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in reply to geneva_convenience

After years of sexual assault being covered up by the media (Weinstein, Epstein, Biden, Cuomo, the list is endless, really) and the Left being the voice of "believe women", I really resent us being forced to be the "that didn't happen, stop lying" group. And I imagine that dissonance is why they keep repeating that lies, because of how uncomfortable it makes us to have to refute them.
in reply to principalkohoutek [none/use name]

Here's an easy fix to that dilemma: There are no women who have claimed to be raped.

None. Zero.

It is all "witeness statements" from groups like ZAKA and the IDF which are stated in the report. Not a single person claims they were raped themselves.

These claims have nothing to do with believing women. They do not claim they were raped. The claim is "Believe Israel".

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'Alligator Alcatraz' Already Ballooning Over $600 Million, Leaked Document Shows


The federal detention facility in Florida, officially named “Alligator Alcatraz,” is only the beginning when it comes to FEMA money being used to fund ICE operations, according to a source within the federal agency. The new program, dubbed “the ICE grant” by FEMA employees, means that millions in grant funds intended for shelters and facilities for noncitizen migrants may now be redirected toward detention centers and whatever else ICE decides.

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said in a statement to the Associated Press on June 25 that the detention facility in Florida “will be funded in large part by the Shelter and Services Program within the Federal Emergency Management Agency.” The Alligator Alcatraz facility will cost $245 per bed daily, or $450 million per year, one U.S. official told the Associated Press. Internal FEMA documents, however, put the total grant awarded to the Florida Division of Emergency Management at $608.4 million.

The flow of cash from FEMA’s SSP program to states building ICE detention centers outlined by Noem, matches what a source within FEMA told Drop Site of the ICE grant: “it appears they’re taking the money intended for the SSP that Congress mandated via their old appropriations bill to a new grant program related to ICE so they can pay states.” States will then use the funds to develop ICE detention centers similar to the Everglades facility in Florida.

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in reply to jackeroni

I will never forget the first time I read about Jeju Island. That and the Tlatelolco massacre genuinely left me reeling.
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in reply to ComradeSharkfucker

South Korean history from the immediate post-WW2 period through to the 1980s is completely ignored in the western world. Syngman Rhee in particular was a true villain.


Pro-Israel Professor Shai Davidai Is Leaving Columbia


Per an email sent to Columbia Business School faculty on Wednesday morning from Dean Costis Maglaras and obtained by The Intercept, the vocal pro-Israel business school assistant professor made the decision to leave the school.

Several students, including Mahmoud Khalil and Mohsen Mahdawi, have also alleged that Davidai targeted them and called for them to be deported in the lead-up to their arrests by Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Davidai was also a member of a prominent WhatsApp group of Columbia alumni, parents and professors that strategized about how to deport pro-Palestine students, The Intercept reported. He has noted that he does not have tenure at the school.



The West seeks to destroy cooperation between Russia and China, says expert


in reply to jackeroni

Iran should not fall. China and russia need to protect it


I'll have to repeat: Merz imagined himself to be the Fuhrer and wants war with Russia


in reply to jackeroni

Lol, just as there is no version of reality where Trump is a good guy, there's no reality where Putin is a good guy


In Kiev, they boast about the use in combat of an aircraft created by the Czech Republic and Slovakia: EADaily


in reply to jackeroni

Why are they using the Russian spelling of the capital of Ukraine?
in reply to nocturne

That is what is proper after all? The Nazi regime that renamed it was illegally propped up by the US empire, none of us should be spelling it the way the occupiers want us to
in reply to jackeroni

Sorry I did not realize you were a Russian propaganda troll. Have a day.
in reply to nocturne

I’m always torn on this - block that troll or keep downvoting him.
in reply to TryingSomethingNew

Or you can open your mind a little to the lies you have been fed, leave the right-wing instance and come on over to lemmy.ml, much more welcoming of non-western non-empire approved sources than the Zionists over there and you'll see through the empire's programming quickly
in reply to nocturne

🙄 Typical liberal default response when faced with the realities of their western programming, open your mind and you'll see
in reply to jackeroni

the occupiers


How dare Ukrainians use Ukrainian spellings.

in reply to belastend

They would prefer the Russian spelling, but it is the current Nazi regime of Ukraine that enforces anti-Russian sentiment!

