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Japanese town wants residents to limit smartphone use to two hours a day


Draft ordinance in Toyoake has triggered a backlash from locals, with some calling it an attack on individual freedom


Archived version: archive.is/newest/theguardian.…


Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.




[Article] Scientists Make Breakthrough in Solving the Mystery of Life’s Origin


For years, researchers have puzzled over how two ingredients for life first linked up on early Earth. Now, they’ve found the “missing link,” and demonstrated this reaction in the lab.


Archived version: archive.is/20250827153505/404m…


Scientists Make Breakthrough in Solving the Mystery of Life’s Origin


🌘
Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week.

Scientists have made a major breakthrough in the mystery of how life first emerged on Earth by demonstrating how two essential biological ingredients could have spontaneously joined together on our planet some four billion years ago.

All life on Earth contains ribonucleic acid (RNA), a special molecule that helps build proteins from simpler amino acids. To kickstart this fundamental biological process, RNA and amino acids had to become attached at some point. But this key step, known as RNA aminoacylation, has never been experimentally observed in early Earth-like conditions despite the best efforts of many researchers over the decades.

Now, a team has achieved this milestone in the quest to unravel life’s origins. As they report in a study published on Wednesday in Nature, the researchers were able to link amino acids to RNA in water at a neutral pH with the aid of energetic chemical compounds called thioesters. The work revealed that two contrasting origin stories for life on Earth, known as “RNA world” and “thioester world,” may both be right.

“It unites two theories for the origin of life, which are totally separate,” said Matthew Powner, a professor of organic chemistry at University College London and an author of the study, in a call with 404 Media. “These were opposed theories—either you have thioesters or you have RNA.”

“What we found, which is kind of cool, is that if you put them both together, they're more than the sum of their parts,” he continued. “Both aspects—RNA world and thioester world—might be right and they’re not mutually exclusive. They can both work together to provide different aspects of things that are essential to building a cell.”

In the RNA world theory, which dates back to the 1960s, self-replicating RNA molecules served as the initial catalysts for life. The thioester world theory, which gained traction in the 1990s, posits that life first emerged from metabolic processes spurred on by energetic thioesters. Now, Powner said, the team has found a “missing link” between the two.

Powner and his colleagues didn’t initially set out to merge the two ideas. The breakthrough came almost as a surprise after the team synthesized pantetheine, a component of thioesters, in simulated conditions resembling early Earth. The team discovered that if amino acids are linked to pantetheine, they naturally attach themselves to RNA at molecular sites that are consistent with what is seen in living things. This act of RNA aminoacylation could eventually enable the complex protein synthesis all organisms now depend on to live.

Pantetheine “is totally universal,” Powner explained. “Every organism on Earth, every genome sequence, needs this molecule for some reason or other. You can't take it out of life and fully understand life.”

“That whole program of looking at pantetheine, and then finding this remarkable chemistry that pantetheine does, was all originally designed to just be a side study,” he added. “It was serendipity in the sense that we didn't expect it, but in a scientific way that we knew it would probably be interesting and we'd probably find uses for it. It’s just the uses we found were not necessarily the ones we expected.”

The researchers suggest that early instances of RNA aminoacylation on Earth would most likely have occurred in lakes and other small bodies of water, where nutrients could accumulate in concentrations that could up the odds of amino acids attaching to RNA.

“It's very difficult to envisage any origins of life chemistry in something as large as an ocean body because it's just too dilute for chemistry,” Powner said. For that reason, they suggest future studies of so-called “soda lakes” in polar environments that are rich in nutrients, like phosphate, and could serve as models for the first nurseries of life on Earth.

The finding could even have implications for extraterrestrial life. If life on Earth first emerged due, in part, to this newly identified process, it’s possible that similar prebiotic reactions can be set in motion elsewhere in the universe. Complex molecules like pantetheine and RNA have never been found off-Earth (yet), but amino acids are present in many extraterrestrial environments. This suggests that the ingredients of life are abundant in the universe, even if the conditions required to spark it are far more rare.

