There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

reuters.com

Sneptaur , to news in Elon Musk's SpaceX fires at least five over critical letter
@Sneptaur@pawb.social avatar

Lemmy is showing another year old post, but I actually met the person who drafted the letter at a bar. In a year or so we’re gonna hear about the results of their lawsuit. They were very fun to talk to and they mentioned being harassed by musk fans obsessively to the point of having to move multiple times.

snowbell , to news in Police are not primarily crime fighters, according to the data
@snowbell@beehaw.org avatar

In other news, water is wet.

Showroom7561 , to worldnews in Spain's unemployment rate falls to 15-year low of 11.60% in Q2

11.6% unemployment seems really, really high for a developed country! What’s the hell is up, Spain?

huojtkeg ,

Real unemployment (calculated with the total number of hours worked, number of temporary workers… etc) is between 19% and 23%. It has been like this since 2008 crisis. The unemployment among youth people is 45%.

There a many reasons, not just one. Imho it’s related to the tourism (summer season), we have few industry (full time jobs all year), unemployment benefits are very generous (there are some jobs in agriculture that are done just by inmigrants from moroco with temporary visa, the landlords don’t find Spanish people to work)

testingtesting123 ,
@testingtesting123@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

What source are you using? This is EPA that is higher than the number of unemployment registered The comments about not finding spanish people…maybe not at the salary they want to pay… www.ine.es/dyngs/INEbase/es/operacion.htm?c=Estad…

huojtkeg ,
Colorcodedresistor , to world in Iranian chess player who removed hijab gets Spanish citizenship

Imagine not being able to return ‘home’ because you took your hat off. 🤔

I hope her friends and family wont catch any retribution for her ‘escaping’ shitty islamic justice

CantSt0pPoppin OP ,
@CantSt0pPoppin@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah the whole thing sucks just remember their are religious fanatics within all religions.

OtakuAltair ,

Fanatics and extremists exist regardless of religions. The latter just allows them to control people easier, and islam happens to be particularly good at that.

Of course, most ‘religious’ people have enough common sense to not follow them to the T. When the government is religious though, like islam encourages, you have a big problem

Carighan ,
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

Fanatics and extremists exist regardless of religions. The latter just allows them to control people easier, and islam happens to be particularly good at that.

This is more accurate.

It’s not that “fanatics exist in all religions”, it’s “fanatics exist”, and religions just give them a cover that is depending on society difficult to challenge as in many places, a religion’s influence on society and rules is quite normalized, completely ignoring how ridiculous this influence is.

kent_eh ,

it’s “fanatics exist”, and religions just give them a cover

It isn’t much of a leap to understanding that religions have always served the purpose of controlling people.

When a leader has a tool that allows the people to think his pronouncements have the endorsement of a God, that leader is going to use that tool.

Nowyn ,

Islam doesn’t encourage any more for theocracy than other Abrahamic religions. The existence of religious fundamentalist Islamic theocracies is a lot more complex than Islam. A lot of it can be traced to colonialism, the decolonization process and Western interference in Islamic countries. This is largely why Iran is one of those. The last Shah was seen corrupt autocratic puppet of the West by many. As a counter to it, the country over-corrected and landed in fundamentalist Islamic theocracy. Radicalization of Islam leading to similar governments happened in other Islam-majority countries. Before the 60s and 70s, many Islamic countries didn’t differ a lot from Western countries when it came to social liberties. There are a lot of images of Tehran and Kabul with women in mini skirts for example.

While I am not saying that modern Islamic countries are not problem or thousand when it comes to civil liberties and democracy, Islam in my knowledge was more tool and less reason behind it.

oce , (edited )
@oce@jlai.lu avatar

Islam isn’t better at it than other religions it just happens to be the major religions in the countries where those fanatics managed to seize the power. You can find similar examples with Christianism (Europe, USA), Judaism (Israel), Hinduism (India), Buddhism (Myanmar) and probably many more.

OtakuAltair ,

Islam isn’t better at it than other religions it just happens to be the major religions in the countries where those fanatics managed to seize the power

That’s no coincidence imo.

I see all religions as negative, but Islam is the only one I can personally attest to, being an ex muslim. It’s cult-y and tends to bring out the worst in people, more so than most religions from what I’ve seen.

oce ,
@oce@jlai.lu avatar

Your personal experience is not a good argument.

