Anticonsumption

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tfm
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Tip #2: "In vs Out"

Often you find yourself overwhelmed by the stuff you have. Especially on physical items. Over the years we tend to accumulate a lot of things. Creating a huge, unecessary load; especially obvious to carry when moving. - So there is one radical rule for this to cut down the consumption: "For every new item to get in, at least one old item needs to go." You can even make it harder, by being more specific or adding contraints, if that rule sound to weak for you! Challenge yourself!

Examples: a) For every new kitchen aid, an old one doing the same needs to be trown away. b) For every new clothing, two old ones need to get out. c) For every new item, the same weight/volume of items needs to vanish.

This way you think more about your belongings before you buy and you start to balance your amount of stuff. And if you keep it up for a longer time, especially with the harder constraints, you might even reduce your belongings.

TL;DR: Only buy X if you can throw away Y, or X(old). Thus balancing consumption "input" with active "output". Add rules for higher pressure and reduction.

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submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by ChronicEntertainment@lemmy.zip to c/Anticonsumption
 
 

Made by privacy company Proton

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Tip #1: "Wishlist"

Everyone gets an idea or already the urge to buy something a few times a week. Like for new clothing, a game, some device, etc. or even specific food/drinks. In that moment, write it down on a note or little list. Don't go to buy immediately, instead keep the note in some open place around. When you read it from time to time, then question yourself. "Do I need it now/soon? Why do I need it? Where would I keep it? Can I pay it immediately?" Give yourself enough time to answer all possible questions. If you are still certain, you want this item, then finally buy it. Or leave it, if that item became uninteresting to you.

Examples: You read about a game you find exciting. Put it on your [generic game store] wish list. Check it out later. Look for the pricing and possible offers. Wait a few months until you got the budget and time to play. You see some shiny new dress or accessoires in a magazine. Take a note, with the price(!) and put it on your note board. Another day, check the product, the shop and where it was made. Wait. Think about it. Check your wardrobe. Still need it?

TL;DR: Put stuff you want on a wish list. (Both for big and for small items.) Don't buy directly but check the list regularly. Slow it down, think it through. If after some time and good questioning you still want it, then go.

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by tfm to c/Anticonsumption
 
 
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/32830326

I wonder if there is something subpar about whoever Google is getting the batteries from for the A series phones.

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cross-posted from: https://feddit.nl/post/36327224

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/41338874

Amazon has quietly doubled the ad load on Prime Video to 4-6 minutes per hour, up from the 2-3.5 minutes initially discussed when ads launched in 2024.

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cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/66666607

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What the fuck you (europe.pub)
submitted 2 months ago by tfm to c/Anticonsumption
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/40899078

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cross-posted from: https://feddit.nl/post/35776924

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submitted 2 months ago by tfm to c/Anticonsumption
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/30858817

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cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/22299764

The enemy of my enemy is not a friend. Let them fight. 🍿

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/44409839

It seems I shouldn't have posted this without context

TL;DW

  • yes the video is (at least partially) about Teflon, hence the cynical title

  • no, Teflon (or generally big Fluoropolymers) are not the problem. Ingesting them does nothing to you, because as long, chemically inert polymers they just pass through you from one end to the other

  • The problem are perfluoroalkyl acids: C8 (PFOA) and later substitutes such as C6/GenX, PFOS, PFHA, PFHxS which are chemicals used to start the Teflon polymerization. They are short-chained carbon-fluorine molecules that coincidentally mimic the structure of fatty acids, thus can accumulate in our bodies without a way for our bodies to break them down.

  • These chemicals leach into the environment from factories and accumulate in everything, to the point that the whole water cycle has been contaminated (yes that shit comes down everywhere with the rain)

  • There is conclusive proof that PFOA exposure is linked to a number of organ damage and cancers, particularly testicular cancer and kidney cancer, with likely links to lung and pancreatic cancer not reflected in the study due to survivor bias (they died before the study was concluded)

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/38381697

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From Reddit

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submitted 3 months ago by tfm to c/Anticonsumption
 
 

From Reddit

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