• intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        In Denver, a person with a house gets subsidized rates for electricity. By parking their EV in their garage and charging overnight, they can pay 4.2¢ per kWh.

        Meanwhile, a person like me who lives in an apartment and must charge his car during the day at public chargers like EVGo or Electrify America, pays 59¢ per kWh.

        This means that assuming a typical 70 kWh charge (from almost empty to almost full) costs:

        • For the house-owner: $2.94
        • For the apartment dweller: $41.30

        That’s almost a 15x difference! (Yay for EV economics).

        We don’t have an economy. We have two economies. We have a severely bimodal economy.

        • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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          1 month ago

          Meanwhile, a person like me who lives in an apartment and must charge his car during the day

          Why not use the outlet at your parking space? That’s in the building code now.

  • TheAlbatross@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 month ago

    Humans are largely good to one another face to face, our most evil things happen when we create systems that allow us to remove the humanity from one another. We also have a tendency to allow only sociopaths and psychopaths to lead us, and we gotta nip that in the bud, but most people who aren’t like that don’t want to lead.

    • pugsnroses77@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      this is how i feel about driving. people arent likely to yell at each other and cut each other off while walking like they are driving. not that it never happens, but when im driving these days theres ALWAYS someone mad asf next to or behind me

        • Zron@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Oh they definitely did.

          Before the pandemic, I’d see one or 2 highly questionable moves in a drive.

          Now it’s like a dozen.

          I see people making lefts on red, cutting off semi trucks, weaving in and out of traffic, driving with absolutely no lights at night, and my god the speeding.

          A few years ago it was normal to see people doing like 5 miles an hour over the limit, now it feels like half the people want to do 10 or 15, even on surface streets.

          I wonder if it’s that most people drove less during the pandemic, the fact that cops around here were told to only pull people over if they were a direct threat to the public, or if the social isolation just made some people way more self centered. But driving has definitely gotten worse since the pandemic.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    The fact that school kids have gotten so much nicer than when I was in school.

    Crime dropping worldwide but particularly in my city.

    And honestly? Plunging birth rates, even though I have a lot of kids and stepkids and love it. I do feel like it’s freedom mostly, people are more free to not have kids and it will keep the population from exploding.

  • AmidFuror@fedia.io
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    1 month ago

    I’ve noticed people are taking more care to proofread what they share online. This makes communication much more smooth and efficient.

    Just kidding.

  • BougieBirdie@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 month ago

    I read an article in Uplifting News the other day - it was about an elderly woman who fell and broke her leg while hiking, and a whole band of people helped carry her down the mountain and to the hospital.

    There’s an awful lot of bad news out there, and it often feels like humanity is failing each other. But at least in this story, absolute strangers came together to help someone who couldn’t help themselves. I cried happy tears.

    https://archive.ph/f4tti

  • SavvyWolf@pawb.social
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    1 month ago

    I like to think that people, on the whole, are becoming more accepting of those that are different.

    I don’t know how true that is, and there’s certainly loud arseholes out there, but maybe the common non-chronically-online person is more welcoming than 10 years ago.