• Chadus_Maximus@lemm.ee
      ·
      4 months ago

      Yeah but what if we imagine it's real and convince everyone to believe it too. Surely nothing will go wrong!

      • I'm kind of joking, if you want legit economics check out Mike Hudson and other MMT authors or preferably become a communist. Mainstream economists live to justify rent seeking by the ruling class. They don't distinguish between production and rents and debts etc

          • I_CAST_BEAM_OF_BATS_I_CAST_BOLT_OF_BATS [none/use name]
            ·
            edit-2
            4 months ago

            If you follow the flowchart and dive into most economics departments you will encounter what I'm talking about.

            What are you talking about Keynesian liberals or something? I do like to read Adam Tooze to see him close in on an interesting point only to veer wildly. Foreign Policy in general has some interesting writers if you want to mine the most advanced liberal cope.

            The model of economics I'm describing is the one which has been most heavily promoted by the west, neoliberalism, it has been used to dissolve the social welfare state which was set up to compete with the socialist bloc since defeating its chief rival and counterbalance in the USSR. It's an ideological persuasion that works along with coercion and subterfuge to eliminate capital controls and suppress the masses with starvation and crackdowns, especially in peripheral countries which are starting to establish socialistic policies or nationalize natural resources. Look at Chile for a perfect example of liberal economics in practice.

            I am aware of plenty of different non-Marxist models of economics and none of them are great because they treat various sectors of production wrong. China and Vietnam have their shit all figured out that's why finance capital and food aid can't decimate their agricultural production and then extort them into unfavorable IMF deals.

            • Brosplosion@lemm.ee
              ·
              4 months ago

              I think you are conflating performance of economic models with the study of economic systems. Economics is literally just the study of a real phenomenon that occurs in the world. It's a valid study to try and understand why it operates the way it does.

          • Dude you are not going to get better results by looking at further cherry-picked statistics from first world countries. The standard of living in the first world is collapsing because of finance capital and economics as a science there exists to cope about it.

    • frezik@midwest.social
      ·
      edit-2
      4 months ago

      Economics just means studying how we distribute limited goods. It breaks down when goods aren't limited (or rather, we have more of it than we can reasonably use), but we're not quite at that level of post-scarcity for most things. Though we might be close enough to cover the first level of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs.

      Economics as a practical discipline tends to assume capitalism. Economics can still be valid without assuming capitalism. There are tons of non-capitalist modes of distributing limited goods.

    • MeowZedong@lemmygrad.ml
      ·
      edit-2
      4 months ago

      When I find a solvent on pubchem that has the taste characterized by some mad lad from the 1800s, it makes me want to try it.

      You say THF is spicy water? Now I'm curious. We must confirm this claim.

      I hear ether smells good. We must confirm this claim.

      These fancy new box cutters are safe and cannot cut your hand. We must confirm this claim.

    • ornery_chemist@mander.xyz
      ·
      edit-2
      4 months ago

      Like, so what if we store our tBuLi with other low-flash point flammables? And pyrophoric oxidizers? In the same bin? That's stuck in a block of ice in the 30-year-old freezer because it hasn't ever been de-iced?

      What if the power goes out for a long period of time and the tBuLi goes for a swim? Or we say you have to de-ice the freezer?

      Haha sounds crazy. And, I wouldn't have to do the shitty quench before disposal. Or work on that project anymore.

      Because you're injured or because PI fires you?

      Haha, yeah :)

      :|

      :)

      :|

      Oh, while you're here, does this still smell like DCM? I can't tell if I rotavapped it all off and the NMR tubes all need aqua regia (sorry my b).

      • skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
        ·
        edit-2
        4 months ago

        Like, so what if we store our tBuLi with other low-flash point flammables? And pyrophoric oxidizers? In the same bin? That's stuck in a block of ice because in the 30-year-old freezer because it hasn't ever been de-iced?

        That's just bad management and you shouldn't store tBuLi that long anyway because it'll decompose. You shouldn't put it in freezer either

        Oh, while you're here, does this still smell like DCM? I can't tell if I rotavapped it all off and the NMR tubes all need aqua regia (sorry my b).

        just put it on high vacuum

        What are you working with that requires aqua regia to clean NMR tubes? I've only had to use piranha once in a decade, while cleaning things that acetone, DCM, and basic ethanol won't touch, and this was just after moving to another lab

        • ornery_chemist@mander.xyz
          ·
          edit-2
          4 months ago

          That's just bad management / just put it on high vacuum

          Yes. The whole thing is satirizing the "Safety -> Against" bit. Each piece, though exaggerated for effect, has a basis in something I've seen over the years.

          Regarding NMR tubes though, the answer in my old group was precious metal complexes, which have a tendency to mirror out once they've done their bit. Or just existed for too long; a lot of them were touchy. The mirror tends to resist solvents and scrubbing. Nitric acid alone sometimes was enough to remove it depending on the metal, but often not. At some point the cost, effort, and danger are all supposed to outweigh just binning the lot and buying new tubes, but my PI was allergic to buying new things.

  • Artaca@lemdro.id
    ·
    4 months ago

    There could be one more to differentiate engineers from architects. Do you like to solve problems (engineer) or create them (architect)? Fun flowchart!

  • Lustrate@lemm.ee
    ·
    4 months ago

    You know it’s a complete and proper list because it excludes that pseudo-science Geology.