I set up my mom on Microsoft Outlook many years ago, back when you had to set the server and so on.
She called me a few days later and said her email wasn't working, so I walked her through looking at the options, making sure the right addresses and preferences were checked, etc.
After about 45 minutes, I remembered that I already set everything up correctly and it was working. Then I decided to ask, "are you typing the @ symbol, or are you typing the word at in the email address?"
And from the paragraph you cited: "Berlin police confirmed the incident on their official X account...insisting that the officers had no choice but to use force against protesters who they claim were acting violently."
They say shit like this even when there are hours of video demonstrating otherwise. I'm sure afterward they'll investigate themselves and find no wrongdoing.
These sorts of people aren't really capable of responding to anything other than displays of power; they don't respect anything else.
It just took one CEO getting murdered for other CEOs to panic, to try to make the story about how the CEO was a 'family man' or whatever, for many CEOs to have their pictures removed from company websites--they don't give a shit about ethics, or history, or anything, but they sure as hell do respond to displays of power.
I think maybe just getting a couple of them would prove to be enough.
The story is really what makes it so good--you start to feel invested in the character, in the world, and that helps with getting deeply immersed in the gameplay. It's an incredibly well written game.
Beyond that, the screenshots show a lot--it's a world that feels very lived-in.
Also the gameplay is a ton of fun. Open world, lots of places to explore--some of them beautiful, others treacherous, some both.
I don't think Saleh is saying anything about all police being this way.
But the fact that any of them are like this, and that there are enough of them like this, is a genuine problem for the well-being of regular people.
This isn't an all-or-nothing situation. We can recognize that there are a significant number of police using violence to accomplish political ends without having to make a disclaimer about not all individual police being this way, because there are clearly enough of them behaving this way that there is real cause for concern.
I also just can't really play games that force me to think about my bank account while I'm playing, charging fees or subscription rates just to fully participate in the game, like seeing a bounty hunting mission that requires me to send money before I can start it. Totally breaks the immersion--I play games so I don't have to think about the real world for a bit. Making me enter bank details wrecks that.
Pro-Palestine protestors really seem to get the pigs into a rage. They must believe that they'll be able to get away with it.
And so far, it looks like they have. Right now, in the U.S., the Trumplicans (and Leon) are revoking the visas of international students who took part in protests to support Palestine. I'd guess for every couple we hear about there are a hundred more we don't.
It seems strange the countries all over the world are using similar violence against anyone protesting the Zionist genocide.
Yeah. With power distributed the way it is now though (mostly concentrated in the hands of a small number of wealthy, connected people), every technological advance will be used against us. These technological advances could really make for a better life for everyone, but not when they're absolutely dominated by entities whose only real objective is taking as much from us as they possibly can.
This occurred about 20ish years ago. Mom had never touched a computer in her life before getting the laptop.
And, this is the same woman who got a new phone and sent me a text that said 'do you like my new phone?'