HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

graaben

no profile record

Submissions

Revenge served ice cold? Law firm outs former partners’ racist, sexist emails

latimes.com
2 points·by graaben·3 lata temu·1 comments

Startup’s Hydrogen Breakthrough May Give New Life to Coal Plants

bloomberg.com
1 points·by graaben·4 lata temu·1 comments

The Big Business of Burying Carbon

wired.com
2 points·by graaben·4 lata temu·0 comments

'Buy now, pay later' is sending the TikTok generation spiraling into debt

sfgate.com
15 points·by graaben·4 lata temu·1 comments

Million-Dollar Homes Are Becoming the Norm at Fastest Pace Ever

bloomberg.com
7 points·by graaben·4 lata temu·0 comments

Silicon Valley’s tech monopoly is over. Is the future in Austin, Texas?

latimes.com
30 points·by graaben·4 lata temu·39 comments

Canada's Red-Hot Housing Market Is Betting Interest Rates Will Never Rise

bloomberg.com
2 points·by graaben·4 lata temu·2 comments

2 out of 3 Kroger workers struggle to afford food and housing, survey finds

latimes.com
2 points·by graaben·5 lat temu·0 comments

A Booming Startup Market Prompts an Investment Rush for Ever-Younger Companies

wsj.com
5 points·by graaben·5 lat temu·0 comments

He Can’t Cure His Dad. But a Scientist’s Research May Help Everyone Else

nytimes.com
2 points·by graaben·5 lat temu·0 comments

comments

graaben
·3 lata temu·discuss
I'm lucky to be able to see it from my apartment living room window, and even after 3 years it never gets old!
graaben
·4 lata temu·discuss
My wife (early 30s) was recently diagnosed with thyroid cancer and it's been absolutely shocking to hear how many other young women just in our social circle have also had it.
graaben
·4 lata temu·discuss
Honest question - if no one is going to change their life, shouldn't we then be focusing on creating a future where they don't have to change? If you gave people a choice between paying higher taxes to achieve abundant clean energy, carbon sequestration, new biodegradable packaging etc. or fundamentally changing life as we know it to slow down emissions, which is more likely to happen?
graaben
·4 lata temu·discuss
Is it naive to think we could prevent the impending ecological collapse and international conflict with mass fusion power? Unlimited energy to remove carbon from the atmosphere, oceans, etc. You also don't need to sell the rich on a life of austerity, as that kind of electricity would allow us to continue and even increase our current Western way of life.
graaben
·4 lata temu·discuss
Here in LA the fad seems to have ended around the start of covid in 2020. I used to see dozens of people a day riding them and now I rarely see any, and if I do it's usually a personal scooter not rented from Bird, Lime, etc. I still see scooters from those companies clogging up the sidewalk, I just never see anyone actually ridings them.
graaben
·4 lata temu·discuss
I believe they are forecasting a loss of another 2mm subscribers in Q2.
graaben
·4 lata temu·discuss
Similar story to where my wife went to high school, just outside NYC but on the other side of the Hudson. Multiple kids diagnosed with cancer shortly after high school, including one that died of a very rare form. My wife herself was just recently diagnosed with thyroid cancer 15 years later.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/sudden-death-whats-in-the_n_1...
graaben
·4 lata temu·discuss
I'm not even talking about mass-affordable, I just mean being able to buy a home on less than a $600k/yr income. Do wages and housing prices continue to grow at 20% YoY indefinitely in cities like this, eventually pricing out everyone except the ultra high net worth?
graaben
·4 lata temu·discuss
My assumption is that a large percentage of the people who fled NYC/SF in March 2020 are either 1) going to miss the city once it fully reopens and they remember why they lived there in the first place; or 2) their "remote forever" job is actually going to become hybrid and they won't want the 2 hour commute.
graaben
·4 lata temu·discuss
I haven't really seen much written on this (maybe I'm just not looking) but what does the future look like when only the top 10-20% can afford a home? Do 80% of families rent forever with no real possibility of being able to buy a home near an economic center? What does that look like for the broader society when so much of the American dream and self-worth is built on being a homeowner?

I live in LA and I think about this a lot when I see the only homes for sale here going for $3-4+ million. How much longer can this continue?
graaben
·4 lata temu·discuss
Do you expect things to get better in the future? I'm not in the market to buy right now, but I'm trying to understand if the current situation is the new normal or still a reaction to covid upheavals. My gut tells me that in 2-3 years things will be much closer to normal as rates rise and people that fled to suburbs decide to move back to the city.
graaben
·5 lat temu·discuss
How did you go about finding a farm to buy from? I'm very interested in doing this.
graaben
·5 lat temu·discuss
What would you say a good dose is for San Pedro? Have you ever tried a higher dose?
graaben
·5 lat temu·discuss
I had a similar reaction after reading this book. I spent a good part of 2020 and 2021 in a deep dive of learning about psychedelic culture, science, and cultivation/synthesis. Regardless of how the science relating to mental health develops, I think these substances are crucial tools of personal exploration and should me more widely (and responsibly) used.
graaben
·5 lat temu·discuss
"The Hospital" by Brian Alexander

This book changed my thinking on so many different topics - the US healthcare economy, the rise of Trumpism, and the erosion of the industrial Mid-West. This book really opened by eyes to those communities that have never recovered from the Great Recession and explains so much of what we have seen politically since 2016, including the current left-right Covid split. Highly recommend for anyone who wants to get even more angry at the current state of our healthcare system.