According to the debate, they had their reasons. But still – when one hundred and eighty six nations say one thing, and two say another, you have to wonder about the two.

  • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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    5 months ago

    Time to block the access to food for every single politician who voted against until they change their vote.

  • radicalautonomy@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    The United States is such a monstrous entity. Fuck this entire country. Someone hurry up and start the Second American Revolution, I’m fucking tired of this shithole.

  • Professorozone@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I was struggling to believe this. I mean Turkey, China, North Korea, really? But yeah, I read a little about the reasoning on a .gov website, but there was a lot of, let’s just say language there. Someone on stack exchange broke it down and regrettably the reasons aren’t good. Mostly it was along the lines of, if people just decided to stop working, we don’t want to have to provide them with food or it would infringe upon our intellectual property if we were forced to help others with their right to food. It would also did into our food profits. So yeah… Shit.

    • Fades@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      reductive and meaningless statement, every goddamn country on the planet are fucking bAd GuYs. Newsflash, the majority of humans with power are horrible selfish trash, every country is guilty of disgusting shit. Every country is controlled by their richest assholes.

  • Canis_76@feddit.nl
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    5 months ago

    Not really. You have to wonder about countries that think it’s ok to reward people with the work of others for doing… What again? Just existing? Seems like free food leads to confined circumstances. That is something the US knows all too well. The US currently gives food away simply because you exist. Guess what that, without competent education, has led to. Drug epidemics, mass poverty, mass murder, and partridge in a pair tree. Them that work, eat.

    • Natanael@slrpnk.net
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      5 months ago

      Fun fact, universal basic income leads to more people improving their lives and getting educated, working better jobs, reducing homelessness, and strengthening the job market, etc.

      That’s more than just free food! And yet it reduces all the bad things you blame on free stuff!

      • Canis_76@feddit.nl
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        5 months ago

        Then they should have talked about universal basic income. You gotta dig deeper than that. I’m responding to the bait that I saw. And UBI reduces all of the bag things for drones. Who’s paying for this again? Btw, I grew up in it, and fought my way out. The depressing truth is that if the situation you are in isn’t enough motivation to get yourself out, then I have to believe that you don’t want to get out. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. I’m not saying that we don’t get out heads, and hearts stepped on by all the crabs wearing timberland boots over here. The tendency ought to be to look to our own, as opposed to others. Others keep us in bag life situations. They didn’t put us there. Out own did that. All of this is general stuff. Something for nothing isn’t a lifestyle I can abide.

        • Womdat10@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          5 months ago

          So, first off, what exactly is the most important thing people buy? It’s food, and it’d water. So free food is the next best thing after universal basic income, and is in itself a form of universal income. Second, you say that it’s not rich people and corporations that put us into this situation, and I just want to know where you got this idea, because it’s not poor people who established a capitalist society, or artificially inflated the price of basic needs, causing people to give up less necessary items because they couldn’t afford both housing and food. It’s also not poor people who decided that the minimum wage shouldn’t be livable. All of those things where done by rich people who were born into the right families and didn’t work for a single day in their lives. So tell me again how this is poor people’s fault?

        • Denjin@lemmings.world
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          5 months ago

          Get a load of the temporarily embarrassed billionaire over here. He’s currently pulling him self up by his bootstraps good and proper right now and those proles can f off if they think they can get their unwashed hands on his (future) money.

      • Fades@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        …what?

        I don’t agree with the comment you are responding to, but they’re not talking about teachers not getting paid they’re talking about reward for not doing anything, and that reward having to come from somewhere (workers who pay their taxes). Asking if teachers get paid doesn’t work here, they’re paid by the taxpayers but that has nothing to do with having a fundamental right to something (the US offers a public education as a right to all citizens). Teachers don’t have a fundamental right to a teaching job.

        • Gabe Bell@lemmy.worldOP
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          5 months ago

          I think the point being made is this :- teachers find a job. Then they teach. They produce the product (knowledge) which is given to kids and teenagers.

