What’s a common “fact” that’s spread around that’s actually not true and pisses you off that too many people believe it?

  • GrayBackgroundMusic@lemmy.zip
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    2 hours ago

    That food stamps or any handouts at all are a serious problem. Our (the US) government launches a single bomb that’s worth years of food support. Idgaf if the food stamp recipients never do a damn thing but watch TV. I’d much rather millions of people doing that than bombing brown people half a world away.

    • Katana314@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      The idea of monetary scale is one I think is a big misconception anytime we’re talking about budget. “This committee wasted MILLIONS of dollars on this stupid niche scenario!” Well, yeah; the USA has millions of people in it. If a program affects the entire country, how much are you willing to spend per person? 8 cents?

  • NihilsineNefas@slrpnk.net
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    2 hours ago

    That the general population are directly responsible for the amount of pollution occurring a la “carbon footprint” when there are 10 companies producing 70% of the world’s pollution

  • wieson@feddit.org
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    7 hours ago

    That WW1 was the same moral black and white as WW2.
    In my opinion, every country in WW1 was the villain just that one side was impatient enough to be the aggressor first.

      • wieson@feddit.org
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        2 hours ago

        I don’t think it is.
        They all were colonial powers that oppressed and subdued their colonial holdings, extracting wealth and even soldiers. France was the only republic, all the others were monarchies and Russia had the most absolutist monarchy. But that doesn’t really factor in, because even France wasn’t fighting to spread or preserve democracy.

        All were fighting to beat them arch enemies, to steal a piece of land or two or maybe a colony and to test their newly developed industrial weaponry. They were all stomping chomping at the bit before it started.

        The German Empire was surely the most militaristic society. But they still fought all for the same ideology and reason.
        To my last point, you can see that in the result: the losers had to gave up colonies but not to independence but to the victors as spoils.

  • Malyca@lemmy.zip
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    7 hours ago

    That you only need headlights to see in the dark. Headlights are just as much so other cars can see you, than they are so you can see. In the rain and in the fog, they’re crucial to have on.

  • Whitebrow@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Agreeing to disagree is only applicable to matters of taste.

    Example would be a preference of maple or agave syrup with your choice of cooked dough.

    One cannot agree to disagree when one of the parties is factually wrong.

    • dragonlover@lemmy.zip
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      5 hours ago

      I see the “agree to disagree” as a bit of a social flag for the conversation that says “I don’t wish to get into it / continue arguing about it” because there is no way to respond to it. If you try to continue the debate you look like an asshole, and if you drop it the person who says it gets to continue being wrong without being challenged.

      It’s very annoying and I hate it.

  • ripcord@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    That all the Y2K preparation stuff was a waste of time / a scam, instead of an example of massive success (people coming together and pulling off something to avoid a disaster)

    • magnetosphere@fedia.io
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      9 hours ago

      A friend of mine got a high-paying temp job reprogramming servers in some obscure programming language. I think the client was a major bank.

      Yeah, a lot of dirtbags took advantage of Y2K, but that doesn’t mean Y2K wasn’t a serious problem. It easily could have been.

      • ripcord@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        It easily could have been

        It was a very serious problem.

        Very few dirtbags took advantage of it.

        Obscure language was probably COBOL. Obscure in the sense that it was once immensely popular for business applications, but by the late 90s there were very few new applications written in it, but a huge number of large businesses still ran it.

        • Rooster326@programming.dev
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          7 hours ago

          You are really underselling the fact that many of these businesses are still running COBOL despite it being the equivalent of ancient Mayan.

        • magnetosphere@fedia.io
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          8 hours ago

          I meant “it easily could have been” in the sense that it if it hadn’t been taken seriously, it would affected virtually everyone in some way.

    • iegod@lemmy.zip
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      6 hours ago

      You’re tired of this? Like, you’ve encountered people actively talking about it so much you’re tired? Besides the odd online post, I’ve never met anyone making reference to or talking about this.

  • CascadianGiraffe@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Things being “illegal”.

    No it’s not against the law. Just because someone can sue you doesn’t mean what you did was a crime. Just because a business can’t sell a particular product doesn’t mean it’s illegal to have. You can’t ‘get arrested’ for half the shit people think is ‘illegal’.

  • chunes@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    The birth rate going down = the population is collapsing.

    No.

    The birth rate is going down and the population is increasing. Both of these are happening at the same time.

  • MusicSoulEdu@lemmy.ca
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    17 hours ago

    That the granny who sued McDonald’s was just upset that her coffee was too hot.

    She suffered from either third or fourth degree burns, on her lap.

    Parts of her were fused together.

    She just wanted McDonald’s to cover the medical bill, but they dragged her name through the mud.

    • Wilco@lemmy.zip
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      16 minutes ago

      This misconception was well paid for. McDonalds and a large group of fortune 500 companies started a slander ad campaign against lawsuits. They literally paid people to write and run stories about “stupid and unjust” lawsuits, claiming the lawsuits wee a waste and of course bringing up this one.

      It worked.

    • elfharm@sh.itjust.works
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      11 hours ago

      Yep, also they had previously been warned about serving coffee that hot, but studies had shown that serving it that hot meant that people drank less of it. And that “crazy” judgement (2.5 million?) wasn’t a random number. That’s how much they make off coffee in one day.

      • lifeinlarkhall@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Yeah we actually learned very quickly about that in legal studies (high school) way back in 2000s and it was presented like a silly Americans (Australian here) kind of thing, just a quick silly case in a small box in the textbook. Wasn’t til I got older I learned the full story!

        We had an Aussie silly case too, not just picking on the US 😅 ours was about some drink in an opaque bottle and someone drank it all before they could see there was some kind of bug or even a snail in the bottle? Something like that so they sued the drink company 🤢 can’t remember enough about that one to find anything on it!

    • Tiral@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      I saw that, yeah McDonald’s really tried to blast her as a sue happy bitch. All she asked for was medical bill costs initially which is reasonable.

  • magnetosphere@fedia.io
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    16 hours ago

    The best first aid for someone having a seizure is to shove a wallet (or something) in their mouth, so that they don’t “swallow their tongue”.

    NO!

    Never do this. Absolutely never. It’s far more likely that you’ll injure the victim (or yourself) in the attempt.

    Furthermore, don’t restrain a seizure victim in any way unless it’s absolutely necessary for their physical safety (like if they’re in danger of falling down a stairway. Even then, it’s usually better to just stand at the top step and act as a barrier). Whenever possible, move things they may hit out of their way; don’t try to move the victim. If there’s something you can’t move, try to put something soft between the victim and the object.

    Most of the time, the best thing you can do for a seizure victim is to not touch them at all, and simply give them room.

    • Nindelofocho@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      Is putting a pillow or something soft under their head adviseable? I know the floor is considered a hard immovable object but it putting something under them sorta so im not sure if that qualifies

      • lifeinlarkhall@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Generally the advice is moving everything out of the way, if possible a blanket or something under their head as quickly as possible if they are on a hard surface and calling the ambulance (if someone else is there get them to do that straight away while you move stuff!) Also a good idea to time the seizure if possible! When they come to, have them stay laying down for a few minutes at least before sitting up. Some people can appear to be okay but go back into seizure so slowly, slowly with sitting up and even before offering a water.

        If you know someone who has seizures, even irregularly, it’s a good idea to ask them about it beforehand in case it ever happens when you’re with them. People can have different management plans and it also just gives you some guidance and the other person some control should it happen.

        (I work in disability!)

        • Nindelofocho@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          Thank you. I work with someone that can have seizures and we have a looot of hard floors so this is great advice for me.

  • cymbal_king@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Propaganda from the fossil fuel industry.

    Solar panels are the cheapest source of electricity now. Batteries have dropped in price by more than 90% in the past decade, and are now viable for grid-scale storage, addressing the main issue with renewable energy. EVs are competitive with combustion cars, and in some ways superior. Heat pumps are now superior to furnaces in many locations. The solar punk future is now! But you wouldn’t know any of this by listening to the public discourse, mainstream media, and many politicians.

    Relevant video from Technology Connections

  • trem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    17 hours ago

    The old “tomatoes are not a vegetable” is pretty frustrating. They are a vegetable.

    In botanical terms, the concept of a vegetable does not exist, which is where tomatoes are classified as fruits. But in culinary terms, vegetables do exist and tomatoes are classified as such.

    I just find it frustrating, because I believed that garbage myself at some point, and I thought, I was smart for knowing that.
    Just one of those examples that you can easily spread misinformation, so long as you make it sound plausible.

    • Doomsider@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      In culinary arts vegetables are the non-sweet edible parts of plants (not fruit). So no, they are not a vegetable.

      What is true is people call them a vegetable.

      • paraplu@piefed.social
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        6 hours ago

        Other sweet plant parts are also considered culinary vegetables: carrots, squash, red peppers, sweet potatoes, fennel, and onions.

        Some of them you do have to cook to perceive as sweet, but non-sweet doesn’t seem to be a good dividing line. Striving for non-overlapping categories instead of just accepting the mess seems like a mistake.

      • wieson@feddit.org
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        7 hours ago

        There are vegetables where you eat the root.
        There are vegetables where you eat the leaves.
        There are vegetables where you eat the stem.
        But for cucumbers, pumpkins, aubergine and paprika you eat the fruit, why should the tomato be different?

  • lonefighter@sh.itjust.works
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    22 hours ago

    The average person only lived to be 35 back in the day.

    No, the average lifespan was like 35 back in the day. 40 year olds weren’t some rare wrinkled old person, the average was affected by the extremely high childhood mortality. If you could survive the first few years of your life your chances of surviving the next 60 were pretty good.

    • Taleya@aussie.zone
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      5 hours ago

      I got relatives that lived to their 90’s in the 1600’s, we may have skewed it a bit

    • PhenomenalPancake@lemmy.worldOP
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      22 hours ago

      That being said, even among people who survived childhood, living to the ages we see nowadays was more rare than it is today due to a lot of environmental and societal factors like plagues and war. It wasn’t unheard of, but that is also something that brought the average down to an extent.

      • Watermark710@piefed.social
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        19 hours ago

        We essentially had a plague in 2020, and there are multiple wars going on as we speak. Those factors didn’t disappear.

        • Taleya@aussie.zone
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          5 hours ago

          True, but we don’t wholesale shit in our drinking water any more while riddled with syphilis

        • PhenomenalPancake@lemmy.worldOP
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          19 hours ago

          The deaths from both the wars going on in the modern day and infectious diseases like COVID are nowhere near on the scale that they were before, especially in terms of the percent of the world population killed by them. We haven’t had deaths on the scale of WWI or the Spanish Flu since those events.

          • Watermark710@piefed.social
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            18 hours ago

            We haven’t had deaths on the scale of WWI or the Spanish Flu since those events.

            WWII had 3-5 times the number of deaths (depending on whose numbers you trust) as WWI though? Like, it’s not even close. Even using the highest estimate for WWI (22 million) and the lowest estimate for WWII (70 million) WWII was more than triple the deaths.

            The global population at the time of WWI was ~1.8 billion, and at the time of WWII is was 2.3 billion.

            So in terms of of percent of the world population, WWI loses.

            I will concede that the Spanish flu was a lot worse than COVID.

  • cattywampas@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    History time!

    Myth: People in the past drank beer because it was safer than drinking water.

    Fact: People in the past drank beer because it was full of calories and tasty. Before modern times people generally had access to or knew how to find clean water, and water has always been the most popular drink throughout history.

    Myth: People needed spices to cover the taste of rotten meat.

    Fact: People ate fresh meat when it was available and preserved it when they could by smoking, drying, salting, fermenting, or otherwise processing it. When they didn’t have access to meat they just wouldn’t eat it. They wanted spices for the same reason we do - because they taste good.

    • Arctic_monkey@leminal.space
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      13 hours ago

      Then why does people’s preference for spicy food correlate to local food pathogen prevalence?

      See: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9586227/

      To elaborate a little further. “Just not eating” something is a modern luxury. For most of our history, you ate everything that was available or (someone, usually your youngest kids first) starved. The argument isn’t that spices cover the taste of rotten food, but that they actually kill the pathogens that make humans sick, making more food edible for longer. This is a spill over from these plants’ long evolutionary arms race with phytotoxins. Cultures in places with high food pathogen prevalence, where spicing makes a real difference to survival, develop a preference for spicy food, despite their initially aversive taste. Cultures in cold climates with few food pathogens don’t.

    • blarghly@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Wasn’t that literally the purpose of grog? A mixture of beer and water used on ships to kill harmful bacteria that would grow in the ships’ water stores over a long voyage?

      And if people in the past knew how to make water safe to drink, then why was epidemiology invented when Londoners couldn’t figure out that they should stop drinking poop water?

      • Watermark710@piefed.social
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        19 hours ago

        Wasn’t that literally the purpose of grog? A mixture of beer and water used on ships to kill harmful bacteria that would grow in the ships’ water stores over a long voyage?

        1. Grog was a mixture of rum, water, and lime juice. Beer does not have enough of an alcohol content to have any antibacterial impact. Your basic premise is flawed.

        2. The main reasons grog was invented were twofold, first and foremost, it diluted the alcohol to manage the sailors’ intoxication levels (much like drinking a rum and Coke does today). Secondly, the addition of lime juice helped fight off scurvy (leading to British sailors being called “limeys”).

        3. While it did improve the flavor of stale water, the disinfecting properties have been greatly exaggerated over time.

      • cattywampas@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        I can’t speak to practices on sailing ships, those surely differ from general history especially when it comes to fresh water which isn’t freely available on the ocean.

        And to your second point, in the context of history that happened in modern times. The cholera epidemics happened in the 19th century with the epidemiologist John Snow publishing his treatise in 1855. Unsafe drinking water causing widespread disease was mainly a problem of modern cities in the industrial age and the overcrowding and unsanitary conditions that came with it.

  • Deestan@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    “Just doing my job” being a valid excuse for causing even minor harm.

    Maybe it would be very hard to choose not to take thay paycheck. Maybe it would have negative consequences for you to not sell fake insurance to people who don’t know better. You don’t get to pretend you didn’t choose to do harm to others.