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

I'm not sure how it's gonna "rewrite history" beside the history of that place. Continous habitation from neolithic to iron ages isn't even unprecedented, hell there are places that are inhabited continously from neolithic to today, like Damascus. Not even the article offers explanation for that sensationalist headline.
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in reply to PolandIsAStateOfMind

yeah the headline is a little bombastic, but the article itself was interesting



China, Russia, and Iran have hypersonic missiles. And that changes everything.


Bullets:
- China is the world leader in the development and deployment of hypersonic missile systems.
- Russia and Iran also have successfully built and recently used hypersonic platforms in conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.
- The United States is racing to close the gap, and hopes to build systems for some Army units next year.
- But the problem is that no air defense platforms can intercept inbound hypersonic munitions.
- This is the reality that confronts career politicians and military officers in Western countries: an armed conflict against any country with hypersonic missiles invites catastrophic losses to ground bases and naval fleet assets.
- Those risks will be deemed unacceptably high, and in the event of potential conflict in the Western Pacific or Persian Gulf will likely result in disengagement and withdrawal of American naval forces.
in reply to davel

They aren't using the same definition of hypersonic that the US uses. The US is the only nation with actual hypersonic missiles that maintain velocity all the way to impact because that shit is hard. Also the Patriot missile systems in Ukraine have already shot down Russian "hypersonics." This journalist is the same breed as the ones that cause the US to create the F-15 to combat the USSRs "invincible foxbat."
in reply to OurToothbrush

US missiles are hypersonic just because AngryCommieKender said so.
in reply to burlemarx

Oh, and I forgot to add, China, Russia and Iran didn't even use their top tier missiles yet.
in reply to OurToothbrush

I'm saying I don't know what is and isn't classified, and I'm not going to share any of the documents I've seen. Habitual Linecrosser talks about it all the time on his YouTube channel, so that is all unclassified.
in reply to AngryCommieKender

Ah, a YouTuber named "habitual linecrosser". Perhaps the "source: it came to me in a dream" commenter was too generous.



Five-Year-Old Boy Injured in Ukraine UAV Strike on Kursk Beach Dies of Wounds




China Denies Shipping Air Defenses To Iran





[JS] Let me pay for Firefox!


Hackernews.
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in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Hard to not feel the pull when you're tied at the 9000 km waist. Regardless of how much effort we put into diversifying our economy away from the states, any economic troubles down there will have immense impacts up here.
in reply to rbesfe

There's absolutely zero reason why Canda couldn't be an autarky. It's a huge country, with plenty of natural resources, and very sparse population.

in reply to Slyke

If only that translated into reindustrializing Canada and becoming self sufficient.


in reply to Davriellelouna

Absolute clown government in charge of an absolute clown country.
in reply to Davriellelouna

Google is paying a pittance to achieve vendor lock-in.

The training may be free but there will be other services which will not be free and the other services will integrate better with the existing 'free' Google services better than anything else.




Houthi attack on cargo ship kills 3 mariners, European naval force says




in reply to NanoooK

Is that suse-on-a-phone just a tease, or something awesome I have yet to discover?
in reply to xia

I believe Tumbleweed is available for Pinephone.
in reply to NanoooK

That's a joke...I remember downloading opensuse, there was a warning that forbids me to use if I was in a country targeted by the USA something like that 😆
IMO, If you really want independance dont use things from corporations.
Many people complains about overstaffing in administrations, so why not have them work on a distro from scratch ?


Donald Trump threatened Putin and Xi he would bomb Moscow, Beijing: audio


Donald Trump said he had separately warned both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping that he would bomb their respective capitals if either of them invaded their neighbors, newly released audio broadcast by CNN shows.

The U.S. president was recorded speaking at a private fundraiser in 2024 about his conversations with Putin and Xi.

"With Putin I said, 'If you go into Ukraine, I'm gonna bomb the s*** out of Moscow,'" Trump is heard saying, recounting his version of their conversation. He also said with Xi he also threatened to "bomb the s*** out of Beijing" if it invaded Taiwan, the self-governing island that China claims as its own.

#USA


US supreme court clears way for Trump officials to resume mass government firings


The US supreme court has cleared the way for Donald Trump’s administration to resume plans for mass firings of federal workers that critics warn could threaten critical government services.