          Kids and teenagers do not pay for this. They go to school (up to a given age) for free. And everyone seems happy with this point of view. Education is a right.

          And sure – teachers don’t have a fundamental right to a teaching job, but that isn’t the point. The point is kids have a fundamental right to the product the teachers make – knowledge.

        • dwalin@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Food is not a reward, its a basic necessity.

          And having a right to food does not mean the US to pay for everything just like the US does not pay for education on the rest of the world.

          And ecucation IS a human right because its inscribed in the list of human rights recognized by the UN and approved by the US.

    • snail_hunter@programming.dev
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      5 months ago

      Not starving to death is not a “reward” and judging ones worth by their ability to provide labor is a disgusting point of view.

    • ByteJunk@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Friend, I’m sorry but you’re fucked up in the head.

      Ask yourself the question: does human life have value by itself? (independent of everything, including age, race, employment, etc).

      If your answer is yes, then every human life should be protected, and we as a society need to be organised in a way that provides the minimum necessities for survival (like food, water, etc). This is what the whole world, except the US, just said.

      On the other end, what you’re saying is that life in itself is worthless and that value is given by some other factor (like being employed). This means that, until proven otherwise, everyone is disposable. If you think through the implications of this, you’ll realize you can do whatever to them - kill them on the spot, harvest their organs, cut them to pieces to feed your pigs, … Is this the world you want to live in?

      For the sake of completeness, let’s explore the implications of #1, where people get “money for nothing”. What’s usually tested is giving people just enough money to cover their most basic needs. Would some people stop working, if they didn’t have to worry about starving? I’m sure some would. But would you?

      Because I, for one, like to be able to afford my luxuries, and will keep working to not give them up.

      • Gabe Bell@lemmy.worldOP
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        5 months ago

        Let’s go another way with this.

        I don’t know if you have any kids or not – this is entirely hypothetical. But I have discovered people think more about a topic the less abstract it is.

        You have two kids, aged 4 and 5. Then you get hit by an asteroid that kills you. No one else can take them in.

        Wouldn’t you like for the state to look after them? To at least give them food, water, shelter and care until they grow up until they are eighteen? To do all this whether they can earn their way or not? To do it just because it is the right thing to do?

        Not because they believe the kids will pay them back or be worth something when they grow up, but because they believe the kids have worth now simply because they are living, sentient human beings?

        Or would you rather that your kids are left out on the street to die? forced to make their own way in the world at the age of 4 and 5? that they will only be fed if they can show they have worth?

        Just curious.

        • DacoTaco@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Thats actually an interesting train of thought imo.
          I personally believe every person that is, or will be in the future, a valuable part of society should get access to social help. Be it food, basic income, housing etc etc.
          I got this believe because i myself came from a poor family, with my mom basically raising 5 very difficult children on her own. However, all 5 of us became very valuable people in society but have all become a positive influence around us. One is product manager, another is cto, another is data centre engineer, all us have helped people who need it etc etc Without the social support we would never have gotten there.

          I believe in those principals because i believe those people should be supported so they can flourish, personally, or help humankind as a whole.

          What you said explains perfectly why i feel this way haha

          • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Your example here has the nuance of future expectation, however. You’re stating that taking care of the children is an investment, not just something done because they are human beings and should be treated as such. Gabe on the other hand is saying simply that it is the right thing to do, regardless of where the kids’ lives lead down the road.

            • DacoTaco@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              I know, and i understand the difference.

              Before you read on, remember this is a view from a european guy who has known social support. I am not american, and the american way of being all on your own, with your own devices disgusts me tbh.
              Im not saying taking care of children is an investment per-se, that is a must. They need to be taken care of, period. My argument for making it sound like an investment, besides basic human need, is one created to counter those that dont believe that and think of them as a waste of time and energy.
              I see childeren in need as a hope, a potential for humanity to become better. Those that have known trouble and being poor are special, they have the potential. And yes, maybe you can see that as an investment, but please consider it an investment into humanity itself, and most certainly not an economic investment!