While the study sheds new light on the origin of life, there are plenty of other steps that must be reconstructed to understand how inorganic matter somehow found a way to self-replicate and start evolving, moving around, and in our case as humans, conducting experiments to figure out how it all got started.

“We get so focused on the details of what we're trying to do that we don't often step back and think, ‘Oh, wow, this is really important and existential for us,’” Powner concluded.

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Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week.


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Chicago O'Hare Breaks Ground on $1.3 Billion Concourse D Expansion


After years of delays, Chicago O'Hare's massive $1.3 billion Concourse D project is finally underway. The new facility promises to modernize the airport with expanded capacity and updated amenities.



Developer Unlocks Newly Enshittified Echelon Exercise Bikes But Can't Legally Release His Software


A firmware update broke a series of popular third-party exercise apps. A developer fixed it, winning a $20,000 bounty from Louis Rossmann.


Archived version: archive.is/20250827215313/404m…


Developer Unlocks Newly Enshittified Echelon Exercise Bikes But Can't Legally Release His Software


An app developer has jailbroken Echelon exercise bikes to restore functionality that the company put behind a paywall last month, but copyright laws prevent him from being allowed to legally release it.

Last month, Peloton competitor Echelon pushed a firmware update to its exercise equipment that forces its machines to connect to the company’s servers in order to work properly. Echelon was popular in part because it was possible to connect Echelon bikes, treadmills, and rowing machines to free or cheap third-party apps and collect information like pedaling power, distance traveled, and other basic functionality that one might want from a piece of exercise equipment. With the new firmware update, the machines work only with constant internet access and getting anything beyond extremely basic functionality requires an Echelon subscription, which can cost hundreds of dollars a year.

In the immediate aftermath of this decision, right to repair advocate and popular YouTuber Louis Rossmann announced a $20,000 bounty through his new organization, the Fulu Foundation, to anyone who was able to jailbreak and unlock Echelon equipment: “I’m tired of this shit,” Rossmann said in a video announcing the bounty. “Fulu Foundation is going to offer a bounty of $20,000 to the first person who repairs this issue. And I call this a repair because I believe that the firmware update that they pushed out breaks your bike.”
youtube.com/embed/2zayHD4kfcA?…
App engineer Ricky Witherspoon, who makes an app called SyncSpin that used to work with Echelon bikes, told 404 Media that he successfully restored offline functionality to Echelon equipment and won the Fulu Foundation bounty. But he and the foundation said that he cannot open source or release it because doing so would run afoul of Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, the wide-ranging copyright law that in part governs reverse engineering. There are various exemptions to Section 1201, but most of them allow for jailbreaks like the one Witherspoon developed to only be used for personal use.

“It’s like picking a lock, and it’s a lock that I own in my own house. I bought this bike, it was unlocked when I bought it, why can’t I distribute this to people who don’t have the technical expertise I do?” Witherspoon told 404 Media. “It would be one thing if they sold the bike with this limitation up front, but that’s not the case. They reached into my house and forced this update on me without users knowing. It’s just really unfortunate.”

Kevin O’Reilly, who works with Rossmann on the Fulu Foundation and is a longtime right to repair advocate, told 404 Media that the foundation has paid out Witherspoon’s bounty.

“A lot of people chose Echelon’s ecosystem because they didn’t want to be locked into using Echelon’s app. There was this third-party ecosystem. That was their draw to the bike in the first place,” O’Reilly said. “But now, if the manufacturer can come in and push a firmware update that requires you to pay for subscription features that you used to have on a device you bought in the first place, well, you don’t really own it.”

“I think this is part of the broader trend of enshittification, right?,” O’Reilly added. “Consumers are feeling this across the board, whether it’s devices we bought or apps we use—it’s clear that what we thought we were getting is not continuing to be provided to us.”

