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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • willis936@lemmy.worldtome_irl@lemmy.worldme🏠irl
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    5 months ago

    How does any of that prevent Biden from acknowledging that housing is expensive and a desire to incentivize housing construction for individual ownership?

    I’m not asking for the moon here. Silence on the matter is a very loud statement about keeping things the way they’re headed. They’ll get a rude referendum on that. No one will be happy with the outcome.


  • willis936@lemmy.worldtome_irl@lemmy.worldme🏠irl
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    5 months ago

    Okay well we’ve had three years without a strong man president and all we’ve gotten are higher interest rates and a letter telling us the economy is doing great. Not even an acknowledgement of the problem, let alone expressed interest in solving it, or a plan, or action.

    This is on the blues right now. They need to do something fast if you don’t want a strong man president.











  • willis936@lemmy.worldtomemes@lemmy.worldThe system is broken
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    6 months ago

    What change do you propose? Being born ultra rich?

    If you work hard and become a professional you can make 100-120k in your 30s. Maybe as much as 150 if you get lucky. Those jobs exist in places where rent is 50% take home and ownership is completely off the table.

    Do you suggest working a Denny’s in a rural area? Fuck that and fuck you.








  • There is 1.4E21 kg of water on Earth. 0.03% of hydrogen is deuterium, a suitable fusion fuel. H2O has an atomic mass of 18 and O has an atomic mass of 16, so Earth has 4.7E16 kg of deuterium readily centrifuged out of ocean water.

    D-D fusion converts about 0.1% of mass to energy (4 MeV / c^2 / 4 Daltons). E=mc^2. So we have 4.2E30 (420E28) Joules of fusion fuel ready for us on Earth. We used 2400 TWh of energy last year. If we used this amount indefinitely then we would have 485 billion years of fuel.

    Bonus: deuterium depletion would have virtually no environmental effect.