wax_worm_futures

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

We need to keep in mind how much of the scientific framing (and thus our understanding of the matter) is shaped by Anglo ideology.

"Colony" and "queen" and "worker" are three such examples.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

Is insect frass considered vegan? Asking for a friend.

[–] [email protected] 22 points 4 weeks ago

More revolving-door presidential cabinets! MORE!

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

Jam is a dessert food. It doesn't belong as a central part of a meal.

Yet Americans will eat it with sweetened peanut butter and sweetened bread and call the resulting creation, whether in its squishiness or its sogginess, a full meal.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Chevre or Havarti or even Gouda would make a good addition. Parmesan or Cheddar would not. Cheez Whiz would be the cursed option.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Ranch only works as an alternate pizza sauce, anything else is haram

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

You don't need passive income to be able to do what you want. Mostly you just need to get past the barrier of housing cost.

Where I am, I could pay down a mortgage on a good house in 4-5 years of working fulltime. With another two similarly-committed comrades to share the house with, we could easily pull it off in 2 years. After that, baseline cost of living would be 6000 a year for 3 people.

After working fulltime for 2 years I quit my job and the 18 months since I've averaged less than 10 hours a week of zero-hour type gigs or odd jobs. I've been on like 12 overnight-away-from-home trips in that time, totaling over 3 months. I could probably retire on 300k, including the cost of a house. I'm going to have to start working again soon but I've been in total vacation mode for a year and a half.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago

This is a very tenuous alliance.

At the capitalist bug farm, mice were always getting into our waxworms, because they buildings were poorly built, they used poorly-sealed kitty litter boxes to grow the waxworms in, and the racks easily allowed the mice to climb up (partly because of escaped-worm cocoons on them).

We'd see them running across the main floor all the time. It was very common to open up a box after 6 weeks and see a litter of baby mice inside, and barely any waxworms. Maybe one out of every 50 was like that.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

You wouldn't happen to know any fish nurseries in need of mealworms, would you?

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 months ago (3 children)

So um...

...do you work closely with fish nurseries?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago

I used to compost the vegetable peels, now I feed them to my worms.

Sometimes it takes me a while to go through a sack of potatoes, and I am always going to aggressively peel what's left.

 

Even though we didn't get the full month of neurodiversity spotlight memes that @LegaliiizeIt was pushing for, I was planning on quitting my job anyway. And taking my skills and going into business for myself. And establishing a workers' co-op structure as soon as it becomes bigger than myself and I hire people.

A business plan is maybe about halfway drafted; I'm several months along in the process that started a year ago by cautiously asking around, as many places as I could, about what I should do. In addition to people in my municipality, I want to thank @JoeByeThen and @hexaflexagonbear and numerous others who responded to my post and helped convince me to go for it, that developing the means of production was a better idea than haggling with Porky for more crumbs. Porky still struggles to get his production up and stable, in many ways, and engages in elaborate stunts to make it look like his ideas have any utility at all.

I put in 3 weeks notice to drive home the point that they were losing one of their most valuable employees. Told them good luck, didn't tell them why they'd need it. Wore some commie gear to work for the final weeks. My last day was this past week. Today, instead of carpooling at 6 AM, I am laying in bed til 9, enjoying a long holiday break.

I'm sitting on enough savings to survive for 2 years without working a single hour, but I also have a lead on some potential funding specific for workers' co-ops. So far my bug survival metrics are already far ahead of my (now former) employer, and that's just doing stuff by hand cuz my first batch of equipment ($750 worth) hasn't even come in yet. One that and the second batch of buggy buddies come in, we'll really be rolling.

Worst case scenario, I fail to clear the hurdles of getting packaging (super easy) or a dedicated facility (a bit harder) or developing a consistent customer base (idk but probably not too hard); then I have to go scrounge full-time jobs for a few more years. Best case scenario, by 2026 I end up with a business with tens of millions in revenue, that puts 10% of profits towards radical projects and all the rest back to employees as bonuses. Is it Dubious that I could do this in a few years from scratch as just one person? Maybe, maybe not.

While @Sbebg is telling you to short TSLA (or maybe that we all should have done it last week?), I am now telling you to buy mealworm futures! I'm gonna take low-impact, well-kept, humanely-treated, ecologically-balanced live feed TO THE MOON!

:bug-facts: :comrade-fly: :stonks-up: :porky-scared:

bees teach us that communism will win

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