Witherspoon says that, basically, Echelon added an authentication layer to its products, where the piece of exercise equipment checks to make sure that it is online and connected to Echelon’s servers before it begins to send information from the equipment to an app over Bluetooth. “There’s this precondition where the bike offers an authentication challenge before it will stream those values. It is like a true digital lock,” he said. “Once you give the bike the key, it works like it used to. I had to insert this [authentication layer] into the code of my app, and now it works.”

Witherspoon has now essentially restored functionality that he used to have to his own bike, which he said he bought in the first place because of its ability to work offline and its ability to connect to third-party apps. But others will only be able to do it if they design similar software, or if they never update the bike’s firmware. Witherspoon said that he made the old version of his SyncSpin app free and has plastered it with a warning urging people to not open the official Echelon app, because it will update the firmware on their equipment and will break functionality. Roberto Viola, the developer of a popular third-party exercise app called QZ, wrote extensively about how Echelon has broken his popular app: “Without warning, Echelon pushed a firmware update. It didn’t just upgrade features—it locked down the entire device. From now on, bikes, treadmills, and rowers must connect to Echelon’s servers just to boot,” he wrote. “No internet? No workout. Even basic offline usage is impossible. If Echelon ever shuts down its servers (it happens!), your expensive bike becomes just metal. If you care about device freedom, offline workouts, or open compatibility: Avoid all firmware updates. Disable automatic updates. Stay alert.”

Witherspoon told me that he is willing to talk to other developers about how he did this, but that he is not willing to release the jailbreak on his own: “I don’t feel like going down a legal rabbit hole, so for now it’s just about spreading awareness that this is possible, and that there’s another example of egregious behavior from a company like this […] if one day releasing this was made legal, I would absolutely open source this. I can legally talk about how I did this to a certain degree, and if someone else wants to do this, they can open source it if they want to.”

Echelon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.



in reply to IHeartBadCode

I feel like browser extensions are one of the worst things to have come to the internet in terms of security. People just install them like they're nothing, assuming they're safe and secure because they're on the extension store - not a terrible assumption for the average person, tbf.

Basically every single extension you install is like "hey give me access to everything you type and everything you click on and every site you visit, and I'll change every instance of the word "Elon" to "fElon" for you. Sound fair?", and everyone just goes "Hell yeah! Let's do it!".

in reply to IHeartBadCode

If you really want privacy, use Tor which is free-as-in-speech-and-beer





Third Way circulates ‘blacklist’ of terms Democrats shouldn’t use


Third Way, a prominent center-left think tank, is aiming to shape the way Democrats speak to voters as they try to counter President Trump’s agenda, including avoiding words such as “birthing person,” “cisgender,” “the unhoused” and “Latinx.”

https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/5465386-democrats-avoid-political-correctness/



Amherst climate science center could close as US feds freeze funding




Israel approves settlement plan to 'erase' idea of Palestinian state


JERUSALEM, Aug 20 (Reuters) - A widely condemned Israeli settlement plan that would cut across land which the Palestinians seek for a state received final approval on Wednesday, according to a statement from Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.
The approval of the E1 project, which would bisect the occupied West Bank and cut it off from East Jerusalem, was announced last week by Smotrich and received final go-ahead from a defence ministry planning commission on Wednesday, he said.

Archive article archive.ph/mj0N5

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israel-approves-settlement-plan-erase-idea-palestinian-state-2025-08-20/

in reply to RandAlThor

And what is Jill stein doing to prevent it??!?
in reply to PyroNeurosis

She never stopped talking about gaza and calling out israel. Did harris said anything about the genocide since she lost?
in reply to Tja

I reached out to her and got this in response:
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This is very funny to me.


To prove you are Human..... Say something nice about Europe.

europe.pub/signup

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in reply to Pro

France, is nice that I'm nowhere near France
in reply to Pro

one good thing about europe is the fact that my dog lives there. she's a good girl.


