I don't think Lemmy or PieFed really support that yet. The only way is to open your web browser, go to the address of the instance you're interested in and view their Local.
Okay, there just was a review that had pretty much the same content you wrote :)
Sticky Mustache, is that you?
Well.. I'm using an instance that has 10 active users according to https://piefed.fediverse.observer/list :)
I wanted to move from Lemmy to PieFed, because its development is faster than that of Lemmy's and because its maintainers have values I have nothing against and because I want to help a cool project grow.
And then I had a bunch of criteria that I wanted my instance to fulfill, and piefed.ee was the only PieFed instance that fulfilled all of my wishes. So, now I'm apparently one out of ten :)
They care about others a lot, because they understand what a hard place a person might be in. They may be much more helpful than people typically.
Heh, it also had been an exceptionally slow developing system for a couple of centuries.
And when it almost catches the others, that's days of jubilation. Heh :)
Note that Lifespan is not the same as life expectancy
In this article it is, though. That's why they use the phrase "average lifespan". There is no "average" in maximum.
In the article the phrase "average lifespan" is used in the meaning "average life expectancy".
It's because the 38 years as average lifespan is skewed by high child mortality. People lived about 70 or 80 years – provided they first made it alive through childhood.
But genetically we come from nomadic tribes, and AFAIK the nomads of a 100000 years ago, had a far shorter average lifespan than after we settled and began farming.
This is mainly because of child mortality. When you get five children, of which two live to be 78 and 89 and the other three die at ages of 2, 14, and 8, your children's average lifespan is 38,2 years. Typically, you either died very young, or you lived old. And the average is, well, the average of those. Basically nobody died around the age of 38.
All that frankly...
No, I don't see issue with most of those mod actions.
Some specific ones seem a bit unnecessary, but I can understand that once they have read a bunch of your conspiracy theories, they get a very negative image of you, and that colours the rest of their decisionmaking.
Some "fancy" ones do taste different, but the basic ones do share a clearly distinguishable common taste.
Whenever I'm going abroad within Europe, for a bit over month before that, I start buying stuff only with banknotes. I put all of the coins made in Finland or (other) Baltic countries in a separate pocket and then make sure to use those during my travel.
It feels nice that people get to see coins that they don't see that often. And at the same time, I'm increasing the relative amount of non-Finnish coins in Finland, which I also think is good, as that helps people here notice that there's more to the EU than just Finland :)
I would guess it's unlikely that all that many other people do the same.