              What i will confess, is that this changes for me, when we are talking about adults. Things, and situations somebody is in, are very complex things as we in a world with infinite possibilities and infinite different type of people. There is like that 0.1% of human adults that would abuse the system, make it worse for everyone because they dont know or can do better in their lives. Ive grown up around such people and i consider them … Not worth it. however, those people who spoil it should not ever ruin it for the others that want it, need it. A person that can not get basic needs fulfilled should always have the option to get support. Rules can be put in place for adults, yes, but the option should be there and a person should never be put on the street with nothing.

              • Gabe Bell@lemmy.worldOP
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                5 months ago

                Ditto.

                I am also from Europe (the UK specifically) and whether someone is going to be the best person in the whole history of humanity or (for want of a better phrase) the most idle, useless wastrel known to humankind I still believe they deserve the basic support of the welfare system, and shouldn’t be left to starve to death on the streets. Because what does it say about a society that does that to someone?

                You don’t help someone for a reward, or for what you will get out of them, you help them because they are a human being who needs help.

                And if you need a better reason (because clearly some people do) you help them because if you were in that situation you hope someone would help you.

                • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  Because what does it say about a society that does that to someone?

                  I just wanted to single this sentence out right here, in agreement with you. The whole purpose of living in a society is taking care of one another. Those who are able should do what they can for those who cannot. They too someday will no longer be able bodied and thus require help themselves. I feel like so many people are just so shortsighted to even see the point. It’s sad, really.

              • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                I appreciate the further clarification. I apologize if I put your example in a vacuum and projected solely that upon you. I think we’re both pretty much on the same page regarding this, so don’t really have anything more to add at this point. Cheers :)

    • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      If an abusive husband refuses to let his wife have a bank account, should we celebrate his generosity for all the spending money he “gives” her?

    • pop@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      Colonists donating money made from stolen property be like:

      Look at me. look how generous I am. 💪

          • wander1236@sh.itjust.works
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            5 months ago

            Technically it can be. Propaganda isn’t propaganda because it’s false, but because it’s one-sided and selective.

            • Gabe Bell@lemmy.worldOP
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              5 months ago

              In my defence (and okay, it’s a very limited and crappy defence) my post said “According to the debate, they had their reasons. But still – when one hundred and eighty six nations say one thing, and two say another, you have to wonder about the two.”

              So I sort of presented a balanced argument. Not a very balanced one, but I did present an attempt at putting America and Israel’s side, even if it was a half-arsed one.

        • joe_archer@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          You do know that people can dislike the decisions America makes and be vocal about that, without it being propaganda right?

        • StupidBrotherInLaw@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Wow, a critical comment that adds nothing of value to the conversation, attacking the commenter instead of the comment. Even more shocking!

    • SmilingSolaris@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Okay, we can hate on Israel all day long for their many crimes, but let’s not entertain “Jews run the United states” jokes. They are the US puppet. A very beloved puppet but still.

      • Porto881@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        No one but you mentioned the Jewish religion. Meanwhile, pro-Zionist candidates (right and left) with the backing of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee have had an almost unexplainable 100% rate of election. The US election system has been hijacked by Israeli interests.

        • SmilingSolaris@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Hijacked by Israeli interests? Comrade, they are the US interests before they are Israeli. Flipping it around and pretending the Israel state owns US politics is one key word away from Nazi conspiracy when you know the actual line of motivations begins and ends with the US.

        • turmoil@feddit.org
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          5 months ago

          You completely disregard the largest zionist organisation in the US, CUFI, of which most members are American Christians.

          The US support for Israel is the perfect storm composed of financial, military and religious interests of various groups in power in the US. The interest of the Israeli government and center to right wing happen to align with those. Thinking Israel is in control in any of this and doesn’t have to pander to those American interest groups is delusional and a common, sometimes antisemitically motivated, misunderstanding.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        let’s not entertain “Jews run the United states”

        Large financial institutions run the United States. And those institutions have a vested interest in controlling trade through the Mediterranean Sea, specifically by way of the Suez Canal. This creates a socio-economic incentive to back a heavily armed ethno-state with strong ties to the US/UK financial system. And - after the holocaust - the Jewish diaspora just happens to be the group that fit the bill. (The large Arab community in Saudi Arabia does, too, but its okay to be racist towards Arabs so we don’t complain quite so much about that).