Norwegian man on 'great Canadian journey' still missing in Manitoba as search teams face challenges | CBC News


(Fort Severn First Nation Chief Matthew) Kakekaspan said searchers from his community were forced to pull out Tuesday morning. In the roughly two days they searched, the group incurred $70,000 in helicopter rental costs, something Kakekaspan says they could no longer sustain.

(RCMP Sgt. Paul Manaigre) said on Tuesday the police force has one Mountie in the area presently.

RCMP initially said the Canada Rangers were requested to attend, but they decided against it because "it was just too dangerous."


***If you are able to donate money to help with the search there are 2 choices -- the first is to donate directly to the people searching ... waynemathews72@gmail.com ... option 2 is to Steffen's family's gofundme ... gofundme.com/f/help-fund-the-s…

in reply to HellsBelle

Seeing as one of his dogs made it, he probably got swept away crossing the river that York factory is on. Two days and they didn't find him on the river banks or in the water means very likely dead.
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in reply to someguy3

Both dogs made it. One is at York Factory and one is in Fort Severn.

All the info is posted on Steffen Skjottelvik's fb page.

in reply to HellsBelle

One dog made it York factory. If he, the human, was lost early or midway, there's no way the dog would know how to go to York factory. So he would have be to be lost within like a mile of York factory and the dog could hear or smell the town and know where to go. More likely they were crossing the river and the dog made it and he didn't.
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Trump administration shields Israeli official charged with child sex crime


“The most concerning question is when and how did America become so subservient to Israel that we immediately release a CHILD SEX PREDATOR after arrest, with a 100 percent locked up case with evidence, and let him off to fly back home to Israel?” Taylor Greene wrote, asserting that no other country’s national would receive similarly favorable treatment.
in reply to PalmTreeIsBestTree

Yep. Just look at how many people in power knew about Epstein's raping of minors and kept quiet.

We had to find out for ourselves, which should put into perspective who our representatives truly represent.




Is the amount of Lemmy activity declining?


I joined during the first Reddit exodus, and it seemed like for ages the amount of Lemmy content was generally increasing (sometimes quickly, sometimes slowly, but overall increasing). Now it seems that when I sort by New, I get through everything since my last visit much more quickly than I used to. Is that my imagination, or is the activity declining?
in reply to AFK BRB Chocolate (CA version)

I'm actually coming back to Lemmy. I left reddit, but then went back to it with limited participation. And now it's truly a cesspool. Lemmy may not be a perfect replacement, but it feels better. I should have never left.
in reply to El Barto

Sorry to hear your experience was so bad, but welcome back.

The situation with bots and trolls on Reddit is horrific. Do you remember that time a few years back when Russia disconnected their whole country from the Internet? That day there was a dramatic decrease in assholes and trolls. Like, night and day, it was unmistakeable and widely commented on.

So hopefully Lemmy doesn't catch on so will that those folks come here in force, too. For now at least, it's much better.

in reply to AFK BRB Chocolate (CA version)

So hopefully Lemmy doesn’t catch on so will that those folks come here in force, too. For now at least, it’s much better.


At the very least, I suspect Lemmy, as a federated network, has more power to filter them. We saw years ago what happened when the Wolfballs bigots tried to join, they were eventually isolated by most other instances who continued to run without them. So as long as we can retain a situation where the largest instances actually take a solid stance against assholes and trolls and bigots, then it becomes much easier to make them all optional, shunned to register on the more liberalist permissive instances.

in reply to comfy

Good point. Also worth noting that, since Lemmy isn't owned by a company trying to make a profit, there's no incentive to put up with outrageous jerks who drive up engagement.
in reply to El Barto

There's way less content here but the content that is here is way better, and the level of intelligence and civility on display is night and day vs Reddit.
in reply to AFK BRB Chocolate (CA version)

The last major push to leave traditional social media was in January, following Zuckerberg and Musk's appearances at Trump's inauguration. Many people leaving X and Meta platforms joined up on Bluesky and Fediverse platforms to replace their activity. It's been 7 months, meaning those who didn't find Lemmy a viable replacement have definitely left by now.

