daily activities. We also heard of systemic failures to provide an environment for each person to maximise their potential.
  • The data on exploitation of people with disability is limited. However, people with disability shared with us experiences of both sexual and financial exploitation by other individuals.

Some of the recommendations (my summary):

  • A new Australian Disability Rights Act
  • Intersectionality, especially with First Nations peoples
  • Legal obligation to prove 'unjustifiable hardship' as reason for not making accommodations for a person with disability
  • Alter the migration act to prevent systemic disability discrimination, (amongst many other laws)
  • Requiring the government to provide interpreters, both spoken language and sign language
  • Transitioning to non-segregated education settings
  • Transitioning to removal of 'group homes'
  • Creating a National Disability Commission as an independent statutory body to monitor outcomes, with a majority leadership by people with disabilities
  • Legal obligations for guardians to show they're attempting to act in the best interests of their guardee
  • An extra $36 million in funding for disablity advocacy and insurance programs
  • Making a number of restraint techniques and solitary confinement illegal in health, justice and education settings
  • laws to prevent non-therapeutic permanent non-consensual sterilisation of people with disability
  • Increased housing protections for tenants with disability
  • teacher, police and healthcare worker training and requirements, especially around cognitive disabilities
  • a registration system for disability support workers that defines their roles and requirements and gives them benefits like sick leave and retirement savings
  • lots more data and reporting being published by the government
  • way better complaints processes and investigations
  • targets for disability employment at all levels of public service, including executives
  • so many more.

Edited to add: A better breakdown of recommendations by category instead of my casual list

 

The Data Local team uses AI technology to generate stories on weather, fuel prices and traffic reports for hyperlocal mastheads.

australia@aussie.zone discussion thread

Knowing how AI frequently relies on having a large dataset to work from, and breaking news frequently not having any confirmed information, this seems ripe for abuse and errors. I would love to see details on their implementation and datasets. Especially because News Corp are known to take very political positions on topics.

 

Post title changed from article title for better internationalisation. Original title:

Magenta Marshall's victory in Rockingham by-election delivers gender parity in WA Parliament's lower house

Article lead paragraph and summary:

Western Australia's lower house of parliament now has equal representation between men and women for the first time in its history, following the election of Labor's Magenta Marshall in the Rockingham by-election.

Key points:

  • There are 59 seats in the lower house of WA's parliament
  • Magenta Marshall's election increases the tally of seats held by women to 29
  • Both parties are claiming the by-election result as a positive
 

"It's no longer plentiful, it's no longer cheap and it's also a fossil fuel." Why the Victorian government is pushing people to ditch gas.

 
 

I put a bait and switch in your bait and switch so you could bait while you switch.

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