The Liberal Abandonment Of Greta Thunberg
The Liberal Abandonment Of Greta Thunberg
The Swedish activist Greta Thunberg has been detained by Israel and reportedly maltreated by her Israeli captors after she was kidnapped, along with hundreds of other activists, from Gaza’s territorial waters on Friday.Nate Bear (¡Do Not Panic!)
like this
Test Batch Setup with Wet Hops
My test batch setup is nearly complete (please also appreciate the "beautiful" tiles) and I tested it with a wet hop beer. As you can see, those were clearly at the upper end of their ripeness scale, but it was the only time I could manage to pick some at all due family & kids.
In they went in for a ~20 minutes 80 ˚C hop stand, during which my kitchen smelled a troubling lot of garlic and onions. By removing the bag with the hops, I stirred up the already settled trub, so I had to pour all hop debris & hot break into the minikeg along with the wort. Let's see what that does to the beer. I've overshot my OG quite a bit with the setup in the pictures, with a lot higher efficiency than predicted, only by stirring every now and then, so we're looking at an OG of 1.051 instead of 1.046.
Yesterday, after a week of fermentation under rising pressure, it was time for a gravity sample. It's fully attenuated already, and except a hint of some sharpness, I'm happy to report that we're apparently free of off-flavours. 😀 It came down do 1.008 (vs 1.010 predicted) , which leaves me with a 5.6 % ABV beer instead of 4.2 % with a lot less residual sweetness (US-05, you monster). Next time, I'll certainly mash hotter, and check the temperature with an external thermometer as well. I also wonder what a Kveik yeast would do to the result.
Here is the base recipe I intend to use for ongoing experiments with malts, yeasts & hops.
like this
Those beautoful cones! I wish I got some, but my vines did not flower this year at all.
Is that sous videt device? How simple is it to clean actually?
Totally forgot got mention it: These are actually wild hops! Foraged next to a rural road with not zero, but little traffic.
And yes, it's a sous vide stick. The one by Inkbird, which I got relatively cheaply. It sits in a hop tube so no grains can get into it.
After use, I instantly rinse it, then put it in a jar with clean water and let it sit there until I'm cleaning up everything. Then, I rinse it again. As it doesn't have to be sterile, I'm fine with this regime for the time being.
Netflix Now Requiring All Subscribers To Recruit 5 New Customers [satire]
Netflix Now Requiring All Subscribers To Recruit 5 New Customers
LOS GATOS, CA—With an update the company hailed as a bold feature that would excite existing users and increase membership, streaming giant Netflix announced Tuesday that all of its subscribers would now be required to recruit five new customers.The Onion Staff (The Onion)
Formation juridique avancée
Parce qu'il n'y a rien de plus fun que du jargon juridique, on vous propose une formation juridique avancée ? Ca sera le 16 octobre dans le 19ème arrondissement de Paris, de 19h à 20h30
Mais pourquoi "avancée" ? Parce qu'il s'agit d'une formation pour celleux qui souhaitent approfondir les sujets liés aux procédures judiciaires, nous n'allons pas réaborder pendant la formation les points déjà traités en formation DCNV (Garde à vue, contrôle d'identité...)
French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu resigns after less than a month
French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu resigns after less than a month
The shock move comes 26 days after his appointment following the collapse of the previous government of François Bayrou.Laura Gozzi (BBC News)
Ex-German chancellor Merkel blames Poland and Baltic States for war in Ukraine
Ex-German chancellor Merkel blames Poland and Baltic States for war in Ukraine
Former German chancellor Angela Merkel has blamed Poland and the Baltic States for turning down a proposal for the European Union to negotiate directly with…Krzysztof Mularczyk (Brussels Signal)
Zionist Bari Weiss named editor-in-chief of CBS News as Paramount buys Free Press startup
The CBS News owner Paramount will acquire the Free Press, a media startup founded by Bari Weiss, and has appointed her editor-in-chief of the storied US news network. The publication is known for criticizing both the left and right and has been a home for staunch support of Israel.
Weiss, 41, has no experience working in broadcast television, though she has carved out a reputation as a heterodox opinion writer and burgeoning media operator.
The purchase comes in light of major changes to 97-year-old CBS News after a merger between Paramount Global, the channel’s parent company, and Skydance Media, a media company founded by David Ellison, the son of billionaire Larry Ellison, this summer. Paramount is also behind the Paramount Pictures movie studios and US cable channels including MTV, Comedy Central and Nickelodeon.
Bari Weiss named editor-in-chief of CBS News as Paramount buys Free Press startup
Commentator to lead storied US news network, five years after acrimonious exit from New York TimesLauren Aratani (The Guardian)
copymyjalopy likes this.
Zionist Bari Weiss named editor-in-chief of CBS News as Paramount buys Free Press startup
The CBS News owner Paramount will acquire the Free Press, a media startup founded by Bari Weiss, and has appointed her editor-in-chief of the storied US news network. The publication is known for criticizing both the left and right and has been a home for staunch support of Israel.
Weiss, 41, has no experience working in broadcast television, though she has carved out a reputation as a heterodox opinion writer and burgeoning media operator.
The purchase comes in light of major changes to 97-year-old CBS News after a merger between Paramount Global, the channel’s parent company, and Skydance Media, a media company founded by David Ellison, the son of billionaire Larry Ellison, this summer. Paramount is also behind the Paramount Pictures movie studios and US cable channels including MTV, Comedy Central and Nickelodeon.
Bari Weiss named editor-in-chief of CBS News as Paramount buys Free Press startup
Commentator to lead storied US news network, five years after acrimonious exit from New York TimesLauren Aratani (The Guardian)
Verizon Announces CEO Transition
Verizon Announces CEO Transition
Verizon Communications Inc. today announced that its Board of Directors has appointed Independent Lead Director and former Chief Executive Officer of PayPal Holdings Inc. Dan Schulman as CEO.www.verizon.com
ICE Targets Unaccompanied Immigrant Children, Offering $2,500 Payment for Deportation
ICE Targets Unaccompanied Immigrant Children, Offering $2,500 Payment for Deportation
ICE confirmed its plan to pay unaccompanied immigrant children in exchange for their agreement to be deported.Jonah Valdez (The Intercept)
copymyjalopy likes this.
