barsoap @ barsoap @lemm.ee Posts 84Comments 5,123Joined 2 yr. ago
Yeah that was the time where maliciously maligning creeds was made a criminal offence, to stop Lutheran and Catholic preachers alike from inciting people, and religious freedom codified. Fast forward 400 years and Americans are telling us that we're limiting free speech with that kind of thing while basing their identity on the theocracies of New England which they founded because England wouldn't let them oppress people at home.
We did not send our best, and it hasn't gone uphill since. The US slept through the whole Age of Enlightenment. There's some trappings, sure, and their revolution certainly quoted it a lot, but try to find a trace of Kant anywhere in the US. Just consider the US's insistence on a punitive criminal system (instead of rehabilitatory) in the light of the Categorical Imperative. Who, in any sensible state of mind, would consider inflicting suffering to be a desirable universal law.
Don't forget Azure Linux. Yes, Microsoft has a Linux distro.
It's probably produced in the EU, maybe not even by Mondelez itself but some license-taker, but it's still an American brand.
Also it's overpriced. Never came across any store-brand stuff that's worse in any way. The domestic name brand would be Exquisa.
Neal Stephenson, "The Diamond Age". Probably the post-cyberpunk novel. Within the setting the existence and status of phyles is certainly well-grounded, actually quite analogous to bog-standard cyberpunk -- instead of corporations supplanting nation states because they do manage to be more powerful there's a mixture of weak nation states and value/ideology-based tribes which constitute full societies not mere corporations, and have different power specialisations. If you have enough economical power, engineering prowess, hacking prowess, reasoning is that you can not just go toe to toe with nation states you can force concessions.
Also side note there's entities which are not nation states which are (almost) universally recognised as sovereign by proper states: The Holy See, and the Sovereign Military Order of Malta. The latter is more of a protocol quirk, the Holy See actually works actively for that status by being a diplomatic powerhouse without any real-world power to back it up, opens quite a couple of diplomatic doors which would otherwise be closed. They use it to mediate and get stuff like human cloning banned on the UN level, aware that they can't actually push Catholic doctrine (most of the world wouldn't care), but need to convince.
That all said though yes the fever dreams of cryptobros have no place in reality. They're not CryptNet, they just like to larp as it.
We have a protein crop shortfall, most of it goes to animal fodder and is South American soy, the rest is Canadian lentils.
But yes impact in Europe will be minimal, both when it comes to our tariffs because minimising impact is built into them and, apparently, also when it comes to theirs, because Trump doesn't give a fuck about applying tariffs strategically. The rest of the world will be more than happy to buy our alcohol, maybe at slightly lower prices but it's not like it's hard to sell.
Of course it does it's French and overpriced. Buy Rotkäppchen.
The more recession, the more bankrupt millionaires, the more billionaires will be able to gobble up, the higher the chances (now former) millionaires realise that they have more in common with burger flippers than with billionaires.
No way around accelerationist logic when the system is launching itself against a wall and the bureaucrats responsible for system inertia to work against that are running around like headless chicken.
Tariffs will increase until sanity improves. We (that is, the EU) certainly aren't going to back down from a trade war.
No. Stop projecting.
Yes. Like I did by telling you to do that instead of preaching from the pulpit, you're starting to get it.
First comes fodder, then morals. When will US libs understand that. How does it feel there, up on your high horse, telling the pedestrians to stop wearing leather boots they should be vegans?
Try calling for solidarity instead of attacking people for wanting what's due to every human by sole virtue of being human. Food, shelter, those things aren't wishes of someone trying to deny the same to others.
note: “Europe” here refers to imported European culture in America
Yeah I was already wondering it's not like actual Europeans get defensive about our influence. There's nothing European about WASP(ish) culture, they're about as European as chuds with Greek statute avatars are Greek: It's a fetish, a signifier to dangle around in front of one set of people to consider themselves superior, and then hide when they're facing the Old Continent proper, then it's "Europoor", "we pay for your healthcare", whatnot. It's a culture which refuses to recognise itself, and thus is forced to define itself in opposition to others, for doing otherwise would imply acknowledging that the cultural highlight of the year, what everyone is talking about for days and weeks on end, what unifies them as a people, are the ads during superbowl. When pressed, then, you point their mind, deliberately or not, to address the question "are you actually European", and of course they'll get defensive you're attacking the charade surrounding the core of their identity. If I were pressed to describe that kind of culture in a single sentence I would choose a single word: Alienation.
And I still can't find a phone that has a replaceable battery, proper IP rating, and doesn't cost an arm and a leg, alternatively, costs thrice as much as the potato display and CPU would warrant. You can get two of the things, but not all three. I won't even begin to speak of having an unlocked bootloader, or, while having the rest in place, also a flush camera. FFS I'd be fine with no camera I just don't want a hump. I'd be fine with 720p, it's a tiny screen after all, but good contrast and not 8k doesn't seem to be a thing that companies think anyone would be interested it.
Stop fucking innovating, just apply lessons already learned. Design a phone with the mindset of designing a bottle opener.
Alles wie geplant. Wenn die Millionäre in der Rezession pleite gehen können die Milliardäre alles billig aufkaufen.
Teens have a perfectly functional frontal cortex thing is they are still figuring out when to actually use it. They can be perfectly adult one moment, or in a particular area, and completely stupid in the other. Visiting Auschwitz, one might presume, would be a situation where an Israeli teen isn't a rage of hormones. Be that when racing shopping carts.
Sense of right and wrong develops way earlier.
Ireland is luring the EU subsidiaries of those companies to Ireland by being, in comparison to other EU countries, a tax haven. Luxembourg does something similar, that's where e.g. Amazon is.
Without those policies US companies would still have EU subsidiaries as you need to have one to operate in the EU. And a lot more money would stay in the EU, instead of flowing to the US. In short: Trump is complaining that Ireland, to the benefit of US companies, is a traitor to the EU's tax offices.
I have no idea but this article includes a section. German manufacturers feared a tariff war and aren't as exposed to Chinese competition in the first place as unlike e.g. the French German companies aren't competing as much on the low-budget market.
Euro-English pop quiz: Is a bottle of Schnapps an instrument, or a facility?
250k to 600k, depending on estimation, number bought at a time, and also model. The 250k is apparently the cost without taking development expenses into account. Overall, since 2005, probably less than 10k missiles were built so that's also the number without significant economies of scale.
The different models are basically the same but with different amounts of fuel (and thus also longer/shorter), prices shouldn't differ drastically. Basically they started out building a missile that could hit a target when it was launched upside-down, spinning, pointing in the wrong direction, from a jet and then said "well slap a bit more fuel on that, it definitely won't mind launching upright from the ground".
The full list hasn't been announced, the stuff applying from the first of April are the same counter-measures applied last time (which won the trade war) in response to 8bn of harm done by US steel and aluminium tariffs, then another, as of yet unspecified, package will come into force mid-April, responding to another 18bn.
Notably, this is an administrative act and pretty much automatic. Applying the Anti-Coercion Instrument ("trade bazooka") with all the goodies (suspension of IP rights etc) is a political decision, the commission can make a proposal based on its own assessments and complaints, or complaints of member states, but ultimately it's the council which decides whether things get implemented. Qualified majority, that is 55% of states representing 65% of the population, unless fewer than four states vote against at which point the population quorum doesn't apply.
Der Terrorist von Mannheim war in der Nazi-Szene aktiv
Die AfD kann nicht politisch besiegt werden – Das ist der Grund