Kbin is federated with several lemmy instances and it's the source of most content with community focused microblogging in the fediverse. The post you're commenting on was posted directly to LW.
Sounds like you touched on their special interest. You almost certainly made their day, even if you felt a little awkward. I have autism and my special interest has changed several times, but that passion usually remains (especially if it lasted for a year or longer). It's taken my entire adult life to figure out when people no longer care
The foreign money in our elections are definitely a big factor when it comes to this topic for sure, especially when discussing the GOP. However when discussing the Democratic Party, it's not nearly as big a factor as the billionaires appointing delegates and super delegates. If there's one theme I've noticed over the last 4 years in regards to party structure, it's that the GOP has barely any money but the Democrats continue to get millions from the wealthy. Since our elections cater to put money in the hands of corporations, this directs both parties to provide for their sources of funding. For the GOP, that means fascism. For the Democrats, it's clinging to the same neoliberalism that produced the mess we've been in for 50 years.
I don't know if you're being sarcastic, but I feel all of those options are reductionist in some capacity and creates an illusion that a single tactical change would have altered the outcome. An election and what it takes to sway opinion is multifaceted and requires a diversity of tactics. To me, the problem is systemic and embedded in the party, which encompasses several of the points you think I solely blame. Namely, the oligarchic control over the party via delegates and super-delegates creates a dichotomy between the party's base of support and the desires of the billionaires holding the purse strings.
Personally, I think a bulk of the fault is on the political parties that produced the last 3 elections, and where most of the attention needs to be. There is certainly some fault with the public, but some of that also goes back to the political parties failing to produce and maintain the advanced political awareness needed to be an informed citizen in the US. The Democrats will not accept responsibility for their failures, and has proven to be the less robust party despite the GOP facing bankruptcy.
I did decaf for a while, because I pavlov'd myself into associating coffee as wake up juice. It worked for about a month before I started crashing during work
Aside from solar panels, as others have mentioned, I have a few other suggestions for things to get/do:
Hydroponic garden
Sewing machine
Heat pump water heater
Heat pump a/c
Induction stovetop
Upgrade insulation
Compost bin
Tools to repair common items
Promote the use of libraries and support their growth into other communal resources
Only buy things when needed
As others have said, there isn't much that a single individual can do against climate change, but let me explain my suggestions. Some of the most carbon intensive activities include the transportation of items like food, clothes, and other goods. To reduce your impact, you need to reduce your reliance on this carbon intensive logistics network. By growing your own food, learning to repair what you own, and learning to sew, you're making a large impact on your personal contribution to climate change. By supporting the library, you're encouraging the use of a shared pool of communal resources, which also reduces your community's climate impact.
The other items are what you can do to improve the efficiency of your house, if you own it. Induction stoves are incredibly safe and a highly efficient cooking surface. Heat pumps are crazy efficient at both heating and cooling, so slowly replacing old appliances with high efficiency options as they fail will maximize the use of what you own before it gets replaced. Compost bins and insulation certainly aren't glamorous like the other tech options, but they'll also go a long way: Landfills create an anaerobic environment, meaning food that gets thrown end up producing methane, and single family homes consume a lot of energy because heat escapes from every wall open to the air.
Animal Farm is a story by George Orwell about the animals of the farm being led by pigs in overthrowing the farmer. The joke seems to be that Orwell both saw and described a literal farm uprising, and that he wrote this book instead because the animals hadn't risen up
Most of the super high content ones up here are very dark beers, like a blond coffee and things like that which mask the taste properly because it's natural from brewing and not fortified. I know exactly what you mean though, I've had high content beers that tasted like a Busch mixed with Winsor
It's fine that you're stepping in to help people dealing with kbin ui bugs, but I don't understand where the hostility towards lemmy is coming from.