This is bad analysis.
They're gonna do a false flag on Venezuela because they want to destroy a left-wing government. The fact that it will distract from the Epstein files is a positive side effect, but they are enacting an agenda beyond it.
Formation à l'action de désobéissance civile
Tu fais tes premiers pas chez Extinction Rebellion ? Cette formation à la DCNV (Désobéissance Civile Non-Violente) est une des formations de base chez XR, elle te permettra de comprendre de façon concrète comment XR met en oeuvre la non-violence dans ses actions, comment se passe une garde à vue, ou encore les techniques de blocage corporel, le déroulement d'une action, les risques juridiques, etc... Cette formation dure une journée, elle aura lieu à Nantes et mêle parties théoriques et parties pratiques (simulation d'action, etc...). Elle te permettra de te sentir plus à l'aise et préparé.e avant de partir en action !
- 🕐 La formation durera de 9h30 à 17h30 avec une pause déjeuner.
- 🪙 La formation est donnée à prix libre, pour permettre de couvrir certains frais de la journée et du groupe local d'Extinction Rebellion. Prévoyez du liquide ou utilisez notre cagnotte en ligne : opencollective.com/xrnantes
- Le lieu vous sera communiqué par mail (centre de Nantes)
- Le nombre de places est limité, vous serez prévenu par mail en cas de changement de programme.
Inscription obligatoire : https://framaforms.org/formation-a-la-desobeissance-civile-1664806451
Inscris-toi à notre newsletter pour être au courant de futures formations
like this
It is better. First of all you don't have to connect your phone number or an email.
this is an automatic victory
Its on a torified network.
It's encrypted
And if you choose basically every chat is a burner account. So once deleted it's gone.
I've noticed that signal is actually NOT secure at all and may actually be a gov project
I use it, and its pretty decent. Looks good and works.
Pros:
-No user ID needed.
-Can self host the server that passes on your messages.
-Has the option to use Flux.
-Works out of the box.
Cons:
-Battery drain is a thing. Either toggle the periodic check, or turn it off and open it yourself to check messages.
-Using one account accross multiple devices can be a pain. Since u can't keep using your phone account at the same time as it is connected to your pc. Can be circumvented by having mutiple accounts in the same group chat; but yea it's a pain the ass.
Neutral:
-Convincing people to use it hahahh. But this is a universal probem vs mainstream messenger apps.
Final verdict: 4/5.
Very good if privacy and anonymity is your number 1 priority. It's less of hassle to set up than some other options, and relatively easy to get people into it. Sent invite, they download the app, make profile and are good to go.
Batterydrain and same use account across multiple devices could and should be better for mainstream adoption. On the other hand if u toggle the periodic checks then I find the drain tolerable. And how many of us are in places that don't have a wallsocket available to charge your phone 😛
This Data Scientist Sees Progress in the Climate Change Fight
Countries are falling short on reducing emissions, but British data scientist Hannah Ritchie looks at the numbers and sees the world making real gains on climate change. In an interview, she talks about the unheralded progress she sees in the global shift to clean energy.
like this
France’s PM resigns after less than a month amid widespread criticism of new cabinet
France’s political crisis has deepened after the new prime minister dramatically resigned within hours of appointing a government.
Sébastien Lecornu was the third French prime minister in a year, as the country continued to lurch from one political crisis to another. He quit hours before his first cabinet meeting on Monday afternoon. Macron accepted Lecornu’s resignation on Monday morning.
Lecornu then made what he called a “spontaneous” speech on the steps of the prime minister’s residence in Paris. He appeared to place the blame on opposition political parties in France, who he said had not wanted to compromise.
France’s PM resigns after less than a month amid widespread criticism of new cabinet
Sébastien Lecornu quits after Emmanuel Macron unveiled largely unchanged cabinet lineupGuardian staff reporter (The Guardian)
DHS agents retreat as Chicago cops refuse to shield them from swarming protesters
DHS agents retreat as Chicago cops refuse to shield them from swarming protesters
Department of Homeland Security agents were seen abandoning one attempt to arrest a man in Chicago over the weekend after being outnumbered by protesters.David Edwards (Raw Story)
like this
Judge blocks Trump’s bid to deploy national guard to Oregon
a federal judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from deploying any national guard units to Oregon a few hours after the California governor, Gavin Newsom, announced he would sue the president over the planned deployment of his state’s troops.
Both states sought the temporary restraining order after the president sent guard members from California to Oregon earlier in the day. On Saturday, the same judge temporarily blocked the administration from deploying Oregon’s national guard troops to Portland.
The ruling by US District Judge Karin Immergut said there was no evidence that recent protests necessitated the presence of national guard troops, no matter where they came from.
Judge blocks Trump’s bid to deploy national guard to Oregon – US politics live
Ruling by US District Judge Karin Immergut blocks any deployment to Portland for two weeks as legal wrangling continuesTom Ambrose (The Guardian)
This is so incredibly short-sighted. Support for solar energy really should be a Republican priority too - it's business, it's industry, it's making money. China, India, the entire continent of Africa, are all going solar. The United States could be a world leader in this trillion-dollar industry - hell, there's a national security argument that we need American scientists and workers to support the American solar industry.
Never mind the climate issue for now. Walking away from solar leaves billions on the table that other countries are going to snap up. Republicans love subsidizing industry. This is a braindead bipartisan opportunity.
But little Donnie hates solar energy personally, threw a tantrum about it, and no one in the 80-year-old boy king's court dares to disagree with him.
Yup. I'm using piefed on the voyager app and I have the votes displayed separately right now. But you have to enable that option in settings as the default is "total" not "separately".
I use the web version of the voyager app but they have the actual app in most app stores.