        So we run into a problem. Saying “AIPAC is manipulating our elections with enormous sums of cash laundered through the MIC into mass media social manipulation” is true, but quickly gets you labeled antisemitic by people who want to conflate billionaire shipping magnets with your elderly aunt from Queens. Trying to draw a line between plutocrats entangled with the MIC and random synagogues in Chattanooga or Cleveland becomes difficult when you’ve got real actual nazi fucks screaming slurs on one side of you and cynical mass-murdering shits insisting anyone anti-war is anti-Jew on the other.

        • SmilingSolaris@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Yeah, it’s a complicated tight line to walk. Hence why it should be avoided implying that Israel puppets the United states and thus falling into actual Nazi conspiracy theories.

          • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Hence why it should be avoided implying that Israel puppets the United states

            The influence of Israeli lobbyists and their affiliates is undeniable. As is the influence of Saudi, UK, Japan, fucking Bermuda…

            Fixating on Israelis as uniquely influential is a problem. But then we have no problem with ranting about Trump being a “Russia controlled puppet”, so we clearly aren’t above a little Cold War style hysteria.

            It might behove us to ask why Benny from Philly has such disproportionate influence, rather than just writing every observation of influence off as Jew Hate.

            But that gets us into a whole conversation about domestic police lobbying, the Pentagon’s revolving door with industry, the role of the O&G lobbyists, etc. And that’s even worse than antisemitism. It’s anti-Americanism.

      • merc@sh.itjust.works
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        5 months ago

        Neither one is a puppet. Each one uses the other. Israel has an outsize influence on US foreign policy, but the US also has an outsize influence on Israeli foreign policy. Israel tries to sway US elections, and US interests try to sway Israeli elections. They share many of the same enemies, which keeps them tied together even when things aren’t necessarily in their shared interests.

        In this particular case, the two probably voted “no” for different reasons.

        The US voted “no” because they wanted John Deere to be able to remotely shut down a combine harvester, or so that Monsanto can sue people for misusing seeds, things that probably be illegal if food were seen as a human right. Israel voted no because they wanted to be able to keep denying food to Palestinians.

    • Enkrod@feddit.org
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      5 months ago

      You know these ventriloquism-routines where the puppet makes the puppeteer talk with it’s voice?

        • Gabe Bell@lemmy.worldOP
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          5 months ago

          In most of The Twilight Zones I watch the puppet ends up killing the parents, taking over the kid and staring at the camera going “Who’s a good boy?”

          Which, okay, does kind of sound like the relationship between Israel and the USA but that’s beside the point

  • 9point6@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Their reasons will not be valid, I’m not going to even entertain reading them.

    We make more food than we consume on this planet—in the absence of scarcity, food security is obviously a human right, it’s aggressively malignant to be against this.

    Whilst we’re at it, shelter is a human right too, we have several times more empty houses than homeless people in most developed nations—that’s fucked.

    • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      As a US citizen, it is a point of great shame that we have so many struggling to eat enough (and/or healthily enough), as well as pay their medical bills.

      We are a nation with great influence and military might, but the richest Americans are often a direct reflection for what this nation as a whole truly is… It’s a wealthy place that doesn’t take care of its own citizens.

        • primrosepathspeedrun@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          it’s (mostly) not about government subsidies anymore; it’s about supply and demand being entirely uncoupled. I would put the blame far more firmly at the hands of edward bernaise and lee atwater.

          remember; we do this with clothes and toys and literally every product.

          • tektite@slrpnk.net
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            5 months ago

            Worked at a job that aggressively destroyed unsold product to the point that we had a form to fill out and needed a witness to sign it.

            Coworker and I “witnessed” each other “pulverizing” stuffed toys by passing them along to needy children orgs and “dumpstering” other products in thrift store donation bins.

