Burray_Mookchin

joined 4 months ago
[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 4 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

That's the common misconception. The lines running between minisplit units are for refrigirant, not air. It's essentially a fridge without a box, with the room where theyre mounted becoming the box instead.

You're right I was wrong about that, sorry lol.

It doesn't. It's just that people who run AC's usually shut everything closed and then exhale all that co2, which in an ordinary room with just 1 person in takes <1hr to reach noticeable impairment levels. AC or not, ventilation is important.

You might be right but I am certainly not opening my windows once an hour during winter, if that's the standard then we're all screwed by the time we go to bed with the windows closed. I don't think this problem is significant enough to justify running an Air Conditioner with the windows open...

You're probably thinking about carbon monooxide, not carbon dioxide?

Yes, I am. As that is the only "real" concern I see with AC's and gas buildup. As I said co2 is just not a big enough issue to justify not getting an AC or letting it run out the window. Regularly airing out should be common sense, but I think once or twice a day is regular enough for the average apartment

[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 5 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (2 children)

Sure, but the inside and the outside of your house aren't different universes, the heat that your fridge emits still gets out into the world. Dense urban areas with widespread AC units can indeed be slightly hotter than if there were no AC's. We're talking in the ballpark of 1-2°C. That shouldn't be a big issue for the local environment. And that heat is not what's causing climate change. Climate change is caused by greenhouse gasses, not by heat-emitting electrical devices

[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 7 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (2 children)

And how exactly does an AC intensify this issue? Because lets be real it's not really a problem people usually face in their daily lives. Some people leave their windows closed for days during the winter (Which is also bad because of mold etc. but thats another story). Most places are not nearly well insulated enough for it to be a problem. And if it was a problem, having an AC device or fan that circulates the air and evens out the co2 levels across the house would actually help alleviate it somewhat

[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

Comment deleted because it was a load of nonsense

[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 16 points 2 weeks ago (6 children)

It works similar to a fridge with the inside of the fridge being your apartment and the outside being, well, the outside. All it does is circulate air over a heat sink filled with a refrigerant, which never leaves the system; it does not emit anything.

The fact that the power it uses comes from burning fossil fuels instead of green energy is really not the consumers fault and is part of the reason why the demand for these devices is skyrocketing in the first place (It's getting hotter because of the climate change)

[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 3 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (10 children)

I don't understand your statement. I can have the windows closed all day with no AC and not worry about rising co2 levels. Why would it be different with this device running and circulating air? It's not like it emits co2.

This looks like a wall mounted monoblock so you would be right ~~but if it's a split device with an outside unit, it does actually bring in fresh air.~~ This is wrong, split units dont bring in fresh air either. The only setup that consistently brings in outside air is a monoblock with 2 ducts. Either way, I'm pretty sure running an AC with the windows open is never good advice even if you can afford it.

The only point of concern would be if you have a gas heater for water etc. in your apartment and run a monoblock AC with just one exhaust hose blowing hot air outside while sucking in new air from the inside. In that case, the negative pressure created by the AC can potentially pull gas that would usually go out the chimney into your apartment.

[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 6 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

Yes we have a 40 hour work week (germany). Standard working hours are 8.5 hours a day, which includes 8 hours of paid work and a mandatory 30 minute unpaid break (So it's really a 42,5h week). I have never heard of a 2 hour lunch ever from anyone I know that works a regular job. On the contrary, many people simply work through their 30 minute break (Which is against the law but it can be difficult to enforce and you get singled out and bullied by management very quickly if you start acting up about it in many low income jobs)

Housing prices have been skyrocketing for decades and many people are struggling to pay for rent and groceries because wages have been stagnating when adjusted for cost of living at the same time. The welfare state has been and continues to be gutted in most parts of europe under the guise of saving money for war efforts or the covid crisis or climate change or whatever issue is available to justify it in the current moment.

Police are increasingly militarized and overly aggressive although they kill less people (Unjust killings are still happening all the time though).

Censorship is also ever increasing. For example targeting all shades of the "Pro-Palestinian" political movements, or incidents where people get their house raided etc. for posting unfavorable remarks about politicians on the internet. There are also incidents of courts making overly harsh judgements to create examples out of cases against leftist lawbreakers to send a signal to the populous.

It's the same shit over here, just slightly milder. As a poor person in europe these posts read like either pure propaganda or uneducated statements made by comfortably wealthy european workers and small business owners or american tourists. I think it's sad that being slightly better than the USA seems to be enough for so many people to proudly support all the deplorable shit that is happening in their own home countries.

[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 20 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I bought a new phone a year ago and lost all my whatsapp messages. Are you sure she didn't simply enable the cloud backups in the settings?

[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 7 points 3 weeks ago (4 children)

They're usually fine when you have subs in a different language than the audio. Where it gets frustrating is when you're watching something in English audio with english subs and the words in the subtitles differ from the spoken words. It happens especially often when the original Audio language is something other than English. It's awful

[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

they’re mostly known for being all about theory and not doing any praxis at all

What exactly is the issue when a person writes analysis while not doing any praxis? (We already assume for the sake of this argument that writing essays, holding lectures and impacting the "discourse" among the left are not praxis.)

What exactly do you mean by "members"? Are you talking about the people who write texts for the GSP or are you talking about people who buy their material and then read it? I fail to see any form of "membership" in the latter case, and I fail to see the problem with those same people not also doing praxis in the former. Can you elaborate a little bit?

[–] Burray_Mookchin@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

I legit don't get the GSP hate. Yes they mostly critique the existing order and they are not a political party offering direct solutions to everything. What does shine through is the desire for a world order that prioritizes the needs of humanity instead of profit. I have yet to read or hear a criticism directed at them that actually concerns itself with their arguments about the state and liberal democracy instead of simply railing against their way of speaking or the alleged arrogance of their readership and/or members. Of course Karl Held often behaved arrogant and overly aggressive when faced with criticism but he was also right a lot of the time.

Pushing all their work aside and labelling it as pseudo intellectual garbage is a take that I can not understand. They are not a cult, they write texts and hold lectures. Yes there are no protests with GSP flags and Peter Decker doesn't squat a house or whatever you want them to do. But I fail to understand why that is a bad thing and what the problem is with people simply putting out good quality analysis for others to read and inform their own praxis. You don't need a "better alternative idea" to articulate a critique of what exists right now. And just because you only criticize the existing order doesn't really mean that you have no interest in it being changed. That is an inference step that I have issues following

Please enlighten me if you know more than I do since I also only recently started paying attention to them. Because so many leftists told me for years that they are not worth my time. I was proven very wrong when I listened to some of their arguments and conversations from the last 34 years and read some of their newer analysis on current events. It's very good theory, nothing more and nothing less in my opinion.

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