Ex-special counsel John Durham undercut case against James Comey in interview with prosecutors: Sources
Ex-special counsel John Durham undercut case against James Comey in interview with prosecutors: Sources
As special counsel, Durham investigated the origins of the FBI's Russia probe.Katherine Faulders (ABC News)
copymyjalopy likes this.
Iran says Cairo agreement for cooperation with IAEA ‘no longer valid’ after sanctions reimposed
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Sunday that a Cairo agreement for cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog “is no longer valid” after the imposition of snapback sanctions by Western countries, Anadolu reports.
“The three European countries thought they could achieve results through the snapback mechanism, but that tool was ineffective and only made diplomacy more complicated,” the state news agency IRNA quoted Araghchi as saying after meeting foreign ambassadors and diplomats accredited to Tehran.
Hamas denies reports of agreeing to weapons surrender under international supervision, warns against false news
The Islamic Resistance Movement, Hamas, has issued an official statement firmly denying media reports, particularly by Al Arabiya Al Hadath, claiming that the movement had agreed to gradually hand over its weapons under international supervision. In its official statement, Hamas said: “The movement confirms that there is no truth to what was reported by Al Arabiya Al Hadath and some other media outlets, quoting a so-called source within the movement, regarding the course of ceasefire negotiations.”
The statement added: “The movement stresses that spreading such misleading news aims to distort facts and create confusion among the public.” Hamas described these reports as “baseless allegations” and strongly rejected them. The movement also called on media outlets to “adhere to professionalism and objectivity, and avoid relying on anonymous or unreliable sources,” stressing that “accurate and official statements are issued only through the movement’s official platforms.”
Islamophobia is the new global currency of power
There is no more honest way to describe the world we live in than this: Islamophobia has become the new global currency of power. It is traded in the speeches of politicians, exchanged in the deals of diplomats, printed in the pages of media, and laundered through the language of security and counterterrorism. It buys impunity for genocide, secures legitimacy for authoritarian leaders, and bankrolls new markets of surveillance and control. The Gaza genocide has torn away whatever illusions were left: the blood of Muslims is not just cheap; it is expendable capital in the economy of global powers.
The Gaza genocide is not an isolated catastrophe; it is the center of a global pattern. From the internment of Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang’s camps to the expulsion of the Rohingya from Myanmar, from the headscarves torn off French Muslim girls in the name of secularism to the US “Muslim ban” dressed in the language of national security, the same logic is at work. Islamophobia is the shared language of power between democracies and dictatorships, between so-called secular republics and openly ethno-nationalist states. It allows brutality to pass as order, apartheid to pass as security, and genocide to pass as policy.
Nowhere is this more visible outside Palestine than in India, where 200 million Muslims are being pushed to the edge of extermination by the RSS-BJP regime. Under Narendra Modi, Islamophobia has been weaponised not as fringe hate but as state ideology. Laws like the Citizenship Amendment Act and the proposed National Register of Citizens have created a framework where Muslims can be rendered stateless in their own homeland. Pogroms in Delhi, lynchings over beef, bulldozers demolishing Muslim homes, and open calls for genocide from Hindutva leaders are not accidents but steps in a carefully scripted project. This project is nourished by propaganda techniques borrowed directly from Zionism: Palestinians are framed as “terrorists” the way Indian Muslims are framed as “jihadis” or “Bangladeshi infiltrators”; Gaza’s resistance is criminalised the same way Indian Muslims’ protests are portrayed as sedition. Both Zionism and Hindutva work by criminalising Muslim existence itself — and both find eager allies in Western capitals that profit from these performances of “civilisational defence.”
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20251006-islamophobia-is-the-new-global-currency-of-power/
like this
Blue states should come together to declare an emergency. Here’s how | Thomas Geoghegan
Blue states should come together to declare an emergency. Here’s how
States opposed to Trump can create a compact – a new prototype for American government – even if it’s perceived as political theaterGuardian staff reporter (The Guardian)
like this
copymyjalopy doesn't like this.
In Amsterdam, 250,000 call on government to get tough on Israel
An estimated 250,000 people took part in a massive protest in Amsterdam on Sunday, calling on the Dutch government to take a firmer stance against Israel and to help end the genocidal violence in Gaza.
Demonstrators, many wearing something red to illustrate the “red line” they say the Dutch government has crossed by its lack of action, packed into the Museumplein and its surrounding streets.
Lemmy Development Update September 2025
It's been a busy month, with a lot of work to add new features to lemmy-ui which were already added to the Lemmy backend before. There were also a lot of bug fixes for the development version. We are gradually getting closer to a 1.0 release.
While the API changes for 1.0 are mostly finalized, we still have many more lemmy-ui 1.0 tasks to complete.
Some of the major additions:
- Simplified lemmy-ui development.
- Audio file support in lemmy-ui.
- Added comment locking (which also locks children). Thanks to @flamingos-cant)
- Post time filtering, with a smart dropdown.
- Added ability to block all users from an instance (separate from blocking all communities)
- Added ability to make a note for a person, and view the vote totals you've given to them.
- Fixed remote RSS feeds.
- Added ability to do actions on report items, from the reports page.
::: spoiler Full list of changes by user
salif
Meri-Dax
flamingos-cant
- Use more standard AP fields for community tags
- Don't populate embed fields when the Opengraph tag is empty
- Add urls for moderators and featured collections on local communities
- Comment lock
MV-GH
- Restore deprecated apk post processing config
- Regenerate baseline profiles
- Bump to Android SDK 36
- Fix too large images in comments being cutoff
- Add option to disable video auto play
dessalines
- Fixing missing shortcode from emoji updating.
- Validate saving default_items_per_page local user setting.
- Fixing show_scores -> show_score DB name.
- Fixing
LockCommentandModLockCommentView - Fixing local_user table column order.
- Adding type_ to
PostOrCommentOrPrivateMessageenum. - Fix post like not decrementing vote totals.
- Add ability to mark a notification as unread.
- Changing rss inbox feed -> notifications
- Fixing admin list users not using query.