If there was a graph of overall activity, you'd probably see a huge increase around December-January, following a slow decline to a slightly higher baseline than November.

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in reply to hansolo

Yes, but none that even comes close to Vienna in terms of size. Vienna has over 2 million inhabitants, the next city (Graz) has only 300 thousand.

Innsbruck (132000 citizens, 5th biggest city in Austria) actually also made a bid to host the contest but lost to the capital


in reply to Davriellelouna

Reading the article, sounds like they have a fuel tanker crash problem. There's been several in the last 3-4 years all involving busses and fuel tankers. I get there's awful road conditions and few regulations but it's suspiciously common for a bus to hit a fuel tanker at least once a year.

Especially, judging by the photos, in such an open space. I've never driven in the desert so correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like there's enough visibility to prepare for crossing paths with another vehicle? I'm sure rolling off-road into the sand is better than ramming into a fuel truck.


in reply to Davriellelouna

What kind of psychopaths would enjoy watching this? More evidence of messed humans, supporting other messed up humans and being facilitated by the net.
in reply to Davriellelouna

In videos posted by this group, Graven – a wiry former soldier – and "Coudoux," a person with a disability and under guardianship, were frequently mistreated, suffering blows, insults and humiliation at the hands of the other two. Cenazandotti and Hamadi in particular regularly slapped their two partners hard on the head, grabbed their throats to strangle them, and spat or poured various substances on them.

Despite the hard-to-watch violence, the creators claimed these videos were meant to be humorous. The group raised money from complacent viewers, either through recurring subscriptions or one-off donations. Some viewers encouraged even more degrading abuse in the comments. By the end of the long livestream that ended with Graven's death, the fundraising counter shown on the video suggested they had collected more than €36,000.



French streamer dies live on air after months of humiliation and abuse


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The Terminal Demise Of Consumer Electronics Through Subscription Services


in reply to zod000

What the hell is even that?! It's an mp3 player that doubles as a cassette adaptor. That's wild
in reply to FenderStratocaster

Yeah, as I said, it is a wacky gimmick, and it does work. My teen kid got a big kick out of it and at the insane price some of the new artists have been charging to get their music in cassette form, it pays for itself in less than three albums if I already had them digitally.

I will say again that it is a $60-ish portable music player, don't expect $1000 Sony gear build quality or interface. I specifically didn't want some sort of Franken-Android DAP, which most newer dedicated music players are, so it worked out.





India and China hail warming ties amid Trump-induced geopolitical shake-up


Visit to Delhi by Wang Yi, China’s top diplomat, has seen both countries agree to resume trade ties and work towards resolving border dispute

India’s prime minister and China’s foreign minister have hailed “steady” progress in their countries’ fractious relationship, agreeing to resume trade and other ties, as well as work towards resolving the long-running Himalayan border dispute, amid a global geopolitical shake-up instigated by Donald Trump’s tariff regime.

According to statements from China’s foreign ministry, the two sides agreed to resume direct flights – reiterating a pledge made in January – as well as issuing visas to journalists and facilitating business and cultural exchanges.

On social media, India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, noted “respect for each other’s interests and sensitiveness”, while China’s foreign ministry said the countries had entered a “steady development track” and should “trust and support” each other.


in reply to xc2215x

Kick is a streaming platform?

I always thought it was some weird messaging platform that scammers always used. Now I get it

in reply to xc2215x

I know, i know, reddit ass but still, heres. a thread discussing it with VOD clips linked. TW tho...

reddit.com/r/europe/s/kvXIVzg3…

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in reply to Davriellelouna

Why even discuss it? Putin broke the 1994 agreement and he declared that the Minsk agreements no longer existed in 2022, just prior to invading again.

in reply to Davriellelouna

Under the new laws in Malaysia’s Terengganu state, first-time offenders could be imprisoned for up to two years and fined


So can they leave Islam and not be bound by the obligation to show up?

kagis

Sounds like that's illegal too. Rather more illegal.

malaymail.com/news/malaysia/20…

Attempted Apostasy and Apostasy offences in Malaysia

Terengganu
Criminal offense
Apostasy
Repentance in 3 days or death sentence and forfeiture of property.


