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squaresinger

@feddit.de

squaresinger 324 points 3 years ago

It's pretty easy to explain: It's complicated.

Basically, it's a conflict that had been running for a really long time.

Before WW1, the area of Israel/Palestine was inhabited by Arabs and controlled by the Ottomans.

During WW1, the Brits promised the Arabs that they'd back an independent arab state there, if the Arabs revolted and successfully kicked out the Ottomans.

The Arabs did their part, so Britain, being as trustworthy as ever, turned around and divvied the Ottoman empire up between them, and Britain got control over what was then called Mandatory Palestine, which the Arabs saw as a betrayal. The official plan was for the Brits to rule the Mandate "until such time as they are able to stand alone".

At the same time, the Zionist Jews wanted to have a national state, where they could live without persecution, and many European nations, where antisemitism was rampant, wanted them gone from Europe, so they kinda had an agreement there. The original plan was to move them to a part of Uganda, but that fell through so Palestine was chosen.

Already long before the national state was created, lots of Jews moved there and created settlements. The Arabs there weren't exactly happy about that massive influx of settlers and the Jews also weren't happy about the natives. Each of them started an uprising over the following years, and with tensions rising, the UN drafted a partition plan.

While the opinion of the Jews over that partition plan was ambivalent, though leaning towards being happy about it, the Arabs were decidedly unhappy about it. They thought, that the UN was overstepping it's rights and that the partition plan was violating the principles of self-determinism set forth by the UN charter.

So a war broke out between the Arabs (including surrounding arab countries) and the Jews there, which resulted in a victory for the Jews. After that, the area was divided up between Jewish Israel, the west bank area controlled by Jordan and inhabited by Arabs, and the tiny area called Gaza strip, controlled by Egypt and inhabited by Palestinians.

The area the Palestinians received after the war was significantly smaller than what was outlined in the UN partition plan.

In 1967, during the six-day war, Israel captured the Gaza strip and it's been under Israeli occupation ever since. In 1993, Israel granted the Gaza strip limited self-government over the area. Basically, Gaza was allowed to self-government about matters of the populated areas, but Israel remained in control in regards to the airspace, the territorial waters and all border crossings except the one towards Egypt, which is controlled by Egypt.

In 2007, Hamas took over the government of Gaza. Most of the world classify them as a terror organisation, and they have been e.g. shooting home-build missiles into Israel and also have mounted a few small-scale insurrections and attacks against Israel.

Israel on the other hand has been casually bombarding and killing Palestinians for a very long time. Also, they let Israeli settlers illegally settle in occupied Palestinian territories, which the Palestinians are not so happy about.

From 2008 until 2020, roughly 5600 Palestinians and 250 Israelis (including many civilians on both sides) have been killed, and 115 000 Pakistanis and 5600 Israelis have been injured (source: https://www.statista.com/...).

The Gaza strip is pretty much an outdoor prison, with a massive population density, low life expectency and abysmal living standards. People are generally not allowed to leave from there. Israel routinely cuts water/electricity, which are both supplied by Israel in response to attacks from Palestine.

All in all, it's a right mess that's been brewing for over 100 years, with no easy solutions. By now, everyone who has been responsible for causing the original mess is dead. Of the leadership neither side is in the right, both sides are making everything worse. There is no solution in sight.

The Palestinians fight the oppression by killing civilians, the Israelis counter by killing civilians and making life even more hell for the people in the occupied territories, who in turn fight even harder and kill more civilians.

Reducing oppression is hardly possible, since that would allow the Palestinians to mount bigger attacks.

Which brings us to the current situation. Palestinians managed to break out of Gaza, at many places even destroying the perimeter fence. They then invaded some towns and a music festival in the border regions, killing a few hundred Israeli civilians and taking some more hostage. Israel countered by bombarding the Gaza strip, killing a few hundred Palestinian civilians. They also, again, cut power and electricity, and the whole western world then responded with cutting food supply.

This in turn will radicalize the Palestinians even more, who will fight harder, and who knows where it ends. Probably with the Israelis finally finding the same answer to "the Palestinian Question" that Germany found for the "Jewish Question" in the 1940s.

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squaresinger 216 points 3 years ago

The part about Google isn't wrong.