- Adding
ban_expires_atto views - Adding a post undelete delay to fix federation tests.
- Add voyager development as the default test server for test.sh
- Adding default posts_per_page setting.
- Add ability to lock comments
- Adding post time filtering with defaults.
- Upgrading pnpm to 10.16
- Collapse removed comments that have no children by default.
- Updating to new 1.0 names.
- Adding ability to visit a random community.
- Highlight new comments using the last read comments time.
- Fixing scheduled publish time.
- Adding read and hidden content for your profile.
- Add ability to show banned users and all users.
- Fixup notifs
- Add @nutomic to codeowners
- Fix profile radios spacing.
- Add ability to block all persons from an instance.
- Add ability to create a note for a person, and view vote totals
- Add ability to resend verification email.
- Use the
getCommentsSlimvariant for post comments. - Fixing build tools to version 36.0.0
Nutomic
- Include error message for rate limit error (fixes #6019)
- Proper null check for mod-reason-mandatory (fixes #6021)
- Update dependencies, use latest diesel-cli
- Set image_mode: None for development
- Correct name for instance default theme
- Avoid unnecessary requests to w3.org (fixes #5999)
- Fix remote user/community rss feeds (fixes #5997)
- Dont allow write api actions for banned user
- Exclude
LocalSite.multi_comm_followerfrom public api - Let banned users login
- Make reason mandatory for mod actions (fixes #1948)
- Remove local_user.enable_keyboard_navigation (fixes #5988)
- Rename FederationState.next_retry and NotificationType
- Rename person banned columns
- Show most used languages first
- Restrict max length of community title
- Reenable plugin hook (fixes #5925)
- Sorting for instance list
- Print diff-check errors to stdout (fixes #5937)
- Avoid regenerating metadata for unchanged post url (fixes #5956)
- Dont allow removing only mod/admin, remove leave_admin endpoint
- Provide federation context collection (fixes #5283)
- Add report actions (fixes #501)
- Convert buttons for view all, show context to links (fixes #3229)
- Enable various lints
- Enable alt text for videos (fixes #2779)
- Fetch emoji data separately (fixes #3470)
- Downscale proxied thumbnails (fixes #2591)
- Insert emojis at current cursor position (fixes #1983)
- Simplify translation code
- Fix Arabic user/community names (fixes #2207)
- Correct name for instance default theme (fixes #2371)
- Fetch similar posts when copying suggested title (fixes #2029)
- Fix community link in modlog title (fixes #2209)
- Properly render multi-line deny reason (fixes #3103)
- UI changes if current user is banned (fixes #989)
- RSS feed should use local domain (fixes #2012)
- Add button to expand all images (fixes #1273)
- Remove env var LEMMY_UI_DEBUG, use NODE_ENV instead
- Add new modlog filters
- Extend readme
- Improve development instructions to use remote instance
- In search results show number of posts/comments for users/communities
- Add checkbox for title only search (#3220)
- Use params instead of string concat (fixes #1350)
- Setting for community/post notifications
- Extend admin user list with more info
- Allow blocking community that banned you (fixes #3267)
- Multiple language input using checkboxes (fixes #1935)
- More details about crossposts (fixes #3386)
- Instance list changes (fixes #3261)
- Respect link target for post domain (fixes #3256)
- Show community languages in sidebar (fixes #1009)
- Implement donation dialog
- Hide bio for banned users (fixes #961)
- Indicate when registration is disabled (fixes #2070)
- Add icon to indicate new accounts (fixes #2389)
- Remove outline for username button
:::
Or see the full list of changes at the links below:
An open source project the size of Lemmy needs constant work to manage the project, implement new features and fix bugs. Dessalines and Nutomic work full-time on these tasks and more. As there is no advertising or tracking, all of our work is funded through donations. Even so there is barely enough time in the day, and no time for a second job. The only available option are user donations. To keep it viable donations need to reach a minimum of 5000€ per month, resulting in a modest salary of 2500€ per developer. If that goal is reached we can stop worrying about money, and fully focus on improving the software for the benefit of all users and instances. We especially rely on recurring donations to secure the long-term development and make Lemmy the best it can be.
LemmyNet/lemmy-ui
The official web app for lemmy. Contribute to LemmyNet/lemmy-ui development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
like this
reshared this
Easier Development on lemmy-ui
Until now it has been very complicated to work on the official Lemmy frontend, as you had to set up an entire local Lemmy stack with Postgres database and Rust backend built from source. Now there is a much easier way, as lemmy-ui can directly connect to a remote production or test instance.
To get started you need to have git and pnpm installed. Then run:
# for development branch (1.0):
git clone https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy-ui --recursive
# for stable branch (0.19):
git clone https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy-ui --recursive -b release/v0.19
# then:
cd lemmy-ui
pnpm install
LEMMY_UI_BACKEND_REMOTE=enterprise.lemmy.ml pnpm devAlternatively you can use
./scripts/test.sh. Finally open http://0.0.0.0:1234/ in your browser. You can replace the value for LEMMY_UI_BACKEND_REMOTE with any production instance. The local lemmy-ui connects to that instance for all API calls, so you will see the same content. All actions work as usual including login, voting, posting etc.Note, due to breaking changes in the development version, you may need to switch branches. main is for the new 1.0 version and all new feature development is happening there. With this you can connect to the test instance voyager.lemmy.ml. release/v0.19 is the stable branch, with it you can connect to enterprise.lemmy.ml, or existing production instances. Only bug fixes should be made there.
Hopefully this will encourage some of you to contribute to lemmy-ui. If you have any experience with web development it will be easy get started.