            Fuck their “brand integrity” when they’re throwing out perfectly good products to make room for more crap people don’t need.

            • primrosepathspeedrun@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              absolutely. this shit is unforgivable. the only cure is the guillotine. not just killing them, but doing it publically, showing anyone who would ever do this shit again that we ALL want them dead, and nobody will save them, nobody will come to their defense, because they do good for nobody.

      • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Grapes of Wrath was required reading for me in both middle and high school. I don’t understand how more Americans aren’t aware of the inhuman actions taken by corporate interests to secure profit.

          • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            I don’t think its that simple, some of them will have it sink in later in life.

            Instead I think its more that we have been so conditioned by visual media that books no longer have the impact that they used to. Now it’s movies and music that fill that role of cultural transmission. Just unfortunately the bandwidth on those mediums is terrible compared to the written word.

            • primrosepathspeedrun@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              okay but I watched “the matrix” before high school, and that film is literally just an essay on situationism (an anarchist philosophy of the hyperobject of capitalism) with some kung fu and crypto-trans-positivity mixed in.

              so clearly the medium is not the problem here.

              • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                Sure The Matrix profoundly affected some people but not for long and it didn’t create any shifts in society other than now some people had the delusion they were actually in the matrix.

                On the other hand there have been several books that many claim to be pivotal in great world events.

                It’s not that the medium is the problem, it’s that 1) Movies are made for profit, not to transform culture, and 2) Our culture is far to diverse for any one symbol set to be universal the way old Greek plays were.

                Also, the trans positivity wouldn’t have been crypto of the fucking studio didn’t shit themselves over Switch. They were the coolest aesthetic in the show and it is a fucking tragedy how they killed them off. I’m pretty sure leaving Switch’s full story in would have got me thinking about what it means to be an ally a decade earlier.

                But the shitcase studio was worried that such an (at the time) outrageous thing would kill their profit (it wouldn’t have).

                Which is why we can’t trust Hollywood to make our myths and gods.

                • primrosepathspeedrun@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  I mean, there are movies that were, for better and worse (mostly worse) pretty important too. birth of a nation, the great dictator, the exorcist (and its involvement with the satanic panic),

                  I watched ‘the matrix’ as a kid, and I ended up as an anarchist. maybe coincidence. who knows.

                  the control of one relatively concentrated entirely capitalist industry is a problem. I agree on that. one could say the same about the publishing industry. and it turns out indie films exist! and are cool sometimes! just like indie publishing! it’s just way harder to distribute them.

                  I agree. fuck hollywood (the industry) and hollywood (the place, which is tacky as hell and filled with tourists and always smells like piss except when it smells like shit, and they lock up all the parks at like 5 PM, and also all the good pizza places are closed or dont open until dinner. it’s super fucked up, especially when they used to sell by the slice and that’s, like, perfect for lunch).

    • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      This is something that’s starting to get to me.

      For the last 30 years EVERY excuse that has been made about America’s inhumane corporate toadying has been utter empty and meaningless bullshit but everyone just pretends it’s real words.

      I mean the justifications for things like denying children free breakfast aren’t even rational on the surface, even without going into it.

      But FUCKING PEOPLE just nod their head like ‘It’ll prevent them from being independent’ is even close to being a rational statement when we are talking about seven year olds that get all of their food given to them ANYWAY?!

      I don’t understand how as a country we have gotten to the point that words literally have no meaning anymore but it is going to take us to a dark place very quickly.

      • Zink@programming.dev
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        5 months ago

        But FUCKING PEOPLE just nod their head like ‘It’ll prevent them from being independent’ is even close to being a rational statement

        I suspect that whole line of reasoning is in service of, and/or a consequence of, this country’s aversion to giving people help they didn’t “earn” or don’t “deserve.” I can hear the conservative relatives now… “yeah it’s just $1.50 to feed a kid each day, but that’s another couple hundred dollars in their welfare mom’s crack budget for the year, and WE shouldn’t pay for that!”