Here’s a recent exemple of Hindu fanatics attacking Muslims: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_Delhi_riots and another from Christian fanatics attacking the institutions of the USA en.wikipedia.org/…/January_6_United_States_Capito…

OtakuAltair , (edited )

Let’s not compare atrocities committed by religions; islam’s would be never-ending if we did, as your comment also suggested.

I will add though that buddism’s continued oppression of muslims in Myanmar is sickening, in addition to your examples

oce ,
@oce@jlai.lu avatar

Let’s not compare atrocities committed by religions

Isn’t it what you do when singling out Islam ?

some_guy ,

If the poster hadn’t specifically stated that they were commenting because that was their former religion, yes. But given the context, no.

OtakuAltair ,

Yup. I think the conclusion is obvious, as my comment indicates, so there’s not much need to compare them here.

Aceticon ,

The problem is when a government is captured by religion.

There is nothing quite so bad as religious types getting power based purelly on being religious types.

I suspect that, because it’s the most fanatical power-hungry types (Moralism is really just a way of justifying the forcing of others to your will) who both have the most motivation to seek positions were they can have free rain to really go on powertrips on other people, and display more overtly the very religiosity that is the whole reason for a government whose power is based on religion.

Certainly those who feel no need to impose their will on others and who can even gasp see some actions as overzealous, don’t have anywhere the same drive, zealotry and backstabbing instincts to climb up the ladder in such power structures.

CantSt0pPoppin OP ,
@CantSt0pPoppin@lemmy.world avatar

You are very right the same is being seen in the united states with Evangelical fanatics taking over all forms of government and a disturbing pace.

Carighan ,
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

Imagine not being able to return ‘home’ because you took your hat off. 🤔

I never quite realized just how pedestrian taking the hijab off is, yeah. Never really thought about it. It is quite literally just taking your hat or well, head-scarf, off. It’s like when my great-grandma came in from the rain and took that plastic headband off she always wore to keep her hair dry.

Ridiculous how backwards we as a species can be, and sadly often are. 😔

okamiueru ,

Is it too reductive to conclude this is just men wanting to be able to dictate what women should and shouldn’t do? Anyone claiming otherwise, even women who “would gladly wear it” feels like Stockholm syndrome to me.

Maybe I’m wrong to think this, but alas, I do.

Carighan ,
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t think it’s too reductive, considering religion as a whole is always about exercising control.

nostradiel , to world in Tesla exaggerated EV range so much that drivers thought cars were broken
@nostradiel@lemmy.world avatar

Honestly, whole EV mania to became eco zero carbon whatev is just lobbying push from corporate conglomerates to simply make more money. It has nothing to do with saving our planet. Every intelligent human can investigate enough to find out that the whole EV industry is more polluting and dangerous to nature than classic cars. There are better ways to go, but they wouldn’t make much money of it. There is no way in hell that I will ever own an EV.

fluxion , to world in African Union chair: Putin's grain offer not enough, Ukraine ceasefire needed

Totally agree, but he could also just not explicitly block/threaten grain ships and blow up grain stores. There’s no way to spin it but somehow people still buy his bullshit excuses

Tihkal_my_Pihkal , to world in Tesla exaggerated EV range so much that drivers thought cars were broken

Ll

some_guy , to world in Iranian chess player who removed hijab gets Spanish citizenship

Hooray for Spain for the second time today. The other “hooray” was for standing against far-right movements.

ShittyBeatlesFCPres , to world in Mexican president disputes DEA estimates of cartel strength

I’m glad they asked the one person on Earth with more incentive to lie about this than the DEA.

vd1n , to world in Tesla exaggerated EV range so much that drivers thought cars were broken

Fuck this scum bag. America needs to start fucking with these clowns on a real level.

sin_free_for_00_days ,

Wealth tax. Heavily progressive tax on wealth, no tax on labor.

vd1n ,

I was thinking Louisville Slugger but whevs. /S

sin_free_for_00_days ,

That’s a more realistic approach.

Crow , to world in Iranian chess player who removed hijab gets Spanish citizenship
@Crow@lemmy.world avatar

I guess she’s a Spanish chess player now. And that’s how brain drain works.

otl ,
@otl@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

A very gifted programmer I met from Iran had to do the same. Originally from Iran, he wanted to marry a girl from Myanmar. This was forbidden for some reason so they said “fuck it, let’s go to where there is loads of tech jobs”. I was working in the Netherlands at the time when I met them. He’s now flourishing in the open source software space over there. Brain drain 100%.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Someone from Iran marrying someone from Myanmar in the Netherlands sounds like a movie musical… “Two oppressed people from different parts of the world find love in beautiful Amsterdam!”

gro2bl ,

Actually there is no problem to marry someone from a different country. The problem is you cannot marry with a non-muslim person, so he/she should accept Islam first. 😟😄 weird like many other rules! I don’t know if other religions have such restrictions or not, I would be happy to hear if someone knows.

kanzalibrary ,
@kanzalibrary@lemmy.world avatar

The problem is you cannot marry with a non-muslim person, so he/she should accept Islam first.