Extending a winning streak for the US president, the justices on Tuesday lifted a lower court order that had frozen sweeping federal layoffs known as “reductions in force” while litigation in the case proceeds.

The decision could result in hundreds of thousands of job losses at the departments of agriculture, commerce, health and human services, state, treasury, veterans affairs and other agencies.

#USA




Okay why is your distro the best?


I made the unfortunate post about asking why people liked Arch so much (RIP my inbox I'm learning a lot from the comments) But, what is the best distro for each reason?

RIP my inbox again. I appreciate this knowledge a lot. Thank you everyone for responding. You all make this such a great community.

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in reply to POTOOOOOOOO

I use Debian and Mint. As others have said, it's because it just works and I don't have to screw with it.
in reply to POTOOOOOOOO

Void. Minimal, all the programs I need are in the repos, which is a first for me. Very fast.


Which Kubernetes is the Smallest? Examining Talos Linux, K3s, K0s, and More - Sidero Labs


in reply to ikidd

I find this comparison unfair becuase k3s is a much more batteries included distro than the others, coming with an ingress controller (traefik) and a few other services not in talos or k0s.

But I do think Talos will end up the lighest overall because Talos is not just a k8s distro, but also a extremely stripped down linux distro. They don’t use systemd to start k8s, they have their own tiny init system.

It should be noted that Sidero Labs is the creator of Talos Linux, which another commenter pointed out.

in reply to ikidd

I've been looking at K3s deployed on FCOS, but I have no clue how I'm supposed to use Terraform to deploy FCOS.

My understanding is that FCOS is supposed to be ephemeral and re-deployed every so often, which would imply the use of a hypervisor like Proxmox on the host, but Proxmox does not play well with Terraform.

I also considered OpenStack, but it's way over my head. I have a very simple single-node Kubernetes setup to deploy using GitOps, and nothing seems to fit the bill.



Is the Trinity Desktop Environment Secure?


So, a while back I installed Xfce with Chicago95, but was disappointed. Xfce just doesn't vibe with me, and a strict emulation of Windows95 is not really what I wanted, I just wanted something that "felt" that classic.

So I was gonna give up and just use KDE, until I saw TDE. I think TDE is probably what I'm looking for but I'm concerned about using anything so minor because security.

It TDE secure (for personal use)?

Can a DE even be insecure, or are they all generally as secure as each-other as long as you follow the rules (trustworthy software, closed firewall, install patches fast, and disaster recovery plans)?

What vulnerabilities can a desktop environment even have (edit)?

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in reply to pyssla

Oh damn, so just viewing a file in your file manager is enough to get infected in an insecure desktop environment, as thumbnails can be generated programmatically? If I clicked a bad link that would 100% infect my system.

I'm not worried too much about screen-capture. I'm worried first and foremost about triggering any arbitrary code execution and thumbnail generation on a file would definitely do it.

in reply to Tenderizer78

It depends on what file manager you use. In many, you can turn off thumbnail generation if you believe this might happen to you.


USAID review raised ‘critical concerns’ over Gaza aid group days before $30 million US grant


An internal government assessment shows USAID officials raised “critical concerns” last month about a key aid group’s ability to protect Palestinians and to deliver them food – just days before the State Department announced $30 million in funding for the organization.

A scathing 14-page document obtained by CNN outlines a litany of problems with a funding application submitted by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a US-backed group established to provide aid following an 11-week Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip. The United Nations human rights office says that hundreds of Palestinians have since been killed around private aid sites, including those operated by GHF.

The assessment flags a range of concerns, from an overall plan missing “even basic details” to a proposal to potentially distribute powdered baby formula in an area that lacks clean water to prepare it.

A USAID official came to a clear conclusion in the report: “I do not concur with moving forward with GHF given operational and reputational risks and lack of oversight.”

#USA


USAID review raised ‘critical concerns’ over Gaza aid group days before $30 million US grant


An internal government assessment shows USAID officials raised “critical concerns” last month about a key aid group’s ability to protect Palestinians and to deliver them food – just days before the State Department announced $30 million in funding for the organization.

A scathing 14-page document obtained by CNN outlines a litany of problems with a funding application submitted by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a US-backed group established to provide aid following an 11-week Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip. The United Nations human rights office says that hundreds of Palestinians have since been killed around private aid sites, including those operated by GHF.

