WebTheWitted

joined 1 year ago
[–] WebTheWitted 4 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Yup. You just made me think of an excellent BBC doc about the topic, would highly recommend if you haven't seen it:

Power of Nightmares

[–] WebTheWitted 4 points 9 months ago

Thank you for taking the time to write out such a well reasoned rebuttal. I'm always on mobile and simply don't have the stamina, but I appreciate all the points you've laid out.

I am always sad when I see the left wing criticisms of the "both sides" argument on Lemmy. Like, I don't necessarily disagree, but I find the whole premise of one side vs another as some of the worst tendencies in democracy at work. I refuse to equate left vs. right == democracy. It's bigger than that.

And speaking of democracy, I think it's really important that everyone be unbiased around what constitutes a threat to democracy. Yes, J6 was objectively bad, and I don't trust Trump to put his big boy pants on in round two. But I'm also alarmed at the lengths to which this legitimate fear is used as a justification for antidemocratic strategy from the DNC.

No matter their political ideology, when people start letting fear inform every decision - and justify their worse impulses - I get reeaaaalll nervous, as should we all.

[–] WebTheWitted 3 points 9 months ago

Hell no to Harris, she has negative charm every interview I've seen, like she has utter contempt for anyone else.

There were 4 opeds in the NYT over the weekend talking about Biden's age, which felt remarkably candid for the elite rag it is. One of them in particular was an "interesting" idea where Biden is swapped out before the convention, but after the primaries / delegates are assigned. Democracy FTW (/s)

Now that I think about it though, why would the aides actually running the white house want a real leader? Seems like they have it pretty good as it is.

[–] WebTheWitted 3 points 9 months ago

Yup, the same dynamic as the right and immigration. More to gain using as a political football instead. The tactics are from the same, cynical playbook, and partisans are happy to play along when it's their team.

[–] WebTheWitted 2 points 9 months ago

Subnautica! That's the first (and better) one IMHO. The sequel is Below Zero.

Might be a little scary for a 4 yo - at least it can be that way for this thirty something.

[–] WebTheWitted 1 points 9 months ago

"They're just like us!"

[–] WebTheWitted 8 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Definitely agree it's not an Illuminati cabal meeting in hoods and masks.

But it's not not that either - there's lots of overlap on boards of directors and VCs invested in these companies. They're in the same circles and probably play golf together. Or, they hang out on the tarmac before their Davos keynotes on saving the world.

[–] WebTheWitted 1 points 10 months ago

Some companies end their fiscal year at the end of January, i.e. FY23 ends January 31, 2024.

[–] WebTheWitted 1 points 10 months ago

Mission Accomplished?

/s

[–] WebTheWitted 1 points 10 months ago

Great call out, I've been keeping up with that saga and it seems things never change when it comes to the US state department.

I'm beginning to feel that the instability caused by US hegemony is a feature, not a bug.

[–] WebTheWitted 7 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

This rhetoric is insane and imaginary considering a number of constraints - army mobilization force, their failure to "eliminate" Hamas, escalating and fighting actual armies like Hezbollah. Even the prison ghetto policy obviously failed on October 7th, so what is the substance of their proposed policy here?

Although I suppose if all they need to do is be "parking lot" security guards it could be pretty quiet.

I really hope the US isn't dumb enough to volunteer our service members to be their new police force.

[–] WebTheWitted 26 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Years of Saudi air strikes with US weapons systems ended in a victory for the Houthis. Not to mention causing one of the worst humanitarian situations of the 21st century.

WTF does the US think it's gonna do other than escalate the situation (and continue the next record breaking humanitarian crisis)?

 

A senator has complained that American law enforcement agencies snoop on US citizens and residents, seemingly without regard for the privacy provisions of the Fourth Amendment, under a secret program called the Hemisphere Project that allows police to conduct searches of trillions of phone records.

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