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I don’t understand how as a country we have gotten to the point

        I hate to inject politics, but this is very much state by state and locale by locale. NOT “as a country”.

        Take the recent issue with summer lunch program for school kids. As far as I know, it was no strings attached free money from the federal government, yet some states used it and some didn’t, and pretty much on party lines. This is not a singular example, but repeated over and over: how are basic rights turned into political posturing at the expense of citizens?

        • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Repugnicans have been obstructionists so long, they don’t really know how to do anything other than get frothingly angry at non-issues. Probably some of them were angry that it benefited the poor.

    • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      For anyone who actually wants to know, here is the U.S. Explanation of Vote on the Right to Food

      For the following reasons, we will call a vote and vote “no” on this resolution. First, drawing on the Special Rapporteur’s recent report, this resolution inappropriately introduces a new focus on pesticides. Pesticide-related matters fall within the mandates of several multilateral bodies and fora, including the Food and Agricultural Organization, World Health Organization, and United Nations Environment Program, and are addressed thoroughly in these other contexts. Existing international health and food safety standards provide states with guidance on protecting consumers from pesticide residues in food. Moreover, pesticides are often a critical component of agricultural production, which in turn is crucial to preventing food insecurity.

      Second, this resolution inappropriately discusses trade-related issues, which fall outside the subject-matter and the expertise of this Council. The language in paragraph 28 in no way supersedes or otherwise undermines the World Trade Organization (WTO) Nairobi Ministerial Declaration, which all WTO Members adopted by consensus and accurately reflects the current status of the issues in those negotiations. At the WTO Ministerial Conference in Nairobi in 2015, WTO Members could not agree to reaffirm the Doha Development Agenda (DDA). As a result, WTO Members are no longer negotiating under the DDA framework. The United States also does not support the resolution’s numerous references to technology transfer.

      We also underscore our disagreement with other inaccurate or imbalanced language in this text. We regret that this resolution contains no reference to the importance of agricultural innovations, which bring wide-ranging benefits to farmers, consumers, and innovators. Strong protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights, including through the international rules-based intellectual property system, provide critical incentives needed to generate the innovation that is crucial to addressing the development challenges of today and tomorrow. In our view, this resolution also draws inaccurate linkages between climate change and human rights related to food.

      Furthermore, we reiterate that states are responsible for implementing their human rights obligations. This is true of all obligations that a state has assumed, regardless of external factors, including, for example, the availability of technical and other assistance.

      We also do not accept any reading of this resolution or related documents that would suggest that States have particular extraterritorial obligations arising from any concept of a right to food.

      Lastly, we wish to clarify our understandings with respect to certain language in this resolution. The United States supports the right of everyone to an adequate standard of living, including food, as recognized in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Domestically, the United States pursues policies that promote access to food, and it is our objective to achieve a world where everyone has adequate access to food, but we do not treat the right to food as an enforceable obligation. The United States does not recognize any change in the current state of conventional or customary international law regarding rights related to food. The United States is not a party to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Accordingly, we interpret this resolution’s references to the right to food, with respect to States Parties to that covenant, in light of its Article 2(1). We also construe this resolution’s references to member states’ obligations regarding the right to food as applicable to the extent they have assumed such obligations.

      Finally, we interpret this resolution’s reaffirmation of previous documents, resolutions, and related human rights mechanisms as applicable to the extent countries affirmed them in the first place.

      • pingveno@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        The text is here

        I started looking into this further and the tweet is misleading. To start with, the graphic is totally inaccurate. This was a vote by the UN Human Rights Council, not the full general assembly. The US was the only country that voted against, with one abstaining. Israel wasn’t involved. It’s also worth emphasizing that the right to food has been established in other international agreements, which the text cites extensively and the US justification refers to near the end.

        Edit: I was somewhat incorrect on the vote, there was a later general assembly vote, which the Instagram account that created this links to. However, their effort to imply that the US somehow hates people being fed is still misleading.