Farms are closing without workers. US border policy threatens to empty shelves. | Opinion
Farms are closing without workers. US border policy threatens to empty shelves. | Opinion
Every year, I stand in my family's orchards, worrying if we'll have workers to pick the 6 million pounds of apples or if they will rot on the trees.Linda Pryor, The Courier-Journal (The Courier-Journal)
France: Mass Protests Against Spending Cuts
France: Mass Protests Against Spending Cuts
This leaflet produced by the GRI for the social movement of 2 October follows their previous leaflet distributed on 10 and 18 September.Leftcom
Judge’s $1.5m home destroyed in huge fire as her family is rushed to hospital
like this
notsosure
in reply to davel • • •☂️-
in reply to notsosure • • •like this
ElcaineVolta e TVA like this.
ShinkanTrain
in reply to davel • • •like this
Rozaŭtuno e TVA like this.
goferking (he/him)
in reply to ShinkanTrain • • •like this
PinguinPliskin, Rozaŭtuno e TVA like this.
anomnom
in reply to goferking (he/him) • • •It’s going to always come down to wealth inequality, which is bred by unregulated capitalism, which is bribed into existence by money in politics.
And getting politicians to reject money is impossible since they don’t want to end up on the eating side of the inequality gap.
☂️-
in reply to ShinkanTrain • • •like this
TVA likes this.
PowerCrazy
in reply to ☂️- • • •cfgaussian
in reply to PowerCrazy • • •Dragonstaff
in reply to PowerCrazy • • •Y'all got to take the word "distract" out of your vocabulary. Israel is not committing genocide to distract from the Epstein files.
I don't really know or care much about Greta Thuneberg. But I wouldn't criticize her unless my activism was objectively more effective than hers...and I don't think that describes either of us.
NoiseColor
in reply to ShinkanTrain • • •Effective? Come on.
I mean she's great, gave a voice to what a lot of people have been thinking for decades before she was born. Maybe what most people think today.
But there is really nothing that's effective. It's not dissing her, it's just that the machine is too strong and it's able to even use the opposition to itself for the machines purpose, like the article says.Usually. It didn't work with Greta, so she's just ignored.
chobeat
in reply to NoiseColor • • •like this
Rozaŭtuno likes this.
NoiseColor
in reply to chobeat • • •Sure. Skill issue. Says the skilled warrior changing the world.
Sure. Whatever you say.
chobeat
in reply to NoiseColor • • •like this
Rozaŭtuno likes this.
NoiseColor
in reply to chobeat • • •Your teach? Wow. I thought you are a psychic since you know everything about me from one Lemmy post lol.
I hope you aren't such s duche with you students.
Anyway, in any case it makes sense to asses effectiveness every now and then. For academic purposes of nothing else.
RenLinwood
in reply to NoiseColor • • •porous_grey_matter
in reply to NoiseColor • • •NoiseColor
in reply to porous_grey_matter • • •We have also not abandoned many systems many times, that's not an argument.
Show me the effect and disruption. I'm not against it, just right now there isn't much there.
You can say she was the head of that flotilla and without her it would be at least much smaller and you are right, but in this case, considering what Israel did to them and there is still a lack of any real effects.
porous_grey_matter
in reply to NoiseColor • • •NoiseColor
in reply to porous_grey_matter • • •I am thinking of the political effects. I'm surprised that there doesn't seem to be any after what they did to her and others on the boats.
But on the other hand, the world has stood by for more than half a century of torture of Gazans, so it shouldn't be surprising.
porous_grey_matter
in reply to NoiseColor • • •This stuff takes longer than a news cycle, that was two days ago.
Agreed.
causepix
in reply to NoiseColor • • •"We live in capitalism, its power seems inescapable – but then, so did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings." Ursula K Le Guin
It's been done before, even under more oppressive conditions. It can and will be done again.
NoiseColor
in reply to causepix • • •RenLinwood
in reply to NoiseColor • • •NoiseColor
in reply to RenLinwood • • •RenLinwood
in reply to NoiseColor • • •causepix
in reply to NoiseColor • • •I get it. You find it comforting to believe there's nothing you can do to change things, so you refuse to consume anything that would challenge that notion. Otherwise, you might feel obligated to do something you aren't willing to do, like join a cause or think critically about how you might make change.
I suppose ignorance is bliss, after all, but if you did want to challenge that notion, I'm happy to share the following:
That's only what I could name off the top of my head
It is in this context alone that we see serious peace talks taking place, with Trump and other US negotiators getting directly involved, and Israel actually seemingly motivated to engage in negotiations on Hamas's terms (i.e. their demands for a permanent ceasefire, unrestricted humanitarian aid, full IOF withdrawal, prisoners exchange, resisting the disarmament of their people, etc). That deal most certainly won't be enough, but it's a start. We both know that Israel wouldn't even come to the table without overwhelming pressure to do so. The cracks in the empire are showing and the empire is desperate to close them, but the thing about cracks is they tend to permanently weaken the structures that stand on them.
Shipping giant Maersk divests from companies linked to Israeli settlements
Yarno Ritzen (Al Jazeera)NoiseColor
in reply to causepix • • •Yes, that's all great, but you have completely the wrong assumptions about me and about what I said.
Nevertheless I appreciate that you gathered all that information together.
Jo Miran
in reply to davel • • •like this
TVA likes this.
https://forum.guncadindex.com/u/unexpected
in reply to Jo Miran • • •I don't think it is toxic, as much as it is almost always misused. Read the following and tell me how many people you know have been using the term correctly.
WIKIPEDIA: Liberalism is a political and moral philosophy based on the rights of the individual, liberty, consent of the governed, political equality, the right to private property, and equality before the law.
political and moral philosophy based on liberty, consent of the governed and equality
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)porous_grey_matter
in reply to • • •like this
TVA likes this.
frostedtrailblazer
in reply to porous_grey_matter • • •I wouldn’t say those three things are inherently logically incompatible, but there would be a lot of grey areas.
The power structure of the federal government doesn’t make it any easier to actually exercise the federal government to accomplish helpful objectives, but making things worse is a relatively easy exercise.
The focus on state level politics seems much more meaningful to actually accomplish any goals, since at least there is not as big of a hurdle where land and money have more power/representation than real people.
cecilkorik
in reply to porous_grey_matter • • •They are not logically incompatible, but we will have to make clear and specific decisions about where one ends and the other begins.