I’m a muslim and as far as I know, there’s no law that forbid you to marry non-muslim. There’s many muslim clerics or saints who are marry a non-muslim in history of Islam.

But to do that, first you need to have a really strong faith so your partner in future will slowly understand and accept Islam by her/his own will. The common understanding that seems to not marry a non-muslim by many muslims because is not an easy path to have a relationship with different faith. Especially family and tradition on both side.

The most common cases about this are men muslim married a woman non-muslim. On the opposite, is very rare cases that happen in history of Islam. Some (fiqh) law by clerics forbids woman muslim to married a men non-muslim, and some allowed that with requirement the woman need to have a strong faith first.

I have many friends who’s their parents married with different religion (islam and christian, islam and shinto, islam and confucius). I admit is not an easy path than married with same religion as far I can see in my own cases, but I respect their choice…

gro2bl ,

I was talking about how it works in Iran

kanzalibrary , (edited )
@kanzalibrary@lemmy.world avatar

Iran has more freedom than you think. Yes, the law about how to dress is very restricted there. But as far as I know for marriage law, Iran (Shia islam) surprisingly very flexible on that compared to other Islam sects. There’s no problem on marriage in Iran to married a non-muslim partner, even without any requirement (of course an agreement from both side men and woman is needed, even parents agreement are not needed for some Shia sects and its legal). But for sure exclusively, any muslim woman in Iran who’s not obey on how to dress properly according to Shia Islam (even she’s married with non-muslim), the punishment will severe.

gro2bl , (edited )

Do you live in Iran?!! If not then I should say I was living there and I know the law well. So I invite you to read more about the marriage law in Iran. Sorry, but freedom doesn’t make any sense in Iran.

MarinaDiamandis ,

Brain drain is one of those things that isn’t felt immediately, but over the course of months and years. Slow death :/

Aurenkin , to world in Tesla exaggerated EV range so much that drivers thought cars were broken

I thought the range was rated by a 3rd party (EPA in the US), is that not the case? They say EPA est. on the website at least but not sure exactly what that means.

jgardner10 ,

I think you answered your own question there. Unless they tell you what it means you should means nothing.

squaresinger ,

It is, but there’s a big “but” with that. When the range is determined by agencies like the EPA, the car is allowed to run in the most optimal configuration, meaning:

  • No heating
  • No AC
  • No radio or other stuff running
  • No autopilot/self driving, which consumes a significant amount of power
  • They even put tape over the gaps in the body (e.g. around the doors) to lower air resistance
  • Minimal weight in the car. Only one person, no luggage, no extras that would add weight
  • Optimal weather (not too hot, not too cold)

This way they get an artificially inflated official range. Now when a customer buys the car, loads in all their stuff and people and actually uses heating/AC/onboard entertainment/autopilot/… and drives in suboptimal weather their range would instantly show as much less than the official rating. And this is where they were cheating, and would show a range number that was closer to the artificially inflated official one.

To be fair, though, when determining “official” fuel consumption for fuel burning cars, they do the same tricks as above. But they probably won’t cheat on the range display, since range is much less of a relevant value for fuel burning cars. Also, everyone expects fuel burning cars to burn much more fuel than it says in the ads.

(That said, when I got my new car, a Dacia Jogger, I was really surprised that the actual fuel consumption is actually lower than the official one.)

Umbra ,

The question is do other ev manufacturers use the same standards for determining range. (Answer is probably yes)

squaresinger ,

For the official range (so the EPA tests)? Totally, yes.

But this article was about displaying an inflated range in while driving. And with that I don’t know. As we know, the car industry is generally not extremely trustworthy. Cheating on stuff like that is pretty common. That’s why it needs to be called out and punished, to curb it.

So the story here is one of “Tesla has been caught and they are getting (maybe) some trouble for it”, not a “Tesla is much less trustworthy than others”. It’s consumers vs manufacturers, not one manufacturer-fanbase vs another manufacturer-fanbase.

