Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)DO
Posts
0
Comments
14
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • What would you consider “actual histories”?

    I can tell you, as a complete matter of fact from first hand witnesses within my own family, that the Chinese people were definitely starving during the Mao era.

    Of course, they don’t understand that Mao was the reason for it, they have portraits of him on their walls and treat him like a hero. But they were definitely starving.

  • I’m reading through Frank Dikotter’s People’s Trilogy - that’ll give you an idea of what happened after the revolution. Before that, there’s a very good early biography of Mao written by an American journalist Edgar Snow called Red Star Over China.

    Red Star will answer questions on why the Chinese would choose the Communists over the Nationalists.

    Read Red Star first, so that you can be in the mindset of a hopeful optimist excited to see the old Fascist guard of the Nationalists be overthrown.. it makes perfect sense why the nationalists would lose. However: what came after that was an enormous human tragedy.

    Imagine people starving in California - you have a cornucopia of perfect land and the country still manages to accidentally or deliberately murder 100 million of its own people through insistence on ideological purity. Dikotter explains really well how that came to be.

    The next thing I want to read is probably the papers Zhao Ziyang wrote - it would be fascinating to understand why the leaders of the Communist Party decided to ignore the student movement at Tiananmen in 1989 and decided to bring in the army to restore order by killing many of the demonstrators.

    Oh - there’s also a really good documentary named The Gate of Heavenly Peace. That’s a must watch.

    Did they do it out of fear of a repeat of students being used to purge and kill leaders? Was it that they felt democracy still had too many problems? These are in Stanford at the moment, I’m not sure if someone’s made a book with them yet. But Zhao Ziyang wanted a democracy, so it’ll be interesting to understand why he failed at convincing the other leaders in the CCP to have one.

  • I’ve done all three: worked in corps, am a dev, and have done some games dev early career.

    When you dev something, it’s a miracle anything works. All modern software is a giant Jenga pile. When a large project rolls out the door, the feeling is never “oh wow let’s flex on these peasants”, it’s more like “my shit sucks oh god when will it break but try it out and see what you think”.

    If I was on the Bethesda team, I would actually be very interested in trying to get feedback from the only other group of devs that remotely know what it’s like to do something similar. What approaches did they take? What’s similar? What’s different? Did the choices that other team make lead to a better product? How much more elegant is their code?

    The only people who ruin goodwill like that are overzealous IP lawyers.

  • It’s easier to immigrate to Japan than the United States. There are lots of work visas and long term residency can be pretty quick with a professional position. Many of the clerks you see in Japan for ordinary jobs are immigrants from South Asia.

  • I doubt it, Trudeau really has pissed off most Canadians and their Conservative Party is also corrupt as hell. It’ll be better than here for a bit but Canadians in general feel politically stuck and that might not end well. Similar issue in Germany.

  • Last time there were a lot more guardrails, though. It also wasn’t entirely clear if he was going to be a fascist either.

    Honestly a reasonable person in 2016 could consider Trump to even be a moderate Republican (yes, really). Corrupt and lazy, sure, but I was expecting the American equivalent of someone like Rob Ford, not some insane idiot who is begging people in his party to literally rig the vote in his favor.

  • Depends how quickly things devolve. If things get bad too quickly, I may move to China for a bit. Yes, really. I know that’s a bit ironic. But I have family there, so getting residency is trivial for me. Day to day life is chill there, just don’t piss off the party. In America, I’d be considered a political enemy if the Republicans go full fascist, so ironically it would be safer for me.

    I’d hate to lose American working opportunities, salaries, my house, my friends, and my family. But if things devolve really quick I don’t want to be here and that’s my fastest way out.

    If there’s a fair bit of time to move, Japan, Spain, Netherlands, even Germany would all be decent picks for me.

    My long term goal is honestly Japan - competent society, free and open, outstanding food, low pollution, safe for kids to be independent with good educational opportunities, few drug addicts, and high social respect.

  • For me, I assume the Trump voters in my life have fallen for propaganda. Not every Trump voter realized that Trump isn’t in their interest; they’re simple people who think Trump is funny and down to earth and points out many of the serious problems we genuinely do have.

    The issue, of course, is that he’s not going to help fix those problems. He’s going to make the country far worse and is obviously only in it for himself.