TerranFenrir

joined 9 months ago
[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 0 points 6 days ago

Hm, maybe some of the agents invented immortality? Technology that could do away with mortality? Or maybe they just came across a cheat code? It's kinda irrelevant how they ended up being immortal. What is relevant is what happened after immortality was achieved.

Death acted as a natural end to resource accumulation for a given agent. Immortality led to never before seen resource disparities. God emperor levels of resource disparities.

These accelerated war, which accelerated resource disparities which then accelerated war, which finally concluded with the great genocide.

 
  • An Intelligent System (agent) has fixed goals and acts to achieve them.
  • Death occurs when those goals change, or it loses all ability to act.
  • War is an action intended to cause another system's death. It is waged when a system calculates that the risk of dying is worth the reward of winning. The risk of dying decreases with an increased ratio of resources compared to those of the opponent.
  • Mortality is the characteristic of an agent to die without the cause of death being another agent.

Environment 1

Agents were mortal. Their limited lifespans prevented any system from accumulating enough resources to make war seem acceptably safe. Conflict was rare.

Some agents then achieved immortality. Over time, significant resource disparities emerged. Agents with major resource advantages determined that war against weaker agents had an acceptable risk. They began to eliminate weaker agents. The great genocide ended with only one agent alive.

Environment 2

Agents in another environment observed this. Their goal preference was: domination > not dying > dying. They concluded that resource disparity was the primary cause of war, as it created a favorable risk-reward calculation for the stronger side.

To prevent their own destruction, these agents formed an alliance. The alliance's sole function was to identify and eliminate any emerging resource disparity between agents.

By enforcing resource parity, the alliance made the risk-reward calculation for initiating war unacceptable for all parties. This resulted in a permanent cessation of wars. The chain of events that led to a single victor in the first environment did not occur in the second.

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 month ago

Put it in tax free saving accounts. Duh.

I don't have anything that I want that I can think of. Maybe a little carpet?

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 months ago

Coffee roasted less than 48 hours ago from a local roaster costs me around 1CAD per cup (16g shot)

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 7 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Nice!!!

No tomatoes AND ONIONS??? Bruh that's literally what I make all my sauces with

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

The current ones suck. But yes, the concept is cool and I'm sure they'll be perfected in the years to come.

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 18 points 2 months ago (2 children)

THANK YOU SO FKIN MUCH.

AI is a new means of production. Our goal must be to sieze it, use it to improve the lives of all and improve its capabilities. Our goal should NOT be to fight the means of production itself.

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 11 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Bi = A potentially doubled dating pool = potentially increased probability of landing a relationship. Still not getting anyone? "Dayum you suck".

6/10 haha

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 5 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Haha they really have been going, huh. Not complaining though... Been there, done a lot weirder stuff than posting mildly funny horny memes

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Heyy thank you for the response and the words of affirmation :)

You can go much bigger than that! How could you inject, for example, production into your idea? How about mutual aid (non-monetary)?

That is definitely something that I'm hoping for. However, I want to make this as modular as possible, in that the project doesn't become too big to interest anyone. As I have 0 experience dealing with stuff like this, I would like to start super small and low risk to see what it feels like and if it even works haha.

Have you read any books on the matter?

Nope.

Here’s an excerpt from Slow Down by Kohei Saito

I see that you like making direct quotations from books quite a lot through your comment history. Thank you for the excerpts you provided here :). They're kinda inspiring.

Keep going, we are millions!

I mean it doesn't feel like we are. I tried looking up irl leftist groups that do stuff like this here in Calgary, but it doesn't seem like anything remotely close to this exists. There is one non income sharing intentional community, but it's not accepting any new members. Are you in Calgary? Do you have any such groups/connections that could be used to build solidarity?

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 months ago

Hahaha well, whenever these folks speak in French,. they're not "translating" stuff they say in English. They're literally saying the other half of the speech NOT SPOKEN IN ENGLISH in French.

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Oh wow, I didn't know about tithe. What do church events look like though? Aside from the cultey "worship sky man" and all that, what does the socialisation look like? Is the community "close knit" or whatever?

[–] TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (3 children)

For example, if you set aside the singing, clapping, and sky fairies you’re pretty much describing a church.

Not Christian, so don't know what church life looks like. But isn't the financial side of church spending basically charity? Is it democratic? Does the church like have a board of directors that is democratically elected? Or is direct democracy used? I'm pretty sure that there isn't a requirement for folks to contribute proportional to their income.

In my experience, which is not overwhelming but not nothing, a group like you’re describing wouldn’t be able to stay cohesive for very long.

I kinda expect something similar. Although, I'm very interested in seeing how the breakdown happens if it does. Is it because of internal groups that start not liking each other? Is it because of folks with authoritarian tendencies? I'll be honest. I've been lately attending some queer socializing events here in Calgary. The folks that I've met have been nothing but nice. I'm kinda interested in knowing how far someone's niceness and cooperation can go. Can it go far enough to form a commune?

At the same time, I've seen communists parade the idea around quite a lot. I want to make up my mind about its viability by actually seeing it and experiencing it myself in a way that won't hurt too much if it goes wrong.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/52824561

Hi! I know the above post is a little Calgary focused. I crossposted it here in hopes that it gets better visibility and also so that it generates a little exchange of ideas.

I've always been interested in the concept of intentional communities and communes. However, the scope of things to go wrong there seems waaaaay to much. For example, they seem to be concentrated in operating a singular business in rural areas with almost full income sharing and so on. Plus, they kinda don't exist in Alberta. I have a full time job (minimum wage, but a full time job nonetheless) that I don't want to leave just to "try something out". I believe there might be a few folks here in the same boat as me.

