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2 yr. ago

  • I'm fine with dying, eventually. It's aging I don't want to go through.

  • oh god oh fuck

  • Nah bro, I'm past the big 3-0. My knees are still good (though I've got plenty of other aches and pains to make me feel ancient), but I've got friends already complaining. We're all getting old and decrepit. Big RIP to youth 😔

  • Most of the works were copies to begin with - the loss of the Library of Alexandria is a loss of a possible source of transmission for literally hundreds of thousands of ancient texts. Considering how many priceless pieces of literature have survived by only a single copy, mourning the (multiple) burnings of the Great Library is far from mourning a nonissue.

  • The whirr of a fan is regular and unchanging, which helps drown out irregular noises. Irregular noises are hell.

  • f-eddit

    Jump
  • It's broader than that - it also forbids comparisons of the Israeli government to Nazis. You may say that that's just an issue of tone that doesn't prevent serious discussion, and you aren't wrong - but I have no interest in getting tone policed on a fucking genocide either, regardless of German law.

  • It was astounding and unexpected. I'm still not the biggest fan of irregular sounds, but not having to refocus on them every time they happen is amazing.

  • f-eddit

    Jump
  • On one hand, I get .org's admins' reasoning, and don't disagree with the core of it - no one wants a fucking police visit to their house over a hobby project.

    On the other hand, it's a strong reason for me to not use Feddit.org (separate from Feddit.uk) comms at all, regardless of the comm's individual position on the ongoing Palestinian genocide.

  • Knowing was slightly helpful, in a "Well, now at least I know what's lacking and that it's not laziness, but focus."

    On the other hand, getting medicated has been... I hesitate to say explicitly life-changing, because at this point in my life it's not really changing anything essential about how I live my life... but it has greatly improved my quality of life. Little things, being able to tackle everyday chores without massive executive dysfunction, or being able to focus on tasks for longer. And my sleep is actually restful now. That's fantastic too.

    And the lack of misophonia when I'm medicated is heavenly. Never knew what it was like to not despise every little irregular sound around me. They're still bothersome, but not to the point where I want to bash my skull in against the edge of a table after hearing people indistinctly chattering for more than ten minutes.

  • Found out I was within the last year. Explained a lot about my childhood, and adulthood for that matter. I slipped through the cracks for so long because I was never 'hyperactive'.

  • Pretty sure it’s calling for the displacement of all the Israeli people there.

    "It's just ethnic cleansing" isn't really a great counter.

  • It owns the libs, therefore, it's good, obviously.

  • Deficient, juvenile, and narcissistic. And they make all the marginalized groups they claim to defend suffer for it.

  • "It couldn't possibly get worse"

    Fuck's sake. I want to cry.

  • "At least the filthy libs are losing"

  • One thing caught my attention though: what did they scrape oil off the skin with? I must see this ancient tool!

    The Strigil!

    Depiction of an athlete cleaning himself with one, though oftentimes they'd have someone do it for them.

    The Emperor Hadrian once came upon a veteran in the public baths scraping his back against a wall. When the Emperor asked him why, the veteran replied that he had no other way to scrape his back. Hadrian, moved by the relative poverty of the veteran, gifted him a slave (look, the ancient world was shitty) and money to maintain himself.

    The next time Hadrian went to the baths, there were numerous men scraping their backs against the wall. Hadrian called them all over to him, and then had them pair up and scrape each other.

    Also, related to olive oil, there's a kind of simple pancake that the Romans fried with olive oil, and I can attest that it's delicious and easy to make.

  • Fascist continues to do incredibly fascist things to the international community.

    Fuck.

  • They stave off the soul-crushing void of despair and the suicidal urges for me, but not the low-grade dissatisfaction with being alive.

  • Alright, alright, now that I'm awake and fed and done my daily posts, I can satisfy your curiosities at least a little bit. I didn't think there would be so many people asking, I just picked a random obscure Roman topic. XD

    So, North Africa was, during the Roman Empire, a major commercial and agricultural hub. It was, in fact, the second-richest province in the Western half of the Empire, just behind Italy itself. The reasons for this are numerous, but two of the biggest were grain export (as the city of Rome, in particular, was a massive market for wheat), and olive oil export. Olive oil in the Roman Empire was extremely important - not just in cuisine (a staple for rich and poor, legionary and civilian, Britain to Syria), but also as lamp fuel, lubricant for wheels and machinery, bathing (it was scraped off the skin with a special tool), sunscreen for athletes, cosmetics, and even as medicine (though perhaps the Roman conception of food as having medical properties makes this less surprising than it would otherwise be).

