• 5 Posts
  • 19 Comments
Joined 4 months ago
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Cake day: July 23rd, 2024

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  • Alle Argumente im Artikel brechen zusammen, wenn man Sport als Privathobby sieht, aber es einem total egal ist, wo das eigene Land dann im Medaillenspiegel der Olympischen Spiele landet. Es ist ja nett, dass die Unis in den USA merkwürdige Dinge mit Sport machen, aber ich bin ganz froh, dass unsere Unis sich auf relevantere Dinge wie wissenschaftliche Forschung und Lehre konzentrieren. Und wir wissen halt auch, dass autoritäre Staaten wie China oder Russland den Sport als nationale Selbstdarstellung nutzen und dabei unter den Athleten Grausamkeiten anrichten, die wir als Demokratie nicht machen wollen und können.

    Von daher: Es gibt viele sinnvollere Dinge, die wir mit dem Geld anstellen können als jemanden zu fördern besonders schnell zu rennen, hoch zu springen oder einen Speer möglichst weit werfen zu lassen, nur damit wir dann irgendwann bei den olypmischen Spielen “gut” abschneiden als “Nation”. Jeder Cent Spitzensportförderung ist in der Breitensportförderung definitiv besser aufgehoben und daher ist der einzig sinnvolle Weg der deutschen Sportförderung ihre komplette Abschaffung.



  • Language is democratic. If people are starting to speak or write in a certain way, that is the correct way to use a language. I know that we have all these organizations trying to define “correct” language use, but if many Germans are deciding that they want to use this apostrophe, that should be correct.

    And there is another issue: There are a lot of people looking down on people who can’t read or write correctly. You can see this here: people are calling other people itiots just because they are using an apostrophe in a not officially accepted way. Which should never, never happen


  • muelltonne@feddit.orgtoEurope@feddit.orgReading habits in Europe
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    3 months ago

    It is even worse:

    Between 20-25% of the European population is functionally illiterate. In other words: at least one citizen in five does not have the reading and writing skills they need for functioning in society, with all its consequences for education, employment, health care, welfare, social integration and political participation. ‘More than 73 million adults in the EU… do not have sufficient literacy levels to cope with the daily requirements of personal, social, and economic life’

    https://blogs.fasos.maastrichtuniversity.nl/EUS2516/lowliteracyineurope/

    So they are not just not reading any books, they literally can’t read books.


  • Das wäre eine megacoole SciFi-Story: Kleine menschliche Siedling im marsianischen Outback, die ständig von riesigen Roboterkreaturen zerstört wird. Die Überlebenden schließen sich zusammen, bilden ein Enterkommando, stürmen dann den Riesenroboter, kapern ihn und ziehen mit ihm in den Kampf gegen weitere Riesenroboter. Und in den späteren Leveln stellt man fest, dass die Riesenroboter klein sind im Vergleich zu den HINTERMÄNNERN und muss dann diese mit einer Armee riesiger Riesenroboter bekämpfen


  • I would question your focus on growth. Yes, we all want this place to succeed. But do we really want this unlimited growth like Facebook, Reddit and all those other companies? Small communities are great, they give you a connection between users, they spark friendships and great discourse. Those are great. Yes, they are smaller than those multimillion user subreddits, but we’ve all seen those big subreddits slowly burning down. Dying to bots, to marketing spam, to low effort, popular comments, to reposts, to karma farming, to US politics. We’ve seen subreddit after subreddit dying to moderator burnout - because big subs are really hard to moderate, people will burn out. They are sacrificing their free time to deal with trolls, shills, putins guys and receive no compensation for that.

    So maybe … let’s don’t replicate Reddit? Let’s focus on creating small, helpful communities and people will come.





  • It totally does make sense. Amateurs with metal detectors are in most cases not really qualified to to archeological digs. And they really are not able do document them properly. Archeology is not only about the artifacts, but also about how they were found. Take a roman coin: If you buy it on Ebay or find it in the street, it is a roman coin. But if you find a roman coin f.e. on an ancient battlefield, you can use it to date the battle. That context gets lost when archeology is not done properly.

    Also their finds are vanishing mostly into private collections. That really doesn’t matter with random coins, but f.e. the sky disc of Nebra, one of Europes most stunning bronze age finds, was dug up during an illegal private metal detector search and they then tried to sell it on the black market. So it does make sense to ban metal detector hunting.




  • muelltonne@feddit.orgtoEurope@feddit.orgToo many tourists?
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    4 months ago

    Tourism also comes in seasons - a ski resort will be crowded in winter, but empty when the snow melts. A beach town is empty in the winter, but busy in the summer. Some cities are getting a huge influx of tourists for specific events, like Munich for the Oktoberfest. So your calculation won’t be accurate to measure the impact of tourism.