But the second half of the article, where he says that AI chatbots will replace Google search because they give more accurate information, that simply is not true.

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squaresinger 174 points 3 years ago

Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Lubuntu, Ubuntu Budgie, Ubuntu Kylin, Ubuntu MATE, Ubuntu Studio, Xubuntu, Edubuntu, Mythbuntu.

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squaresinger 154 points 3 years ago

Unpaid overtime.

Framing "fulfilling your contract" as "silent quitting".

In what other context would be "delivering what's in the contract" anything less than satisfactory?

When I buy a litre of milk and the box contains exactly a litre of milk it isn't "silent stealing" either.

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squaresinger 120 points 3 years ago

Both where fighting against fictional problems.

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squaresinger 119 points 3 years ago

All in all, the / is just one style of abbreviation used in English. It's not only used for "with", but also a few other words (w/o = without, N/A = not applicable).

In German we abbreviate using a dot (e.g. "m." = "mit" = "with). That's not more or less intuitive, it's just what you are used to.

What's kinda special with English is that there are multiple abbreviation styles. Off the top of my head I can think of six styles:

  • Abbreviate random parts of words using a slash: "N/A", "w/", "w/o"
  • Abbreviate keeping only the first letter of a word using a dot: "e.g."
  • Abbreviate keeping the first and some random later consonants (and sometimes consonants that aren't in the word at all) without using punctuation: Dr, Mr, Ms, Mrs
  • Abbreviate using acronyms and no punctuation: BBC
  • Abbreviate using acronyms and dots: B.C.
  • Abbreviate by substituting parts of the word with a single letter: Xmas (Christmas), Xing (Crossing)
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squaresinger 111 points 3 years ago

Good, that we have specialists for both and nobody is advocating that everyone should be doing full-stack work... oh wait.

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squaresinger 106 points 3 years ago

Nein, die Öffis finanzieren ist absolut unmöglich. So viel Geld kann man sich nicht leisten. Immerhin haben wir ja auch gar nicht genügend Schilder um ein Tempolimit auf der Autobahn durchzusetzen. /s

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squaresinger 100 points 3 years ago

Klare Sache. Die Statistik hier ist "Active last month". Postet also jemand heute, dann zählt der User als aktiv für ein ganzes Monat.

Der erste Tag des Rückgangs der Nutzerzahl war der 12.7.

Schaut man von dem genau ein Monat zurück, dann landet man "zufällig" genau am ersten Tag des Reddit-Blackouts. Wer also an dem Tag sich einen Account erstellt hat, und einen Post/Kommentar/Like erstellt hat, der zählt als aktiv bis zum 12.7.. Das heißt, der aktuelle Rückgang kommt hauptsächlich daher, dass da die Leute nicht mehr zählen, die mal eben kurz reingeschaut und sich dann wieder verabschiedet haben.

Den Rückgang gibt es so in der Form gar nicht (wenn man in täglich aktiven Nutzern zählt), es waren nur die (monatlich aktiven) Zahlen davor unecht aufgebläht.

Schaut man sich hingegen z.B. die "local posts"-Statistik an, dann geht die recht linear nach oben. Die Kommentare ebenfalls.

Was ich so aus den Statistiken rauslese ist Folgendes:

  • Es sind deutlich weniger Nutzer insgesamt gleichzeitig aktiv gewesen als die "active last month"-Statistik vermuten lässt.
  • Viele haben es sich kurz angeschaut und sind gegangen.
  • Es ist ein solider Teil geblieben, wie man daran sehen kann, dass der Drop nur relativ gering ausfällt, und nicht den Anstieg vor einem Monat spiegelt.
  • Das große Wachstum ist vorerst vorbei. Die Post/Kommentar-Zahlen wachsen linear, was einer gleichbleibenden Aktivität entspricht.
  • Kommentar-Engagement wächst deutlich schlechter als Post-Engagement, was wohl zu vielen Posts mit wenigen Kommentaren führt
  • Die Statistiken, die wir haben, sind ziemlich mau, es gäbe schönere Zahlen, die man hernehmen könnte.
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squaresinger 99 points 3 years ago

Tbh, I don't really get the hate that Ubuntu gets.

