And so much salt.
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Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•Businesses can claim refunds starting Monday for Trump tariffs declared unconstitutional
32·28 days agoWe paid an illegal tax and now corporations are getting our money back.
How is this not theft and equally illegal as the tariffs in the first place?
The funnest job I’ve ever had was delivering pizzas.
Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•Trump Seethes as ‘Stupid Lawsuit’ Exposes Ballroom’s Underground ‘Military Complex’ Plans
1·2 months agoThe Daft and the Füherious
Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•Walmart digital price labels are coming to every store shelf in U.S. by end of 2026
5·2 months agoAldi
Costco
Locally owned shops (not for better deals, but to support small businesses)
By choosing not to participate in the system that we have right now, you’re perpetuating it.
Run in a primary.
Vote in the primaries.
Get or be a better candidate that can help change things for the better.
Action in the only way to change the status quo.
That’s why we need to encourage viable, like-minded candidates to run in primaries and then vote for them in primaries. Then, regardless of who wins the primary we vote for the non-fascist.
Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•How much proof is there that smart tvs and phones listen to you?
2·2 months agoI pay for Kagi search.
Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•How much proof is there that smart tvs and phones listen to you?
3·2 months agoWhat ads? My browser blocks ads. My vpn blocks ads. I pay for email so don’t see ads there. I pay for search so I don’t see ads there, either. I self host media. My TV doesn’t connect to the internet.
I seriously never see ads.
Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Conservatives: Libz don't even know what a woman is. Also Conservatives: *constantly engage with purely synthetic creations thinking that they are women.*
5·2 months agoIt’s the same hand holding the same phone, but it is in there twice. Not even the perspective has changed. That’s one easy giveaway.
Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is a belief you’ve done a total 180 on?
8·2 months agoIt is extremely clear that there are no all-powerful, all-knowing, benificent gods. They’re all lacking at least one of those things, if they exist at all. And then what is a “god”? It just becomes a semantics game and becomes pretty pointless to discuss.
I’m planning on leaving my estate to the local indigenous nation when I die.
If we’re boiling things down to biology, if two people are finding it impossible to conceive/carry to term, that’s biology telling them they shouldn’t be combining their genes.
Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•Trump Says He's 'Entitled' to Illegal Third Term as Allies Draft Voter Suppression Decree
8·3 months agoAlways has been.
Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Heaper, new tools to organize docs, photos [YouTube]English
1·3 months agoSo is this basically just another DAM system (but marketed more to end users/self-hosters?
There are FOSS DAM systems.
I agree.
When we were a young married couple decades ago, we’d check out movies from the library on VHS tape. One we loved was Topper. In the VHS transfer, there was a line from the protagonist giving “good advice” to another main character: “You haven’t lived until you’ve beat your wife.” In all earnestness.
That line was mysteriously missing from the DVD and all subsequent versions I’ve seen.
I think it is detrimental to society to whitewash shameful past behavior. We need to acknowledge it, remember how bad things have been, and respect the progress that has been made. It also helps us reflect on ways we might be acting now that could be viewed as horrific or backwards in the future. It helps drive continuing progress.
Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•People always want their ideal conversation to sound like movie characters, but in reality most people talk as if they're in an interrogation room or how people sound like on police bodycam footage.
2·3 months agoThis is one of the things I love about the movie, The Big Lebowski. The characters often start a sentence, but transition to a different thought before finishing the first sentence. They’ll pick up an overheard word or phrase they like and use it in their own conversations. It feels so much more real than typical move dialog.
Neverbeaten@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•Smashing Pumpkins Singer Billy Corgan Mysteriously Claims the Government Contacted Him About ‘Things Way Above My Pay Grade’
4·4 months agoI’ll always love the early albums, but I knew Billy lost the plot the first time he talked about and insisted that different paint colors on the same guitar make it sound different (noticeably different). He hasn’t been reality-based in many years.
After watching many, many episodes of antiques roadshow, I’ve come to a conclusion about what kinds of things appreciate and become investments and what things are worthless.
Anything marketed and sold as a “collectible” is worthless after the fad has died down. People will hang on to them despite the bubble popping, in some sort of hope they’ll be valuable again someday. This guarantees they won’t become valuable because so many people have large collections and preserve them well.
The things that are actually valuable after 30+ years all have two things in common.
- They are things that hold some sort of sentimental, cultural, or historical significance
- They are rare. Maybe they were mass produced things that were basically commodities but no one valued them enough to preserve any. The few that are preserved (usually by a handful of unrelated individuals that may be compulsive or eccentric) become valuable because of a large group of people nostalgic for those items coinciding with scarcity. Or maybe they’re historical documents or artworks that are truly one-of-a-kind.
The things that become investments are exactly the things no one thought about collecting, but that were ubiquitous and loved enough to engender some kind of nostalgia or significance to a large group of collectors. If the demographics of the bulk of the collectors are in the 1% for some reason, then the values can get truly astronomical. But these also fluctuate in value as these rare items come into fashion to collect (or fall out of fashion). The more ephemeral or fragile in nature an item is, the more rare it is to survive for lengths of time and therefore the more value it could potentially have… things like cardboard toys from the 1920s can be incredibly valuable if they’re in great condition. Those were the cheapest toys and likely considered somewhat disposable back then. No one really valued them at the time, so very few were preserved.
All that said, anything lots of people keep as mint as possible in their boxes will likely never be as valuable as when they were initially sold as new. Especially if “collectible” was a key marketing point for it.




Largest in population. Largest in economy
Land doesn’t vote.