• 5 Posts
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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • Something I take heart in is the fact that Hitler, before World War 2, was considered controversial as well. A lot of people thought it was improper to mock or criticize a world leader, and that he had good reasons for doing what he wanted to do, and that America shouldn’t be involved in foreign conflicts, and so on.

    Of course, the judgment of history is (properly) that he is a racist, xenophobic, warmongering madman and we stopped him too late if anything.

    I feel pretty confident Trump is gonna wind up remembered the same way.


  • Veraticus@lib.lgbttoAsklemmy@lemmy.mlWhat do you like most about North Korea?
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    10 months ago

    Where to begin! The famines? The oppression? The lack of liberties? The persecution of queer people, or, indeed, any thought viewed as slightly aberrant? The megalomaniacal madman who keeps his people in chains while he lives the life of the ultra-rich? The gasping, desperate poverty of his subjects? Their inability to leave the country? The militarism? The backwardness?

    Oh, wait, what we like?

    Uh…


  • This title definitely makes it sound like this is a Democrat policy goal or that Democrats are actually responsible for this, when actually, as the article gradually makes clear, the people responsible for this are opposed to mainstream Democrat goals:

    Democratic lawmakers and the Joe Biden administration have touted a wealth tax as a way to tackle record levels of inequality and fund programs that slash poverty and expand access to health care and education.

    The people involved are not politicians. They are an advocacy group and apparently unaffiliated with the Democratic organization at large. The main guy seems as “Democrat” as Tulsi Gabbard, since he spent a lot of time and energy defending Trump and his policies on various talk shows.

    Anyway, kind of a disingenuous framing.




  • Veraticus@lib.lgbttoLinux@lemmy.mlWho does flatpak/snap benefit?
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    10 months ago

    It benefits the end-user.

    People do not want to be in dependency resolution hell; where they have three programs that all use different versions of libssl and require them to install all of them properly and point each application to the correct one. Most users have no ability to resolve problems like that. By not bundling, the application developer is forcing them to either try anyway or just not install their software.

    Bundling dependencies with Flatpak or Snap helps the end user at the cost of only a few extra megabytes of space, which most users have in abundance anyway.





  • It’s entirely not irrelevant. Even if you create a program to evolve pong, that was also designed by a human. As a computer programmer you should know that no computer program will just become pong, what an idiotic idea.

    You just keep pivoting away from how you were using words to them meaning something entirely different; this entire argument is worthless. At least LLMs don’t change the definitions of the words they use as they use them.


  • Oh, yeah. I mean their political goal is to destroy the entire system so I wouldn’t say they’re engaging in political discussions with anything approaching good faith. They’re actually more aligned with the “freedom” caucus of the Republican party, in that they’re trying to intentionally create mistrust in and hatred of the government to justify replacing it with something much much worse.

    They also aren’t engaging in discussions in general in good faith since they explicitly spend most of their time harassing other instances’ members by memeing and dunking on them.

    While I get why you posted this they just don’t care. The point of their interactions isn’t to discuss or convince, but to make you angry and eventually get you to leave. Don’t give in.