PugJesus
History Major. Cripple. Vaguely Left-Wing. In pain and constantly irritable.
- 248 Posts
- 374 Comments
PugJesus@piefed.socialto
memes@lemmy.world•People's Reaction to Birth Rates be like:English
6·12 days agoIt is, but not as bad. The EU’s birth rate is higher than Japan’s, and the EU is much more immigrant-friendly - and if that makes you suck in air through your teeth, let me clarify - that’s a relative estimation. SK and Japan are… infamously hostile towards immigration.
PugJesus@piefed.socialto
memes@lemmy.world•Nah nah nah, bro, tell us again about that scoreEnglish
27·12 days agoI don’t go in for sports ball, but I do enjoy the memes
PugJesus@piefed.socialto
memes@lemmy.world•People's Reaction to Birth Rates be like:English
181·12 days agoI mean, South Korea and Japan’s birth rate is a serious problem.
The issue is less that they’re going ‘extinct’, and more that the population pyramid is gonna look real fucky going forward, and that comes with… economic issues. And potentially cultural issues.
Me, at 80 degrees: “A little chilly in here.”
PugJesus@piefed.socialOPto
Star Wars Memes@lemmy.world•Antoninus Pius on some wu wei shit. Action by inaction.English
4·12 days agoYep! Funny enough, the only recorded Roman emissaries who made it to Han China claimed to be representatives of either Antoninus Pius, or his adoptive son (the dual issues of uncreative Roman naming conventions and translation issues makes it unclear).
PugJesus@piefed.socialOPto
Star Wars Memes@lemmy.world•Antoninus Pius on some wu wei shit. Action by inaction.English
17·13 days agoExplanation: Antoninus Pius is one of the longer-reigning Emperors of the Roman Empire. Why does no one remember him? Because he did nothing.
Not literally nothing, but his reign contained little in the way of excitement. No great invasions or defenses, no fundamental reforms in yet another misguided attempt at adulation or military glory, no crisis that was allowed to blossom to such a stage. Just a quiet, diligent man who was noted to enjoy fishing in his down time, keeping a steady hand on the tiller of state. When his ~23 year reign was over, letting the gears of government turn with nothing more than addressing problems and clarifying legal issues as they arose, the Empire looked much as it had when he had inherited it - just with a bit more of everything - charitable organizations, completed infrastructure projects, legal protections, slave rights (but still slavery, because the past is a shitty place), money in the treasury…
Antoninus Pius did nothing, actively. By inaction, he chose the best possible course of action in his reign. o7
Wu wei is a Taoist concept Romans were unlikely to have been aware of.
PugJesus@piefed.socialOPto
Science Memes@mander.xyz•It's Always Sunny In The Poison-Filled Cat BoxEnglish
141·14 days agoFunny how our opponents can give us some of our best tools.
PugJesus@piefed.socialto
pics@lemmy.world•Jim Justice and his english bulldog Babydog. He owns a coal mining empire. His net worth was estimated at $664.2 million in 2025, making him the richest U.S. senatorEnglish
23·16 days agoFire the Senator, replace him with his dog.
I thought I’d be less suicidal at this age tbqh
An amazing shot!
Generally, high-quality pieces would have been made by artisans (and thus usually custom), not factory-made. The high demand meant that the skills to make these pieces were more commonly pursued by woodworkers, thus making a larger labor pool (and so, cheaper labor), but the technology available and higher price of resources means that it would have required more expense in the form of materials and more man-hours to create the product.
A friend of mine once had me pose with two of these when on a roadtrip (we had never seen them before).
So he could say I had “azburgers”
do people know you can pay for custom pieces
Like, if a door knocker is that important to you, like an upper-middle class 19th century homeowner, you can just… pay 500$ or so for a nice one. I promise you that the 19th century homeowner paid much more for their’s, adjusted for inflation.
I’d double-check your local traffic regulations; there are places where you can get written a ticket for running a yellow light.
Holy shit, then what’s the difference in those places between a red light and a yellow light?
PugJesus@piefed.socialOPto
Traditional Art@lemmy.world•Map of Byzantium/Constantinople/Istanbul, 16th century AD (Franz Hogenberg)English
3·1 month agoAs a matter of technicality, it is. As Constantinople has neighborhoods on both sides of the strait, it’s considered both European and Asian. A city of two continents.
Now I know who’s responsible for that goddamn abomination of a song.
I now know who I’m going to assassinate once my time travel machine is finished.
PugJesus@piefed.socialto
Traditional Art@lemmy.world•Inktober52, Prompt 2026_22, BedraggledEnglish
2·1 month agoNosferatu!
PugJesus@piefed.socialto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Welcome to industrialization, bitchassEnglish
2·1 month agoI know this is the shitposting Lemmy and historical accuracy isn’t the goal here … But you don’t honestly think they put plantations in infertile places and used slaves for no reason right? They made a shit ton of money
Overall, you’re right, but I’d like to point out two caveats here:
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Southern plantation farming was incredibly inefficient and utterly ruined the land it was practiced on - something that was recognized (and criticized) as early as George Washington. So they did build their plantations in fertile areas, but exhausted the soil and did very little to let it recover until George Washington Carver (unrelated) started spreading crop rotations around ~1900.
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The aristocrats made a shitton of money relative to the average person, but they were much, much poorer - both individually and as a society - than the industrialized North. Northern farming, even, was much more efficient - but the Southern aristocracy perpetuated their system because control was more important than money. In the slavery (and sharecropping) system, the plantation class effectively ruled little fiefs of dependent ‘free’ farmers and unfree (legally or practically) Black labor, able to exercise wide-reaching control not just economically, but also socially, culturally, and politically. Given the choice between more luxury or more power, they chose more power, and used that power to perpetuate their sickened systems.
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That’s the thing about population pyramids - they don’t just move up evenly. They’re adjusted by the ongoing mortality of each age group and the size of the next age group down. Poland and Japan are on the same trajectory, but Japan is, effectively, much further along. More ~30-40 years than ~10. The emphasis is less on the largest ‘boom’ generation, and much more on the general trend of the ‘youngest’ generations shrinking, growing, or being stable. In Poland, it’s uneven - closer to shrinking than stable, but more stable than Japan, which is only shrinking.
Even relatively small differences can have an outsized effect in making the older generations an ever-larger proportion of the population despite their lifetime mortality going up with each age bracket. Compare the percentages here. “Boom” generation aside, Japan’s retiree cohort is roughly 150% the youth cohort. That’s not a good sign. For Poland to end up with those numbers in a decade, it would have to have effectively no mortality in the elder cohorts - extremely unlikely.
That being said, it is a problem for Poland going forward - as well as many other developed countries.