Umbra ,

Well said

pickle_party247 ,
nbafantest ,

It’s also simply harder to hit peak rpm for optimal fuel efficency for ice vehicles.

bstix ,

I like the Zoe for this reason. It goes longer and faster than the official stats. Maybe because it was a proof of concept car. Of course like any EV it depends a lot on the weather, so the max. range is a pretty useless metric anyway.

Range anxiety is overblown. Any EV can handle the daily commute, and if not, I d probably consider what I’m doing with my life driving hundreds of miles every day.

chrismarquardt ,

EPA tests all cars stationary on a dynamometer through different cycles. Influence of air drag, air condition, cold temperatures etc. are then added through a factor that is typically 0.7 according to EPA‘s official information at epa.gov/…/testing-national-vehicle-and-fuel-emiss…

I agree part of the EPA range is calculated but I think it’s wrong to claim that a/c and other factors aren’t taken into account.

I’ve driven my EV better than EPA range at times and that included using A/C and having more than one person in the car. I’m not saying that driving it that way is a ton of fun and I’m not saying that I can do that in the midst of winter. But it’s definitely possible.

squaresinger ,

I just get a 502 error on that link…

Sorry, I have to admit, I didn’t look exactly into what the EPA does, but I have some experience regarding NEFZ, NDEC and WLTP, all of which don’t care about stuff like heating or AC.

But EPA has it’s own bag of flaws. For starters, these tests aren’t done by an independent agency or something, they are done by the manufacturers. They also don’t test the real road vehicles, but usually just pre-production prototypes.

And to factor in all of:

  • Air resistance
  • Heating
  • Cooling
  • Onboard entertainment
  • Weight increase due to passengers and luggage
  • Hot/cold weather impacting usable battery capacity

they just multiply the lab test result by 0.7. Compared with the test results from ADAC, that’s a correct adjustment would be 0.6, which is a pretty massive difference. For e.g. the Tesla 3, that’s a difference from 415km -> 355km.

What’s also not part of either of these calculations is what percentage of the time these cars will have to be heated/cooled. There aren’t too many countries where the weather is 15-25°C for the majority of the year, yet still the EPA calculates that heating and cooling will only be used infrequently.

chrismarquardt ,

The link works ok here. 502 indicates a server problem, so that might have been temporary.

I’ll state that we don’t really need to discuss how standardized measurements will never be able to reflect every conceivable use case in every conceivable geography, because that is simply not what these ratings are there for. They exist to make vehicles simpler to compare.

And of course manufacturers will use (and emphasize) those estimates if that makes them look better. Doesn’t make a difference if EV or ICE manufacturer.

None of my past ICE vehicles ever got close to the rated consumption. Common sense tells me I shouldn’t expect things to be different with a different propulsion system.

topinambour_rex ,
@topinambour_rex@lemmy.world avatar

For what I understood reading the article is the automaker who make the test. Then they can use the epa algorithm, or their own. Tesla did the latter. EPA asked them to reduce of 3% their results. Other brands ? They use EPA algorithm. Most have the correct result. Except for the Hyundai Kona. They underestimated their range.

ryathal ,

The big thing is the EPA estimate is a blend of city and highway driving. For ice cars the city is generally lower than highway, but it’s the opposite for most electric vehicles. I believe Tesla also uses 60 for highway speed instead of a more realistic 65-70+, the lower speed dramatically increases range.

PersnickityPenguin ,

Tesla vehicles just show the EPA range. Unlike every other EV out there, a Tesla vehicles doesn’t show the range factoring in weather, driving style and other factors in a guess-o-meter. They just show the EPA range times your battery %.

You only get the adjusted range when you plug your destination into the trip planner.

ryathal ,

The fact that they are the only one’s doing that and are also capable of showing more accurate numbers make it seem like a conscious choice to be deceptive.

Blamemeta , to world in Iranian chess player who removed hijab gets Spanish citizenship

And another person who couldv’e helped Iran move past its issues leaves.

otl ,
@otl@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Sadly the impression I get, from when I’ve spoken with Iranians, is that the establishment don’t see those things as issues to move past at all.

Sentrovasi ,

Yeah, while I am happy for her and wish nothing but the best for her, is this really going to change anything back home? How many other women have the means and training to do what she did? I guess the one thing this does is highlight to the rest of the world how terrible things are in Iran, but I'm under no illusion that this is going to improve the lot of oppressed women in Iran. They might be even more restricted from attending overseas competitions.

Larvitar ,
@Larvitar@kbin.social avatar

I don't know why she would be responsible for changing anything in Iran?

She made a statement to highlight the atrocities in a terrible country and it put her in the crosshairs. This is the same thing as putting on your oxygen mask before you help others while on a plane.