      • Asafum@feddit.nl
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        5 months ago

        We also underscore our disagreement with other inaccurate or imbalanced language in this text. We regret that this resolution contains no reference to the importance of agricultural innovations, which bring wide-ranging benefits to farmers, consumers, and innovators. Strong protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights, including through the international rules-based intellectual property system, provide critical incentives needed to generate the innovation that is crucial to addressing the development challenges of today and tomorrow

        “We’re fighting to protect John Deere profits…”

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Some of these seem quite valid, but I really hope “intellectual property” isn’t the real reason. Poorly written regulations are too easily invalidated or ignored, so the feedback to “stay in your lane” seems important. However our corporate masters should not be able to dictate the basic right to food

        • aidan@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Well yeah that’s the thing, a treaty isn’t (or at least shouldn’t) be a vague “helping people is good and being mean is bad”

      • ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        Clearing land for soy and cattle exports is also the main reason the Amazon and the Pantanal are burning. Two of the most unique and biodiverse biomes on Earth are being reduced to ash and still people go hungry.

        The world we made is too inefficient.

          • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            You eat tofu because you think eating animals is mean.

            I eat tofu because I’m broke and its 2 bucks a lb and a good source of protein that can be added to nearly any meal. We are not the same.

            And I likely eat a fucktonne more tofu than you do. Like probably 2 or 3 times unless you eat it basically every day.

            Haven’t bought red meat in over 2 months, not for lack of wanting mind you. I have a frozen pack of bone in chicken thighs that I use to flavor my tofu, and if I stretch it it will last all month.

            I don’t know who the fuck you think you’re talking to, it’s amazingly extra to imagine my eating habits and then berate them for your imaginings. It’s like when your girlfriend is angry at you for cheating on her in a dream.

              • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                No I will NOT fucking let you end it on this. The whole ‘meat leads to food scarcity’ is absolute twenty year old rancid bullshit filled with the insidious corn kernels of deceit.

                We throw enough food away untouched to feed every single hungry person in America twice over, our food scarcity is entirely artificial.

                Are you aware that the U.S. government forces farmers to let food rot to keep prices sable?

                Do you magically think that if we stopped animal agriculture tomorrow that food will magically become cheap for the needy?

                No it won’t, because the government will AGAIN AS IT HAS EVERY YEAR just order more farmers to not sell their crops.

                This is why we hate vegans, it isn’t just about your empty moral self-superiority, it isn’t just your poorly thought out but loudly shouted schemes, it’s all that added to the fact that you actively go out of your way to find disinformation that appeals to your values, and then choose to believe it regardless of any outside facts.

                I cannot even begin to relate the contempt I feel for people who actively forward disproven ‘knowledge’ with zero regard to its accuracy.

          • miss phant@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            5 months ago

            Veganism is not even about absolutism, it’s about reducing animal cruelty to the extent possible and practical. Throwing out a leather belt you already own would not lead to any reduction in animal harm, I’d even call it an action that would go against veganism.

            • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              What if I told you the cessation of animal husbandry will result in greater misery and possible extinction of our current domesticated animals?

              Basically all domesticated animals except pigs cannot thrive in the wild any longer. Releasing them would be a cruelty greater than a quick death in a slaughterhouse.

              When we first domesticated animals we made a sacred pact with them: If they provide for ours, we will care for theirs, and it’s an ancient pact older than any living culture.

              • friendlymessage@feddit.org
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                5 months ago

                You’re working under the hypothetical that mankind would just one day stop consuming animal products and every animal would be released into the wild. That’s not what would happen.

                There are two possibilities: policy-driven or consumer-driven, both essentially work the same way. We would at some point stop breeding new farm animals, be it because it’s outlawed or because demand for animal products would go down. Either way, this would be a gradual process over decades. Every animal that is already bred would of course still be slaughtered, just like they are now. This would lead to the extinction of the domesticated branches of some animal families, true. However, as they add absolutely nothing to biodiversity, there is no loss to nature. Their free cousins still exist roaming the planet anyway such as the red junglefowl and the wild boar.