At the same time, I've been looking for leftist in person communities to socialize with here in Calgary, but they kinda seem non-existent too.

So here's a little proposition. What if we have a super low stakes "commune"? What we do is, we organize a little community which has a fund. Contributions to the fund by each member are decided as a percentage of their income. Say 1% to start with. We don't have to live under the same roof. We don't have to work at the same employer. All that we do is this: contribute an x% of our paycheck to this fund. Every week, we meet and democratically decide where and how we spend the fund.

We could spend it on something like grocery credits (each member receives 100 dollars on groceries), x amount for a phone plan and so on. What are the advantages of doing this?

Here's how I envision a hypothetical commune like this to work:

  • Members share a percentage of their paycheck. The size of the fund is dependent upon the income level of every member. This way, every member is incentivized to help other members increase their own respective incomes, as that translates to larger funds.
  • Collective bargaining power is always good. We could buy stuff in wholesale much more easily. We could negotiate with service providers to get better deals, thus saving all of us money.
  • Weekly meetings mean a nice little socialization thing.

Anyway, you probably have quite a few/many questions that I might or might not have answers to yet. You probably think this is a terrible idea. Or maybe you find this interesting.

Here's what I'm hoping to happen. We meet at central library or somewhere and discuss trying out a very short term, low stakes economic experiment. We decide that we contribute a very small percentage (say 2%) of our income for one month to a little fund. We then create a budget for the month on how to allocate that fund.

I'm interested to observe how this would actually work in person. Would there be total gridlock? How would legislation for this work? How would the spending priorities for the fund look like?

If we find out that it actually seems to be beneficial, we could go ahead with bigger and bigger percentages. If not, it could still be a fun little experiment that would last for a month!

What do you think? Anyone interested in trying something like this out?

 

I've always been interested in the concept of intentional communities and communes. However, the scope of things to go wrong there seems waaaaay to much. For example, they seem to be concentrated in operating a singular business in rural areas with almost full income sharing and so on. Plus, they kinda don't exist in Alberta. I have a full time job (minimum wage, but a full time job nonetheless) that I don't want to leave just to "try something out". I believe there might be a few folks here in the same boat as me.

At the same time, I've been looking for leftist in person communities to socialize with here in Calgary, but they kinda seem non-existent too.

So here's a little proposition. What if we have a super low stakes "commune"? What we do is, we organize a little community which has a fund. Contributions to the fund by each member are decided as a percentage of their income. Say 1% to start with. We don't have to live under the same roof. We don't have to work at the same employer. All that we do is this: contribute an x% of our paycheck to this fund. Every week, we meet and democratically decide where and how we spend the fund.

We could spend it on something like grocery credits (each member receives 100 dollars on groceries), x amount for a phone plan and so on. What are the advantages of doing this?

Here's how I envision a hypothetical commune like this to work:

  • Members share a percentage of their paycheck. The size of the fund is dependent upon the income level of every member. This way, every member is incentivized to help other members increase their own respective incomes, as that translates to larger funds.
  • Collective bargaining power is always good. We could buy stuff in wholesale much more easily. We could negotiate with service providers to get better deals, thus saving all of us money.
  • Weekly meetings mean a nice little socialization thing.

Anyway, you probably have quite a few/many questions that I might or might not have answers to yet. You probably think this is a terrible idea. Or maybe you find this interesting.

Here's what I'm hoping to happen. We meet at central library or somewhere and discuss trying out a very short term, low stakes economic experiment. We decide that we contribute a very small percentage (say 2%) of our income for one month to a little fund. We then create a budget for the month on how to allocate that fund.

I'm interested to observe how this would actually work in person. Would there be total gridlock? How would legislation for this work? How would the spending priorities for the fund look like?

If we find out that it actually seems to be beneficial, we could go ahead with bigger and bigger percentages. If not, it could still be a fun little experiment that would last for a month!

What do you think? Anyone interested in trying something like this out?

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/52269995

I love the idea of cooperatives. I'm a member of Calgary Coop, Servus, InnovationCU and ACE. How does politicking around directors elections and AGMs in general work? I tried looking up online for any discussion groups and stuff. There's pretty much nothing.

How does one understand the candidates, their policies and so on? How do the election campaigns of these folks work? Any members here with some experience with this?

 

I love the idea of cooperatives. I'm a member of Calgary Coop, Servus, InnovationCU and ACE. How does politicking around directors elections and AGMs in general work? I tried looking up online for any discussion groups and stuff. There's pretty much nothing.

How does one understand the candidates, their policies and so on? How do the election campaigns of these folks work? Any members here with some experience with this?

 

How could you??? His kids are now going to ask mommy, "mommy mommy, where's daddy?". A beautiful family destroyed, for what? Because Heinrich engaged in the democratic process??? Because he did what he thought was right? Because he wanted to make the world a better place? Shame on you!!!

/s

 

I am a staunch anti capitalist. Capitalism allows the existence of corporations. Corporations have shareholders. Sharing = communism. I hate communism. Therefore, I hate capitalism.

I'm running behind the President in 2026. Do I have your vote?

 

So you'll see these folks doing shit like this at empty fields quite early in the morning in India. This isn't satire lol. It's actually them "keeping themselves ready" or whatever when the time comes.

You gotta give it to them- at least compared to western fascists, these folks are a lot goofier.

 

The (Indian) Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has directed states to carry out nationwide mock drills on May 7 to evaluate civil defence preparedness.

Such a drill has not been conducted after the 1971 full scale India-Pakistan war.

The mock drills will involve a range of activities, including air raid siren tests, self-protection training, and evacuation rehearsals.

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