Unless you are asking me to live in a society where I must share my toothbrush with others because I am not allowed to keep any private property.
I do believe in private property: with modest, reasonable limits. Which we can and will discuss the details of over time, and I understand that will likely become a heated discussion at times, but I believe it is an inevitable and necessary one. Does that disqualify me from being a leftist? Does it make me a liberal too? Let me know.
queermunist she/her
in reply to cecilkorik • • •porous_grey_matter
in reply to cecilkorik • • •Private property in this context means things which generate/are used to generate capital, not just any kind of object which people might have and use. The important distinction is that capital is social, it is a means of coercing others to do work for you. That's true for a factory, where people work for the owner, or for a rented property where the tenant must work to pay the owner. It's true in a way even for wages - when you spend money you are buying the products of people's labour (which under capitalism was not produced in a just way). It's not the case for your toothbrush.
The distinction that liberalism made was that everyone should in theory be allowed to own private property rather than royals appointed by divine right and hereditary nobility they delegated some power to. Not that in the 1700s we were suddenly allowed to have our own clothes for the first time in history.
cecilkorik
in reply to porous_grey_matter • • •Isn't it though? I didn't make my toothbrush. It came from the toothbrush factory. In fact, it's an electric toothbrush. Which presumably requires a lot of somewhat high tech inputs and resources to create. Would someone have developed this innovation without some economic pressure to do so? I'm not totally convinced. I think there is some role for capital in that sense. Maybe I'm wrong.
Thank you for taking my somewhat tongue in cheek comment so generously though. My humor is not always placed appropriately and doesn't always come across well, but it sometimes provokes people to respond, and I'm simply trying to learn and keep an open mind, and I appreciate your time and effort in sharing your knowledge.
twinklefruit
in reply to Jo Miran • • •I completely agree.
The left needs to stop letting liberals define them.
reallykindasorta
in reply to davel • • •hear hear! Too many people who love the “first they came for” poem who still think Palestine is a pesky wedge issue being used against their boys in blue.
like this
Rozaŭtuno e TVA like this.
RizzRustbolt
in reply to davel • • •She's not that rowdy little girl anymore. Now she's a fierce young woman.
So of course they abandoned her.
like this
Rozaŭtuno e TVA like this.
nfreak
in reply to RizzRustbolt • • •like this
Rozaŭtuno e TVA like this.
🍉 Albert 🍉
in reply to davel • • •Greta could have become a very rich liberal grifter.
keep them Davos cheques coming in.
instead she's risking her life to help those humanity has abandoned.
respect
like this
Rozaŭtuno e TVA like this.
Quadhammer
in reply to 🍉 Albert 🍉 • • •And you got leftist piling on liberals for some reason
Edit: oh shit I'm in .ml my bad(not really) lol hey at least you don't ban dissent I guess
Edit 2: Leftists once again can't see the forest for the trees with your ideological purity test pitted against defeating a common enemy. For people so smart you really need to understand that your power lies with NUMBERS
Grapho
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Wym some reason? Y'all get off too easy imo.
Stop with the woe is me shit, you know perfectly well how complicit y'all are.
Quadhammer
in reply to Grapho • • •Grapho
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to Grapho • • •Grapho
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to Grapho • • •KimBongUn420
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Shitlibs even too lazy for wikipedia
Quadhammer
in reply to KimBongUn420 • • •causepix
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to causepix • • •KimBongUn420
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Shitlibs even too lazy for wikipedia
Quadhammer
in reply to KimBongUn420 • • •KimBongUn420
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to KimBongUn420 • • •BrainInABox
in reply to Quadhammer • • •"I believe in personal liberty over economic system"
Quadhammer
in reply to BrainInABox • • •BrainInABox
in reply to Quadhammer • • •ZeroHora
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to ZeroHora • • •causepix
in reply to Quadhammer • • •You not wanting to understand what we're telling you does not make us the morons.
edit:
Doesn't it? Where do you draw the line between taxes and government seizure, especially in the context of capital owners? Also, wouldn't it be far more effective for the government to simply own the means of production and operate at the behest of the people? Does taxing capitalists more while still allowing them to have full control over the means of production - which they'll use to influence the people and government in their favor - not simply set up the same situation we find ourselves in now, just some amount of time down the road?
I would say it does set that up (in fact it has in the past, just look at what was in the new deal and how it's been eroded since it was signed. Assuming you're familiar with US history...), and that is why liberalism is incompatible with anti-capitalism.
Quadhammer
in reply to causepix • • •causepix
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to causepix • • •causepix
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to causepix • • •causepix
in reply to Quadhammer • • •lol that's not what I'm referring to. What they call themselves doesn't matter, what matters is whether their policies/laws and/or philosophy/ideology align with neoliberal principals. In other words; we only care about the material reality of the matter. This is because Marxists follow a framework called dialectical materialism.
Words, especially those which a politician or lawmaker uses to market themselves to the public, are not material. They can't be measured in any meaningful way and they don't necessarily reflect reality. (You can, however, measure the material indications and effects of those words if you're inclined to do so, but that's besides my point.)
1938: Dialectical and Historical Materialism
www.marxists.orgRenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to RenLinwood • • •RenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •WizardofFrobozz
in reply to Quadhammer • • •“For some reason”
Liberals in the US are MAGA enablers. To the last individual.
Quadhammer
in reply to WizardofFrobozz • • •WizardofFrobozz
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to WizardofFrobozz • • •causepix
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to causepix • • •causepix
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to causepix • • •causepix
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Communism operates under what was referred to by Marx as a 'dictatorship of the proletariat', which we regard as complete liberation of the working class, because it allows the public to have control which is simply not possible under the liberal framework of "personal liberty for all". Under the liberal framework, even the smallest most democratic intervention is decried as "government overreach"; that is, if it is even made democratically possible in the first place.