I mean, I do understand that people don't like some of the decisions made with Ubuntu (e.g. snap), but especially for people who don't use an OS for the sake of using that OS and just want to use their PC to get stuff done, Ubuntu/Kubuntu are quite good.

You have a mostly consistent UI that can do most important configs without touching CLI. Manuals and simple guides are easy to find, even in other languages than English (which is important for quite a big number of people outside the US).

And contrary to some other, smaller distros, Ubuntu isn't run by just 1-2 people and you can trust in it still existing in 10 years. (Obviously, this is true for many other distros, but some quite widly used distros are run just by a tiny team of hobbyists)

I mean, I'd get the reaction if someone claimed they are Linux users because they use Android (though with enough knowledge you can also get a full Linux distro running on Android in chroot).

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squaresinger 97 points 3 years ago

Tbh, I kinda miss these links. Lemmy has a big discoverability issue, and part of that is that it's impossible to link to a post or comment in an instance-agnostic way.

Links to communities would at least help to find new communities to join.

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squaresinger 96 points 3 years ago

It is really hard to have an unpopular opinion unless you are mentally deranged/a conspiracy theorist.

As evidenced by the comments under this very post. Even when trying most people can't come up with an actually unpopular opinion.

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squaresinger 88 points 3 years ago

If all other executives would earn as much as the guys from Wikipedia, the world would be a better place.

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squaresinger 86 points 3 years ago

The new cable, that is included in the box, is C to C, both male, so there is literally no issue. Apple is just butthurt that they had to ditch lightning.

And probably they want to redirect the anger of iPhone buyers from them to the EU.

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squaresinger 85 points 3 years ago

Ist die Ausrede vom Scheuer tatsächlich, dass er so inkompetent ist, dass er nicht mal seine Partei von der AfD unterscheiden kann?

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squaresinger 83 points 3 years ago

Using AI is much more hit and miss than executing the first google result blindly, which has been available since decades. And google didn't cost us our jobs, so I am not afraid of AI.

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squaresinger 80 points 3 years ago

4% is pretty meager considering the current inflation.

And one-time payments to offset a permanently-staying inflation is just ridiculous.

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squaresinger 79 points 3 years ago

I love that story! I tell it every time someone tries to sell me on anarchism.

Christiana was an old military complex that the government gave up on, so anarchist squatters moved in.

Soon they realized, that they needed some way to decide matters that concerned everyone. So they formed small councils, and in these councils they each chose some people to represent them in one big council. These people weren't elected politicians, just people chosen to represent them. They then voted on issues, and no, that wasn't a form of democracy. It's still anarchism.

Then then realized, that the upkeep of common areas and infrastructure costs money, so they required that everyone paid their share. That obviously weren't taxes. Just mandatory contributions.

When organized crime started to spread, they decided on some mandatory rules (you read right: these weren't laws, just mandatory rules that you had to keep if you didn't want to face punishment). Then they chose some strong men that should make sure the rules were followed. No, not police men. Just concerned strong men.

They worked together with Kopenhagen's police. Basically, they'd call the cops and then drag the offenders outside of Christiania to the waiting cops.

Part of the rules were that it wasn't allowed to consume hard drugs or to wear motor cycle gang attire.

So in the end, they had no politicians, no government, no taxes and no police force. Just things that where basically identical to these things. The only thing they really don't have is a prison, because they outsourced that to Kopenhagen.

Anarchism directly leads to a form of government, no matter how you call it.

If you want an opposite example, how anarchism lead to an anarcho-capitalistic nightmare, where the community decended into a rule by organized crime, google the Kowloon Walled City. It's equally interesting.

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squaresinger 78 points 3 years ago

Jeder einzelne von denen wäre ohne den Begrenzungselementen auf der Radspur unterwegs gewesen und hätte Fahrradfahrer gefährdet.

Kommt als nächstes ein Artikel, dass die bösen Randsteine reihenweise Autos beschädigen, die beim Ausparken mal über den Fußweg fahren wollten, oder den Fußweg wegen der Sonne übersehen haben?

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squaresinger 75 points 3 years ago

WIll this also affect all other .ml domains? Or is this some anti-piracy thing? (I don't know fmhy, but from the name I guess it's about piracy.)

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thanks for using Leebra!

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