                Also, feral chickens, feral dogs, feral pigeons, and feral cats among many more feel hurt by your statement they couldn’t survive in the wild. For many domesticated animals it’s simply not feasible to release them to the wild not because they couldn’t survive on an individual level but because of their sheer number no potential habitate could survive it.

                When we first domesticated animals we made a sacred pact with them

                You’re very much romanticizing what happened here. A pact requires consent. Animals can’t consent, so there is no pact. Especially not a sacred one, I mean, what the fuck?

                I wouldn’t go as far as calling what we’re doing slavery either for the same reason, human concepts of free will and consent don’t really work with animals. But if you think, we’re actually caring for these animals, I have a bridge to sell you.

              • htrayl@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                I would say your simply wrong.

                It is not more moral to keep billions of animals alive, and in miserable conditions, solely for the purpose of consuming them, despite any romanticized idea of keeping a completely artificially selected species around.

                And also, that there isn’t a world where we completely give up meat eating anyways, and even less of a world where we let them go extinct.

            • Spot@startrek.website
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              5 months ago

              I once met a caravan of “Roadkill” vegans. They would not eat anything animal related unless it was for sure going to go to waste. They had pamphlets on how to make sure if the meat was spoiled or not, processing guides on how to get the most use of animals, all kinds of info I found very surprising from what I had known of veganism.

              • grysbok@lemmy.sdf.org
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                5 months ago

                Makes sense. I don’t order pork but if something comes with surprise bacon I’ll eat it–the pig is already dead. And I’ll be angry at Applebee’s for adding unlisted bacon to their macaroni and cheese. (Seriously, you have no vegetation options and when I try the “make a meal out of sides” trick you add betrayal bacon? I’m glad millennials are killing Applebee’s.)

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Forget tofu - I can never seem to cook it right. I like the approach just one less red meat meal per week (for example, chicken is better for you and better for the environment), or one less meat meal per week (there are many common meals that happen to not have meat, like a salad, or eggs, or depending on how you count fish). I can have a black bean patty without being vegetarian

            Look at what a small change over the whole population cannot do! Looks like a long term trend in the right direction, but heading back up over the last decade

            https://aei.ag/overview/article/meat-consumption-trends-2023

              • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                I like to saute tons of onions at once and use them throughout the week, after doing a bunch I’ll deglaze, add salt and seasoning and simmer a bunch of tofu in that. Gives good color and great flavor, and can be added to basically any meal.

  • Canis_76@feddit.nl
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    5 months ago

    Everything has value in, and of itself. It isn’t not my place to care about every sentient thing in reality. If being practical is being fuct, then that’s me. Have fun caring about everything you can’t do anything about. When you have a fight worth fighting, I’ll sign up again. In the mean time I agree with everything you say. Whatever that’s worth.

    • Wogi@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      We produce more food than we can eat in the US alone. We export a lot of it and throw another 40% directly in to the garbage.

      Food is scarce only because there’s money in making it scarce. It doesn’t have to be, and it shouldn’t be.

    • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      Have fun caring about everything you can’t do anything about.

      Isn’t that what you’re doing right now? Caring about the opinions of others that you won’t change?

  • cybersandwich@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Can we talk about what defining things like this as a “right” means?

    Otherwise voting to call it a “right” seems super performative. What’s the consequence of making this a right?

    • Fades@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I’m sure they’ll be offering everyone in their respective countries free food as is their newly given right! Right?

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      What’s the consequence of making this a right?

      Just for starters, it implies certain acts intended to deliberately deprive people of access to food constitute a crime. So embargos of regions like Cuba, Ukraine, Sudan, Gaza, and North Korea would be de facto illegal under international law.

      Of course, then you have to start asking questions like “What does it mean to be in violation of international law when the ICJ is so toothless?” But that’s the UN for you. Issuing generally progressive proclamations through a general assembly while a handful of economic heavyweights get to decide how it all gets enforced.

      • trolololol@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Imagine being the only 2 places on earth that go out of your way to be afraid of a toothless organization.