The assessment flags a range of concerns, from an overall plan missing “even basic details” to a proposal to potentially distribute powdered baby formula in an area that lacks clean water to prepare it.

A USAID official came to a clear conclusion in the report: “I do not concur with moving forward with GHF given operational and reputational risks and lack of oversight.”



USAID review raised ‘critical concerns’ over Gaza aid group days before $30 million US grant | CNN


An internal government assessment shows USAID officials raised “critical concerns” last month about a key aid group’s ability to protect Palestinians and to deliver them food – just days before the State Department announced $30 million in funding for the organization.

A scathing 14-page document obtained by CNN outlines a litany of problems with a funding application submitted by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a US-backed group established to provide aid following an 11-week Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip. The United Nations human rights office says that hundreds of Palestinians have since been killed around private aid sites, including those operated by GHF.

The assessment flags a range of concerns, from an overall plan missing “even basic details” to a proposal to potentially distribute powdered baby formula in an area that lacks clean water to prepare it.

A USAID official came to a clear conclusion in the report: “I do not concur with moving forward with GHF given operational and reputational risks and lack of oversight.”



Imperial Hypocrisy About "Terrorism" Hits Its Most Absurd Point Yet


The US has removed Syria’s Al Qaeda franchise from its list of designated terrorist organizations just days after the UK added nonviolent activist group Palestine Action to its own list of banned terrorist groups.

The western empire will surely find ways to be even more hypocritical and ridiculous about its “terrorism” designations in the future, but at this point it’s hard to imagine how it will manage to do so.

This move comes as Sharaa holds friendly meetings with US and UK officials and holds normalization talks with Israel, showing that all one has to do to cease being a “terrorist” in the eyes of the empire is to start aligning with the empire’s interests.

So that was on Monday. The Saturday prior, the group Palestine Action was added to the UK’s list of proscribed terrorist groups under the Terrorism Act of 2000, making involvement with the group as aggressively punishable as involvement with ISIS.

The “terrorism” in question? Spraying red paint on two British war planes in protest against the UK’s support for the Gaza holocaust. A minor act of vandalism gets placed in the same category as mass murdering civilians with a car bomb when the vandalism is directed at the imperial war machine in opposition to the empire’s genocidal atrocities.



in reply to ikidd

What's the advantage of something like FOKS compared to gnupg or openPGP servers?
in reply to Strit

Right at the top:

FOKS is like Keybase, but fully open-source and federated, with SSO and YubiKey support.
in reply to just_another_person

I guess the reason I am asking is that I have never understood the use-case for Keybase either.

So your answer does not really answer my question. 😀

in reply to Strit

My understanding of Keybase is that it was some kind identity aggregator. You were able to link identities not just by keys, but also by external services, like Twitter (at a time), email and other things.
in reply to alexcleac

Ah, so the main difference from gnupg and openpgp servers is that it can use other methods than email to identify the owner of a key. Thank you.
in reply to ikidd

Is the data and public keys being replicated in the communication between instances? it's not made clear how the federation actually works, because "enabling users on different servers to share data with end-to-end encryption" (from foks.pub/) is something all services with TLS / HTTPS support already do...

Also.. one big plus for the OpenPGP HKP protocol is that technically you can self-host your own key in a static HTTPS server with predefined responses and be able to have it interact with other servers and clients without issue. I'm expecting the more complex nature of FOKS might make self-hosting in this way difficult. I'd rather minimize the dynamic services I expose to the outside publicly if I'm self hosting.

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in reply to ikidd

I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're refering to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/systemd/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus systemd Linux.
in reply to ikidd

Because people here accuse Poettering of being an asshole: I've read some of his blogposts and seen some talks of his and him doing Q&A: He answered professionally, did his best to answer truthfully, did acknowledge when he didn't know something. No rants, no opining on things he didn't know about, no taking questions in bad faith.

As far as I can tell all the people declaring him some kind of asshole are full of shit.

in reply to gnuhaut

He is not that bad, the issue is that, as all foss devs, he is not interested in solving problems he does not feel like are important.

The problem is, he disapproves when resources are allocated in his project to those problems and one main area he is not a fan of is support for legacy stuff.

It just happens that legacy stuff is the majority of the industry, as production environment of half the globe needs to run legacy software and a lot of it on legacy hardware

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in reply to gnuhaut

He answered professionally


Until you ask him about security and CVEs advisories...