@johentsch@hostux.social avatar

johentsch

@johentsch@hostux.social

Musician, Music Theorist, Pedagogue, PhD Candidate in #ComputationalMusicology @ Digital and Cognitive #Musicology Lab @ École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland. Interested in #KnowledgeGraphs, #LOD, etc. #fedi22 searchable #nobridge

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amy , to random
@amy@spookygirl.boo avatar

Boost if you still remember how to use these 😭

johentsch ,
@johentsch@hostux.social avatar

@amy
I'm really sad I was born too late to know these. Or microfilm. But then again....

Strandjunker , to random
@Strandjunker@mstdn.social avatar

It would be funny if it wasn’t so pathetic — and dangerous for our democracy.

johentsch ,
@johentsch@hostux.social avatar

@Strandjunker
A group of elephants squeezing into a corner, in fear of a tiny D. Trump facing them.

jeffowski , to random
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar
johentsch ,
@johentsch@hostux.social avatar

@jeffowski
What show was that?

breadandcircuses , (edited ) to random
@breadandcircuses@climatejustice.social avatar

Upon retiring from work at age 58 (lucky me) in 2012, I chose to leave the United States in favor of Europe, where I ended up staying in Budapest, Hungary, for six years. I rented a studio apartment near the city center, bought a used bicycle, and enjoyed a modest, inexpensive, yet comfortable lifestyle.

Since my return to the U.S. in 2018, I’ve found there are many things I miss. When I lived in Budapest, there were three different small independent bakeries within a five-minute walk from my apartment. Also in that same radius were a couple of almost literal hole-in-the-wall fruit and vegetable shops offering delicious fresh produce. And although the nearby area held no chain restaurants, it was home to several quite good local eateries.

There were clothing stores selling both new and used goods, as well as shoe stores, all of them small and independent, not necessarily carrying a wide selection, but providing high quality items at surprisingly low prices, and with friendly trustworthy service. Plus, within a five-minute walk was a practically free public transit system than made frequent stops and could take me almost anywhere I wanted to go within the city, safely, reliably, and quickly.

So I wonder, why is it that — at least in my current neighborhood in suburban Virginia — the only options for baked goods or produce or clothing or home furnishings or hardware or almost anything else are chain stores? Well, that, or freaking Amazon. Why are all other choices so limited, so few and so far between? Why does virtually everything depend upon — no, actually demand the use of a car to get there?

Most United Statesians, I suspect, have no idea that people in other countries live so differently than the way we do here. We have been sold on the idea, taught from an early age, that ours is the best way, indeed the only sensible way to do things. Anyone suggesting that a less car-centric and hyper-capitalistic culture is not only possible but desirable, that it could be much more pleasant and satisfying, not to mention safer and more friendly to the environment, well, they plainly don’t know what they’re talking about. It makes me sad and angry.

#USA #Europe

johentsch ,
@johentsch@hostux.social avatar

@breadandcircuses
I understand your questions are rhethorical and you probably have many answers to them yourself. Could they be summarized as "end-stage capitalism" with an economy composed of oligopols, exerting an unproportional amount of political power?

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