Says that the federal government apparently has a constitutional issue with states imposing the death sentence, so it hasn't been applied, though.

old.reddit.com/r/malaysia/comm…

In Malaysia it's illegal, but it has yet to have a death penalty for apostasy. Kelantan is currently trying their best to make it legal tho, so we'll see where that goes. The punishment is an expendable arrest where the syariah courts will send their officer to detain you for a year or two and sending you to a Muslim therapist or something. Yea they treat people who committed apostasy like they have some kind of mental problems. And how long they will be detained will depend on the syariah courts. If they think they should keep you in their "correction center" for 5 years, then you'll be there for 5 years. Which means, yes, you're most likely are gonna lose your job, house, and car just because you no longer believe in what they believe in.
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in reply to tal

If there’s one thing better than religion, it’s a religion merged with the state.

American wingnuts see things like this, and are getting excited at the possibilities.



Should we remove XSLT from the web platform?


cross-posted from: lemmy.bestiver.se/post/555312

Comments


My comment: It seems google is trying to pull another Manifest v3 and JPEGXL - propose then ignore everyone and do it anyway.

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in reply to taaz

Why not fix library, corporate are lacking of founds to fix all the tickets ? Reminds me of Google openssl fork because it's not "their" opensource product so they won't contribute or pay someone to do it.
in reply to vane

Looking through the comments, someone already wrote a polyfill that people could use if they need it. It's a niche feature that is the source of security vulnerabilities, so why fix it if they can safely replace it?
in reply to sugar_in_your_tea

To have good XSLT library that follows standard ? But no we got html5 and now web components and shadow DOM slop that is not even accessible from javascript instead of proper XSLT because nobody wants to deal with it. XPath is broken since the beginning of this shit show.
in reply to vane

It sounds like you're complaining about not having consistent DOM state, not about the XSLT library. Whether the library is built in to the browser or an add-on is irrelevant to your problem.

in reply to schizoidman

love how theyre trying to act like their hard on hateful conduct, fascist signifiers, but those soldiers are actually behaving inline with the military policies rolled out by the government...if canada helps fund and assist genocide, but condemns soldiers doing a nazi salute, that just tells me they are fine with fascist solidarity coming from the top down, but not the bottom up...this is how they try to get away with what theyre doing, act all hard and make examples out of the soldiers to appear against this hate, while their other hand is in nazi cookie jars!
in reply to thestranging

They are doing just fine eradicating Natives, and not giving them their land back. It’s just ok to be a little gay Nazi there.



Powerful Libyan official in talks with Israel to resettle Palestinians from Gaza


cross-posted from: feddit.org/post/17626996

Some excerpts:
Speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the issue, Libyan, Arab and European officials told MEE that National Security Adviser Ibrahim Dbeibah, a relative of Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, was spearheading the talks despite Palestinians in Gaza flatly rejecting US President Donald Trump's postwar plan for the enclave.

The source said that in an attempt to placate some Libyan leaders, the US was prepared to confer economic support or other benefits in exchange for the country taking in Palestinians.

The idea of Libya serving as a possible new home for expelled Palestinians comes amid reports that Khalifa Haftar, a powerful military leader who also oversees a rival rubber-stamp parliament in the country's east, was offered greater control over the country's oil resources if he agreed to resettle hundreds of thousands of Palestinians.