Which isn't totally incorrect, because what you're talking about isn't "personal liberty for all". You exclude billionaires. Us socialists/communists exclude capitalists as a whole, because the sole interest of a capitalist is to enrich themselves at the direct expense of the working class and our liberty. Billionaires are certainly the worst and most visible offenders, but a materialist lens allows one to see that each and every capitalist serves interests that are fundamentally in conflict with those of the working class. To operate any other way would be to betray their own interests, and wouldn't make for a very effective result.
Liberation will only come when the working class has the power to decide collectively how our resources will be used, which will only come when we have majority control over the means of production, which will eventually lead to the capitalist class becoming completely obsolete. Liberation means being able to provide for our needs above anything else; for the sake of our humanity alone, and from the work that we are already doing; rather than our labor power being extracted for private gains and our needs provided only to the extent that it serves capitalists' profit motives.
Quadhammer
in reply to causepix • • •causepix
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Why is that? Have you ever spent time thinking about how that would be any more or less possible under the current system than, say, seizing the wealth of billionaires and socializing it back to the working class? How would the latter ever be possible by any means short of revolution, especially now if Trump gets his way? What will you do when the ruling class doesn't put that kind of relief on the table? How much oppression and destruction will you consent to, if you believe liberation is not possible and things can only get worse from here?
If you don't believe in it, you won't fight for it. It's a self fulfilling prophecy. That's exactly why our system does everything in its power; both to obscure revolutionary working class history, and to inflate the state's ability to repress dissent. So I'll repeat this until the day I die: it's been done before under worse circumstances.
Russians and Cubans were under brutal dictatorship. Haitians were completely enslaved by one of the most powerful colonial forces in their time. Vietnamese guerillas successfully fought off invasion by the single most militaristic nation in the world, and they aren't alone in having done so (see North Korea, Afghanistan, Iraq, so on). If I could speculate, I'd say China's political and economic situation in 1950 is a pretty reasonable outcome for the direction we're heading now in the US. Regardless of how you feel about what came after each of these struggles, the factual reality is that these weren't armies sponsored by any state. These were working class people fighting directly against the states that profited from their exploitation.
All of those people got organized and won liberation from their domestic oppressors, doing their part to weaken the empire, despite what would seem as insurmountable odds to a disorganized worker. It's on us now to organize ourselves against our own oppressors, to get them off both our backs and theirs, and we can't do that without maintaining optimism about our ability to win should we fight. We know that Fascism can only exist for so long until it cannibalizes itself. As a collective we are capable of beating it long before that comes to pass. If we allow the state to beat that optimism out of us then we are only greatly delaying our liberation and doing the ultimate disservice to our people.
Quadhammer
in reply to causepix • • •causepix
in reply to Quadhammer • • •I don't think we should waste our time trying to convince fascists of anything (most of whom are the wealthy elites we outnumber anyways), other than by carrying out the consequences of their actions. Their interests are simply not aligned with ours.
That's okay though, because threshold number of people required to disrupt the system and make real change is much smaller than you would think. All it takes is coordination between those of us that believe in upholding the dignity of the working class, and we gain that coordination by organizing and spreading class consciousness.
The thing is that most of the everyday people in the US already agree with us. Even Republican voters. Most people believe that housing, food, and healthcare should be affordable; that there should be real solutions to homelessness and crime; even bodily autonomy (pro-choice, gender affirming care) is popular among the people. It's just that neither party puts up real solutions, both of them make excuses for why those things are not possible, and the Republicans are really good at making up scapegoats and creating non-solutions that sound really good to someone already conditioned to accept them, which the Democrats generally play along with and split the difference rather than putting up any real challenge or counter-argument.
As for the aesthetics of socialism, even Castro eventually had to spell out that it was, in fact, socialism that was responsible for all the gains they had made since their revolution - that the bogeymen they were so afraid of were simply projections made by their former oppressors. Working class consciousness doesn't have to be 100% before anything can ever happen. It can grow as a result of our success after the fact.
::: spoiler Excerpt from Fidel Castro's Speech on Marxism-Leninism
Source: marxists.org/history/cuba/arch…
:::
Fidel Castro speaks on Marxism-Leninism 1961
www.marxists.orgRenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •m532
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Galactose
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to Galactose • • •RenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to RenLinwood • • •RenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to RenLinwood • • •RenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to RenLinwood • • •RenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to RenLinwood • • •RenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to RenLinwood • • •nullpotential
in reply to Quadhammer • • •how much time you got
Zachariah
in reply to nullpotential • • •prole
in reply to Quadhammer • • •RenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to RenLinwood • • •RenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •Quadhammer
in reply to RenLinwood • • •RenLinwood
in reply to Quadhammer • • •DancingBear
in reply to davel • • •Liberal ‘leaders’ abandonment. There needs to be an understanding that leadership is no longer following the will of the people in the United States. On either the left or the right. This fact is more of a cause of why things are so crazy than anything the people are doing or wanting
At least in the United States
Also: Israel is currently a terrorist state
like this
Rozaŭtuno likes this.
SupremeDonut
in reply to DancingBear • • •like this
Rozaŭtuno likes this.
RememberTheApollo_
in reply to davel • • •like this
Rozaŭtuno e TVA like this.
krooklochurm
in reply to RememberTheApollo_ • • •The current anger with Sanders appears to be, from an outsiders pov, that he didn't criticize Israel by calling it a genocide soon enough.
That appears to be it.
I mean. To dismiss everything because one mistake, even if that mistake is massive, and then correcting that mistake, if belatedly, to me, says something very positive about that politician.
I'd prefer it was immediate, and it's gross that it took him so long, but all the other stuff isn't cancelled out by that. He's still a net positive. And he DID criticize earlier than any other us politician I can think of, and sure it
Could have been even earlier and harsher, but like. Fuck. If you hate politicians for being open to changing mind based on new evidence, or reforming beliefs you don't like, or admitting mistakes, you are AGAINST them being rational and it plays right into the hands of neoliberal propagandists.
like this
TVA likes this.
magguzu
in reply to krooklochurm • • •There's more, he criticized protests against ICE in LA turning into riots, and had some nice things to say about Kirk after he was killed.
