And themselves
Plenty of people actually did leave reddit, myself included. It wasn't the API tax though, that was just the beginning.....
I'm just trying to build wealth and just entered the market, so I'm not too excited for me, but it needs to happen. It's a basic necessity that the majority of people can't afford, how is that okay? I will lose a bunch if the market crashes and probably never be able to achieve my goals, but its not very feasible right now anyway. I wanted a hobby farm, thats never going to happen regardless. Something has to change.
That's very dependent on there actually being another way to get around. Public transit isn't good everywhere, people still need to be able to go get groceries and things. Most people are not trying to cause inconvenience to others, they are just trying to live their lives.
'I don't understand so it doesn't exist'
It does though, understanding what interest is and how it works is pretty relevant. Understanding percentages and fractions is important for things like cooking too. Ever tried to build something without using any math? It's everywhere, it literally describes our world in a language that allows us to predict things as well.
That wasn't the problem, though. If you have multiple it can take some and not others, and also it's inconsistent as another commenter mentioned.
I think you mixed up your left and rights, bud.
This is the same decision that would've been made before covid about any other vaccine, so why be a donor in the first place? Genuine question, I don't understand.
Having a bunch of posts taken from another site with no real interaction with OP or anyone else isn't driving traffic here, it's boring the people who come here for discussion. The actual user posts will get drowned out by the huge number of reddit scraped posts. If something is interesting and fits a community here, post it. But scraping reddit to lemmy isn't really helping as much as it might seem.
Its pretty useful information when you're converting recipes. Most measuring sets don't come with a 1/8 cup or smaller, so it's pretty helpful in the case that you end up with a small fraction of a cup.
At what cost?