"The Palestinians will not be getting any care from those governments, which will push them to the following catastrophe, [which] will lead to a new wave of migration towards the shores of Europe. And this is also a scary thought, firstly because the past decades have proven to us that many of them will only make it halfway through the Mediterranean, like many of those boats that capsized. And those that would eventually get to Europe, I do not think that Europe would be welcoming of another one million Arabs arriving at its shores, as the Syrians who just made similar journeys just few years ago."


in reply to Saleh

Unbelievable. The US is burning down everything to please Israel.
in reply to Mrkawfee

In this case it is even more insidious in my eyes. After Gaddafi has been ousted, Libya has been effectively split and maintained dysfunctional. Now they try to exploit this split and dysfunctionality to promise recognition to whichever side is willing to play their evil game.

The same is don in talks with South Sudan and Somaliland, exploiting weakened countries that have split off and struggle for international recognition. Of course all of the "candidates" are wholly unprepared to provide any sort of safety to the ethnically cleansed people. In my eyes this has strong resemblance to the Madagascar plan of the Nazis, where the inability of the receiving land to adequately care for the people and subsequent large numbers of people killed by starvation and/or conflict with the local population is by design.

In a way it is offshoring further genocide through ethnic cleansing.

in reply to Saleh

Agreed. Clear to see why Israel ordered the US to regime change all these countries.
in reply to Mrkawfee

The regime change in Libya was primarily motivated by France, not the US. It is tied to France continuous presence in its former colonies in North and West Africa.
There is currently a scandal ongoing in France as the Sarkozy Government was probably bankrolled by Gaddafi .

The US is far from the only "player" meddling in Africa and West Asia and they don't need Israel to "order" them in many cases. What is special about the US Israel relationship is that the US is still doing what Israel wants most of the time, even if it is contrary to US interests. Many times their interests unfortunately did align in the past.

in reply to Saleh

It may have been motivated by France but Libya was one of the "7 countries in 5 years" which the neocons planned on regime changing after 9/11 as part of the Project for the New American Century.

information-warfare.com/the-me…

in reply to Saleh

The only good option for relocation is Egypt, but as of yet, they are not willing to take in Gazan refugees. Relocation of Gazans also means Israel would get away with genocide and have their cake too. But something clearly needs to be done. The suffering is immense.
in reply to Photonic

There simply is no "good option" in ethnic cleansing and genocide.

What should be done is forcing Israel to end the genocide and provide full access for humanitarian help. Then Israel needs to pay for the rebuilding of Gaza and all the war criminals need to be brought to justice in The Hague. European countries could easily enforce that by ending all weapons shipments and economic and diplomatic support for the illegal occupation as well as blocking all land, sea and air routes for any shipment to Israel that is beyond food, medicine and other basic necessities for life. Bonus points for threatening sanctions against the Arab states complicit in helping Israel such as the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Egypt. Even more bonus points for breaking the naval blockade and allowing unhindered humanitarian access by Sea.

We have seen with the US that Trump actually doesn't fight, once someone stands up to him. China stood up to him and he stepped down quickly in the tariff bullshit. Russia isn't even bothering to pretend anymore and Trump is instead bullying Ukraine on behalf of Russia. If the US would be the only one left supporting Israel in the West, the Arab traitor regimes would also reconsider, if they want to go with the US down this path or quickly switch sides, which is in line with what their populations want.

The continued treachery of the Arab regimes will blow into their face and has the possibility to bring on a new Arab spring in Egypt and Jordan, which could spiral out of control for Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states quickly. Ethnically cleansing millions of Palestinians into Egypt or Jordan would certainly be the tipping point for these regimes.

If the EU countries get their shit together, they will realize that they are in the process of setting a region with hundreds of millions of people ablaze by continuing their lackluster response to Israels crimes and could face down a "refugee crisis" compared to which everything before was a walk in the park on a sunny day in May.

in reply to Saleh

This is all wishful thinking. I’m way past the stage of EU leaders having a spine. In a perfect –or much better than ours– world, this could happen. Not in ours. European leaders won’t even properly defend against an invasion in their own continent. They can’t even find consensus on whether to condemn the Israeli regime’s actions.
I’m just thinking of saving lives here. Justice is too much to ask in this sick world.