Sentrovasi ,

She isn't responsible, and I hope that was clear in my original statement. What I'm saying is agreeing with the sentiment in the original post that rather than lending support to the problems faced back home, it might conversely make things worse.

It's not her prerogative at all, just a sad observation.

glimse ,

It’s not necessarily about what she specifically could do but it’s emblematic of the greater issue. Not the first intelligent person to never return to Iran due to the leadership and she won’t be the last

atzanteol ,

I’m sorry, who are you to demand she risk her life?

Marsupial ,
@Marsupial@quokk.au avatar

If she stayed, would that change anything?

Steeve ,

First of all, if she went home she would’ve just been arrested, how does that help anyone? And second, why’s it on her to move Iran past it’s issues? Good on her for her brave protest and good on her for not going back and choosing to do more with her life than end up a martyr in an Iranian prison.

Blamemeta ,

Its not just her. Its everyone with a brain.

Carighan , (edited )
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

I would say it’s the other way around.

The way to “help” Iran is for more people to leave. Significantly more, basically anybody with two brain cells to rub together. Leave only the most assinine idiots behind and then they can run their own country into the ground hardcore but they no longer affect anyone with it as everyone else has left.

Basically, Iran has to cease to exist in its current form. By burning itself out. This is incidentally the same way we could move past idiotic religious believes in the first place.

zouden ,

When does that ever work? Can you name some examples?

steltek ,

The aptly named Arab Spring got pretty far, as those things go. Not perfect by any stretch, of course.

I’m struggling to think of alternatives that didn’t involve foreign intention. Peaceful revolution is hard.

Zengen ,

I would say that what you say makes sense but it doesn’t really work super well in practice. I’ll give the best example. North Korea. We have choked them on food, energy, medicine etc. For going on 70 years now. They are still a cancerous blight on the world. With nukes. Sure I guess the argument could be made that they stay inside north Korea and keep to themselves though.

SuddenDownpour ,

If the Irani government already intends to arrest her, her only avenue to “help Iran” was taking up arms. I think everyone here has enough brain cells to understand why you can’t shame any random person for just not making that choice.

dangblingus , to world in Tesla exaggerated EV range so much that drivers thought cars were broken

Wouldn’t this be a gross violation of FCC regulations? I know he’s got the capital to deal with any fines, but surely this would get the FCC’s attention.

HamSwagwich ,

What does the FCC have to do with it? Do you mean the FTC?

AquaTofana ,

I was wondering if this violated false advertising laws? I’m definitely nowhere near a Lawyer, so I can’t begin to grasp the nuances of things like that but…

If someone buys the car under the pretense that it will drive 500 miles on one charge, and it consistently only makes it 350 miles, that’s not a variable tolerance issue like +/-10% . It’s a straight up “I sold you a falsehood” issue.

treefrog ,

I’m near two lawyers (they live across the street).

Jokes aside, yes, States that have false advertising laws this would for sure fall under. In States that don’t, it’s still fraud.

Just took business law last spring.

AquaTofana ,

Okay. I admit it. I grinned.

But in all seriousness, it is good to know that even in states with lesser consumer protection laws, purchasers will still be protected.

I love learning little random tidbits of knowledge like this!

kelargo ,

FTC ? Not FCC

PrivateOnions , to world in Iranian chess player who removed hijab gets Spanish citizenship

Based Spain. Fuck the Iranian government

Nowyn ,

While I agree strongly with the latter statement I have a lot of reservations with the former. I am incredibly happy for her. But this decision as has been the case most of the time in the past decade with the exception of Ukrainian refugees is a decision on an individual level instead of an institutional one. There are a lot of people who are either asylum seekers, people with asylum or quota refugees with similar situations and danger levels. Making individual decisions leaves them behind and only aids one person. Basically, it is good PR with limited results increasing already existent inequality among refugees in Spain.

SuddenDownpour ,

Spain is a fairly difficult country to get into if you want the law to treat you in equal terms as any other citizen, if you belong to the wrong nationality. Latin Americans are often received with open arms, while Africans usually end up working below minimum salary without legal protections due to the lack of means to regularize their situation and the fear of getting deported.

Llewellyn ,
@Llewellyn@lemmy.ml avatar

And fuck Islam.

nomadjoanne ,

Islam would be fine if they behaved more like moderate Christians or Jews. People seem to forget just how violent the Bible and the Torah are. But the modern versions of those religions don’t take their cannon all that literally.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines