The concrete and cement sector has been trying to reduce its environmental impact for years through sustainable concrete mixtures or efficient designs.
Now, a research team at the University of Pennsylvania has combined both novel materials and a material-saving design, without compromising on strength and durability.
The project, called Diamanti, takes inspiration from nature and uses a robotic 3D printer to create complex, lattice-like patterns with a sustainable concrete mixture.
While most regular concrete absorbs carbon dioxide (up to 30% of its production emissions over its entire life cycle, according to some research), Diamanti’s enhanced concrete mixture absorbs 142% more carbon dioxide than conventional concrete mixes.
Its first design, a pedestrian bridge, uses 60% less material while retaining mechanical strength, says Masoud Akbarzadeh, an associate professor of architecture at the University of Pennsylvania and director of the lab that spearheaded the project.
I mean, if you want you view it as dehumanizing and condescending, that is of course your right. And as we’ve generally gotten along well, I don’t like that we have to disagree here.
I was providing bookends, not two data points. Among the circles I’ve run in since that start in college, no one has found it offensive. This is manufactured outrage, to my mind.
Like, this sort of tone policing is how people who are otherwise reasonable start to feel alienated. I can’t use a word from my decadeslong lexicon because you view it differently? Fuck off with that. Those marginally offended and not directly addressed have the choice to not engage in the conversation. “Oh, this guy’s, a misogynist prick; no point in talking” is a perfectly reasonable response.
But don’t tell me this is a universally hated term that’s a tell for viewing women as inferior, because you don’t have the receipts. It’s like claiming “dude” is demeaning because it implies I work on a ranch.
It’s slang. You want to co-opt that to show the oppression of the patriarchy? Fine. I feel no guilt using a term women around me have for decades. I’m going to call snowflake shit on the left just as much as on the right. You’re literally trying to claim my intent without context or, you know, being in my own brain, and that’s not particularly nice.
The information is pretty easy to find, but since you asked for receipts, here is a article from JSTOR that calls out “chick” as a dehumanizing term for women and cites a study from the 90s that calls it out (among several other dehumanizing words for women).
https://daily.jstor.org/the-language-of-nasty-women-and-other-gendered-insults/
I think you misinterpret the point of me calling out the word. I don’t think you have an intention to condescend or dehumanize women, but other people that use “chicks” to refer to women often do. If it were me, I would not want to associate myself with them.
In the end, intent matters less than impact. For example, if you use a slur that you did not know was a slur, wouldn’t you rather be told so you can stop using it?
I of course would if told that’s a problem. The failure, as I see it, is that “chicks” only came into my lexicon via women. If they’re using the term, how am I being offensive?
This feels like manufactured grievance. I present an excerpt from an email I received from the woman who got me into the rave scene many moons ago:
Now, we can play this game that I hate women, but it’s not going to have a lot of legs.
I literally never said that and don’t even know where this came from. Please stop escalating beyond what I have said
Could be a few reasons. Internalized misogyny is a thing. Maybe they grew up around it and didn’t know the connotations. The more likely thing is that when it entered you lexicon it was more acceptable. Times change, culture changes, language changes.
If nothing else, you clearly have a group around you that tolerates the use. And if that works for them, that’s fine. The folks here don’t know you, though. We only have your interactions on here to guide us. Getting defensive about using terms like this paints a picture, however untrue, that you don’t respect women and don’t care to listen to outside perspectives.
I mean, to me this is blown way out of proportion. It’s akin to saying “‘hot dog’ is offensive; you need to say ‘frankfurter.’”
The amount of effort going into proving my misogyny for using a common term is just … wow.
OK, I have said this multiple times and you don’t seem to be listening.
I literally did not say you were a misogynist. I never said you hate women. I stated that I did not think that in multiple ways. I said you are using an outdated term and people who are misogynists use it. I did so in the hope that you would at least be more cautious in your use.
It’s not though. It’s akin to using the G slur when you mean got ripped off. It is an outdated slang term that a whole lot of people find offensive. Even if the people around you have not, the greater population of people have moved the fuck on.
Clearly you think this an attack on you (it’s not, for the record), so I am done. I’m done having the slightest critique escalated to an attack on your character. Honestly, I’m probably done with you altogether. This is not the first time you have had multiple people tell you something only to you stick your fingers in your ears and say “nuh-uh, my personal experience trumps all” even after being provided evidence of a world view beyond yours.
So yeah, have a good one.
Others trying to tell me how to live my life is literally the issue the queer community faces daily. It escapes me how that’s more acceptable going the other way. If we aren’t willing to consider intent, how is that different from MAGA?
The people who put the Q in the LGBT said fuck you all and applied the meaning they wanted to the word and it stopped being a slur, because being offended is a choice. If it was another generation, they’d try to police what other people can say instead…
If you look at “guy” in the dictionary, you will see it was way more “dehumanizing” than being called a young bird, but no one makes it their battle to stop people from using the word “guy” - it’s not a fashionable enough cause hehe
Anyway, unfortunately, there is little we can do about generational changes, so just move on and use your vocabulary on your social circle and people your age. You know your intent when using the words and so does your generation. The internet is full of drama, let the young ones to their newspeak.
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