That said I think it's really unproductive for people to turn on him after he was a big spark in a movement and is still outspoken. He has irritated me a few times lately but he's still one of the most influential leaders.
eldavi
in reply to krooklochurm • • •even if it's clear that he's been doubling down on that mistake when presented with the evidence and then only switched it's become clear that the tide has begun turn?
krooklochurm
in reply to eldavi • • •Better late than never?
Would you rather the kind of politician that just lies constantly?
like this
TVA likes this.
BrainInABox
in reply to krooklochurm • • •eldavi
in reply to krooklochurm • • •causepix
in reply to krooklochurm • • •They specifically mentioned the liberal establishment. You're talking about criticism from people that probably abhor the liberal establishment even more than they do progressive liberals like Bernie.
Also I think this kind of criticism is important and I don't know why it bothers people so much. It's okay to be critical of things you ultimately support, either for ideological or simply for tactical reasons. It's called critical support, and I think people should do it more often. Even if the criticism isn't ultimately supportive, that doesn't mean all of a person's hate is directed in that single place. There may be more than just the surface level WHAT, like the WHY of it all and what that implies, that you are missing (or dismissing).
You have to stand for something or you'll fall for anything, and refusal to engage in critical analysis - pretending any politician can do no wrong (or the contrary case; can do no right), getting defensive, and outright rejecting any investigation to prove or disprove your conclusion - does not fall into the category of 'standing for something' to me but rather overzealous team sports.
We have to practice more critical thinking, despite how badly our political class does not want us doing that. Whether it helps any specific politician win an election or not (which you can still do even with criticisms). Especially considering that it's this kind of criticism that has made it untenable for a growing number of politicians to deny the genocide in Palestine; it's pretty clear that the only needle that uncritical support will move is that of the progressives, towards the liberal end of the spectrum. After all, it's our criticism of the current system and its complicity in human suffering that makes us progressive in the first place.
like this
TVA likes this.
FlyingCircus
in reply to krooklochurm • • •like this
TVA likes this.
BrainInABox
in reply to krooklochurm • • •prole
in reply to RememberTheApollo_ • • •This is where there really is a distinction between "liberal" and "leftist" or "progressive."
I would not call any of those three people "liberals."
like this
TVA likes this.
Don_alForno
in reply to RememberTheApollo_ • • •like this
TVA likes this.
BrainInABox
in reply to Don_alForno • • •Galactose
in reply to davel • • •On the other hand look at the Right wing Clowns celebrating the kidnapping of Greta.
I may not like Greta, but credit where credit is due, She's brave. (Also Fuck NuxTaku you zionist pig, I heard your family is in Israel)
- YouTube
www.youtube.comlike this
TVA likes this.
RaivoKulli
in reply to davel • • •spoopy
in reply to RaivoKulli • • •Nah there's a pretty stark shift right when she started to talk about Gaza.
It's a pretty common trend, anyone that doesn't tow the Israeli party line is pretty quickly outcast or opposed.
like this
TVA likes this.
GnuLinuxDude
in reply to spoopy • • •It's sort of like Malala, and how she remained committed to socialism and Islam. I think ten years ago for a while the western boosters who brought her to international attention thought she'd flip and be a useful stooge. When she turned out to not be, we heard less and less of her.
Same deal with Greta Thunberg, who is something more dangerous than someone who can be bought: she's someone who is principled for climate justice and human rights.
RaivoKulli
in reply to spoopy • • •spoopy
in reply to RaivoKulli • • •NoodlePoint
in reply to davel • • •The left is pretty much splintered into different types of ideologies, levels of hostility towards conservatism, and having wildly different objectives to accomplish, so they could not agree with each other and thus rarely ever win over the right.
The right-wingers? They have unanimous hatred towards the left and seemingly united until once they defeat the left, they'll fight and kill each other as to who gets the biggest slice of the pie.
I'm saying this because much of the left are split over this personality.
like this
TVA likes this.
Echo Dot
in reply to NoodlePoint • • •This is how I feel about Jeremy Corbyn in the UK and his stupidly named political party that will go nowhere.
Obstensively he is fairly radically left wing, he's just not radically in favour of actually doing anything. Basically he sits on the sidelines and mutters about genocide being bad (hot take I know) but otherwise just sits there. The only reason he's considered a threat is because his party might actually take votes away from labour but if he won an election nothing would change.
Short of an actual uprising against the corporate elite nothing is going to improve. You can certainly not rely on politicians to be your saviours. That's true globally not just in the US in the UK.
bankimu
in reply to NoodlePoint • • •I am unsure about that.
Although I am not exactly right-winger. I do not believe there is a God, for example.
Long ago - at least that is how it seems now - "right-wingers" were laughably and infuriatingly wrong. They tried pushing evolution in schools. They were against gay rights. And so on.
Now I find that it's the "left-wingers" who are laughably and infuriatingly wrong. They have even managed to malleate how science is defined socially. And science is not the only example - they've lost their minds in crime, immigration, sexuality, racism - everything - and they changed (or tried to change) all definitions. I will not go into any examples because it always starts a debate. But I will say this. If we think math is a "white supremacist construct", then there is something that has gone very, very wrong.
Gold_E_Lox
in reply to bankimu • • •PumpkinSkink
in reply to bankimu • • •twinklefruit
in reply to davel • • •Liberal is a dirty word.
They're conservatives who have gay and black friends.
like this
TVA likes this.
Echo Dot
in reply to twinklefruit • • •like this
TVA likes this.
SabinStargem
in reply to davel • • •like this
TVA likes this.
buttnugget
in reply to SabinStargem • • •Echo Dot
in reply to buttnugget • • •like this
TVA likes this.
_cryptagion [he/him]
in reply to Echo Dot • • •like this
TVA likes this.
Garbagio
in reply to davel • • •Sam_Bass
in reply to davel • • •