• 0 Posts
  • 12 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 13th, 2023

help-circle





  • This reminds me of many moons ago, when I was a young man still in the chase. There was this girl I was really interested and one day we kind of clicked. She invited me to a concert of some small band I didn’t know about, but I said “yeah, sure I will go with you!” (The mission always comes first!)

    We get there and it’s this small to medium sized stadium full of young people. She was sitting next to me and things were going generally well.

    Lights turn off, the band enters the stage and starts playing some rock with metal overtones. I start to think “This can’t be so bad…”

    Well, famous last words. A few minutes after the band starts playing, the song takes a turn for the worse. The guitar mellows out, the band stops and the singer asks everybody in the fucking stadium to hold hands, close their eyes and pray with him… The lyrics changed to Jesus this, Jesus that and never came out of the rut. It was two hours of that.

    Lord Almighty… If you indeed existed you would not have allowed something like that to happen…






  • I partially agree with your comment.

    I’m not saying that we should not improve lawns (by removing them), but rather, that we should also go after the big offenders, and maybe focus on them first because that’s where the most immediate gains are.

    Every time we have a drought, I see the old drama of taking shorter showers, people filling buckets in the shower to flush their toilets later, etc, all while farmers are planting Alfalfa to export it for cheap. IIRC, alfalfa was the largest consumer of irrigation water, which breaks down the farmers mantra that “we are using water to grow your food”.

    Even when you consider almonds, which we do eat, it’s not a staple food. Nobody will starve if the almond industry collapses. They make a lot of money but mostly for a closed set of farmers. They’re also not a large employer on the state.


  • I hate lawns. They suck water like nothing, require a lot of work and never look quite the way you want.

    But let’s keep things in perspective here. The big argument against lawns is water use. I agree. But in California, for example, all residential water use accounts for less than 15% of the total use of water in the state.

    If we want to save the environment we should start with what’s taking the remaining 85%.