    Notably, there's extensive evidence for both large-scale olive oil processing by elites with access to significant amounts of capital as well as fairly primitive homestead-presses from well-off freeman farmers that nonetheless are thought to have been able to produce a considerable surplus for export (at least, considerable from the point of view of a single village).

    While the resulting mash often remained locally, being used for animal feed, fertilizer, or fuel, the olive oil itself, of varying grades and quantities, was exported all across the Empire. That North African pottery was also produced on a massive scale for export helped - both 'mid-grade' African Red Slip (what a well-off peasant or day-laborer might bring out as tableware when the in-laws come 'round) and utilitarian clay amphorae for transport.

    Many of the places the olive oil would be exported to, like Italy, Spain, and Syria, were suitable climates for growing olives themselves - it was not an absolute inability to acquire olive oil locally that drove this trade, but comparative advantage - that, even including transport costs, it was more profitable for these regions to acquire at least some of their olive oil from far-off Africa than try to produce all of it themselves at the expense of other uses for the land. Olive oil also has the advantage of keeping for a good bit of time, unlike foodstuffs which rot quickly and can only be transported a short distance by cart or sailing ship.

    The apparatus of the Empire itself found an interest in encouraging this trade, though the primary concern was usually grain for the ever-hungry city of Rome, which may have numbered a million(!) people at the time. There is widespread evidence of free distribution of 'waste' (uncultivated but theoretically arable) land by the Imperial apparatus to North African farmers simply for pledging to make agricultural use of the land.

    There was a study I read a bit back which identified hundreds of olive oil mills in modern-day Libya that were primarily active during the Greek and Roman periods, not for sustained periods afterwards. In other words, in the Greek and Roman periods, North Africa was producing considerably more olive oil than it would for hundreds of years after the decline of Roman power. Olive oil is more reliant on stability than other common crops - olive trees need years to mature, during which the farmer is financially vulnerable. And if unrest or disaster causes the destruction of some or all of the orchard, that's 5-10 years down the drain for nothing.

    After the Arab invasions in the 7th century AD, much of this productive capacity was lost - not necessarily because of any particular failings on the part of the new rulers, but simply because long-distance trade before the modern day is always in very fragile equilibrium, and "What was once under the control of one polity is now split between two intermittently hostile polities" is not conducive to trade. The stability, security, and economy of scale (particularly regarding the size of the market) enjoyed under the Empire (admittedly in decline at that point anyway) was washed away by the winds of political upheaval. C'est la vie!

    I could say more, but this is already long and there's a thunderstorm and I don't want to lose all of this, so I'll end it here. XD

    @Admax@lemmy.world @SnortsGarlicPowder@lemmy.zip @otter@lemmy.dbzer0.com @HKPiax@lemmy.world @PyroNeurosis@lemmy.blahaj.zone @madamarie@lemmy.world

  • Star Wars Memes @lemmy.world

    We only support ONE separatist confederacy in this house

    Star Wars Memes @lemmy.world

    Make up your damn mind!

    cats @lemmy.world

    "We have ways of making you talk"

    memes @lemmy.world

    Bob is such a kidder

    memes @lemmy.world

    "Good, bad, I'm the one with the corporate shares"

    Star Wars Memes @lemmy.world

    Not all Emperors ascend to the throne equal

    memes @lemmy.world

    Literally meme

    AnarchyChess @sopuli.xyz

    My lips are sealed

    memes @lemmy.world

    2001 Planet Of The Apes moment

    memes @lemmy.world

    Show me a goth moth

    cats @lemmy.world

    Armed

    memes @lemmy.world

    Sweet moon sugar...

    memes @lemmy.world

    I think this is how the book goes

    AnarchyChess @sopuli.xyz

    CHESS KILLED THE SOVIET UNION

    cats @lemmy.world

    I should get a cat

    memes @lemmy.world

    When the apartment has a mouse problem again and you can hear them between the floors

    memes @lemmy.world

    Blahaj is wild

    cats @lemmy.world

    "The devil with an angel's face"

    memes @lemmy.world

    WOKE SADDLES

    memes @lemmy.world

    The gods as my witnesses, I will force it into existence