knfrmity

joined 2 years ago
[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 2 weeks ago

Are we on the Call of Duty timeline?

Basically simultaneously to his cheating scandal which led to his resignation as CIA director, the 2012 CoD released which portrayed him as being the Secretary of Defense in 2025.

It seemed hilarious then but it's not so crazy now.

Just need an aircraft carrier called the Obama and we're set.

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I wonder what those measures are. The article only says that thirteen were announced, but not their substance.

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I host my own with Pihole and Unbound (which I would recommend if you have the technical expertise). Adguard gives you similar functionality on a hosted service (ie. you don't have to set it up yourself).

In terms of which public servers are good, or at least censorship free, I just checked Google, Cloudflare, and Quad9 and they all resolved RT and Sputnik, sites censored by the EU. I'm located in the EU.

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 11 points 3 weeks ago (5 children)

Not sure where you are, but EU blocks are just at the DNS level. Change your DNS to one that doesn't bother with following EU's silly virtue signaling website bans and you're set.

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 9 points 3 weeks ago

It would be one of those "this is a conspiracy theory spread by Russian and Iranian troll farms" pages.

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I would recommend starting by figuring out why you personally would use a VPN. What specific threats are you facing? What can a VPN help you mitigate? The marketing ("makes you private online") is mostly nonsense, you just move your implicit trust from your ISP to the VPN provider. For example, when you're going things online your local government doesn't like, a VPN may not mitigate that risk.

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 3 weeks ago

Soyuz first flew humans to space in 1967. It's still doing so today, with some revisions in the meantime but fundamentally it's the same system. It's still the cheapest way to space.

Meanwhile the US had to end the space shuttle program for cost and safety reasons, and has only found a way back with SpaceCIA. The shuttle would have been a better system if the military hadn't gotten involved, but capitalists can't separate science from the interests of capital.

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 14 points 3 weeks ago

I like the term the Russians use, golden billion, for how clear and to the point it is, but I'm not going to argue that "global south" is incorrect just because of the DPRK.

Unfortunately westoids call it a "conspiracy theory," because it's apparently not clear that the west lives off the blood, sweat, and tears of the global south.

The golden billion (Russian: золотой миллиард, romanized: zolotoy milliard) theory is a conspiracy theory that a cabal of global elites are pulling strings to amass wealth for the world's richest billion people at the expense of the rest of humanity.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_billion

The whole Wikipedia page on it is hilarious. They quote a neofascist economist to "prove" that resource scarcity isn't an issue, and sourcelessly claim that colonialism/imperialism isn't a thing.

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 22 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Ironically the US could learn half or more of what they need spies to find out if they just made scientific cooperation between the two countries legal and stopped witch-hunting scientists with Chinese and other Asian heritage.

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 41 points 3 weeks ago

But it's fine that Red Hat/IBM is literally a US defense contractor that knowingly participates in crimes against humanity.

Plus the other thousand examples of how Linux, or any western tech, are the product of empire.

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 7 points 3 weeks ago

The photoresist is a component of photolithography, but doesn't determine the process node on its own. The 120nm quoted here is quite advanced compared to the capitalist products I have found advertised (200nm or so).

Photolithography (also known as optical lithography) is a process used in the manufacturing of integrated circuits. It involves using light to transfer a pattern onto a substrate, typically a silicon wafer.

The process begins with a photosensitive material, called a photoresist, being applied to the substrate. A photomask that contains the desired pattern is then placed over the photoresist. Light is shone through the photomask, exposing the photoresist in certain areas. The exposed areas undergo a chemical change, making them either soluble or insoluble in a developer solution. After development, the pattern is transferred onto the substrate through etching, chemical vapor deposition, or ion implantation processes.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photolithography

[–] knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml 19 points 3 weeks ago

I think she's also involved with the Canadian "Victims of Communism" memorial, which is trying to get a bunch of names of Nazi collaborators put up on display near Canada's federal government buildings.

 

I really stepped in it last night. My partner is livid with me for suggesting Stalin wasn't the evil dictator he's made out to be in the west. For a German who grew up with anti-communism and went to some very liberal universities for political science it was too much. They said something to the effect of "this feels exactly like if you said, oh Hitler wasn't that bad, he was actually a good guy." We're in the midst of planning our wedding and they were suddenly at the point of doubting that they know who I am and if this is a relationship they want to maintain.

We have a hard time discussing politics as it is. We are still not so great at interpreting the nuances of way each other speaks, and our background knowledge is very different. So we have to figure out what we do from here.

I can't come at this from the direction of "trying to convert them." They already think I have gone into a conspiracy theory ridden and propaganda laden hole, and believe me, I ask myself the same thing every day. It really weighs heavily on me, as some of our close family members have fallen into conspiracy theory echo chambers.

We've decided we need to go back to basics and make sure our core values align, which I genuinely believe they do. They're an anti-capitalist as well, although don't have a strong idea of what to would be better, just that it shouldn't be communism.

I'm not sure where to go after we sort out what our shared values are.

There's a certain condescension I sense when it comes to the leftist sources I read, many on recommendation from GenZedong members. I'm often met with "leftists just make up all kinds of stuff to suit their narrative," or "how do you know that's a primary or reliable secondary source, it's so easy to fake anything these days." Meanwhile they go to Wikipedia and see that Stalin killed millions and signed a treaty with the Nazis, even as they understand that much of western capitalist media is propaganda as well. We can't have any useful discussion on current events at the moment because we have vastly different knowledge of what's happening, as well as entirely different analytical tools to pick it apart with.

They're also terrified I'm going to say very extreme things in front of their family (privileged petite bourgeois liberals). I try to be careful but at the same time I won't pretend to not be a communist. We have political discussions often and I'm not one to just sit those out. I'm sure my family would react poorly as well, but with the geographical distance to them it's not as present an issue in our minds.

How do you all deal with this? How do you have these discussions and share these ideas with the more soc-dem or liberal minded people in your lives?

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