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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/)GR
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225
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I actually switched back to Firefox (from chrome) about 5 or 6 years ago because I liked the interface more. And I still like the Firefox design decisions more than what chrome is doing.

    Privacy is nice too but people come to Firefox for lots of reasons.

  • Yeah, so? Name a Republican president who did a better job. Because I'll take sleepy joe over George W. Bush any day.

    Also we're talking about politicians and presidents here. We don't have kings here in the US, a president is only a piece of an administration. Even if Trump wins and they make president a more dictatorial role, he'll still only be a puppet to other powerful people.

    I'm genuinely not sure what people want out of politics? Like do you want some sort of god king to come down from their city on a hill and to fix everything to be perfectly moral? Politics is messy and full of compromise. It sucks, but in the grand scheme of things a president can only steer the trajectory of the country a little bit.

  • Yeah I agree, it's not a very good graph. I just get frustrated when people ridicule the US political system for everything. We have a lot to fix (like what's causing women to become more liberal), but I think we need to focus on what's actionable and reasonable to fix. We can't become +20 more liberal overnight.

  • The graph is about young people, not the entire population. Young people in America are historically more progressive than older people.

    Also why does liberal and conservative have to be on an absolute scale? The words liberal and conservative seem to me at least be about pushing politics in one direction or another. Because policy is always subject to change, shouldn't the words liberal and conservative be relative to the political system they exist within?

  • The engineer guy on YouTube did an episode the engineering method explaining how ancient and medieval Masons built stuff without math. https://youtu.be/_ivqWN4L3zU?si=2N_iyZiBD8eDpltR

    Though I am sure the Romans used plenty of math during the construction of many of their projects.

  • Now that you mention it, I seem to remember Xenophon stumbling across giant ruins that perplexed him while out on campaign. I think they were Persian? It very much could be drawing on the experiences of people seeing the ruins of fallen empires.

    Edit: AI is telling me that Xenophon traveled through the impressive ruins of Assyrian cities, he was fighting the Persians.

  • This is why I could never be a cop. Someone skips over a turnstile in front of me, and all I would think is: "not even enough money to buy my next coffee, let alone the donut"

    Like why care about public transport? There's plenty of real crimes to handle in NYC.

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  • You're probably right, but guns like the ones they used can be obtained legally making them much easier to be obtained illegally. I'm not an expert on gun policy, so I can't tell you how we should restrict access to guns.

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  • I read Birmingham and for a second thought this might not be in the US, oh how foolish I am.

    I used to think that gun laws/ownership in the US was workable, I know lots of responsible gun owners, and have shot a couple guns myself. But I'm just tired of all these mass shootings, at this point maybe we should just get rid of them.

  • The inuit folk I've talked to said that sometimes they have to shoot a polar bear if it's harassing the village. When they kill one, it's not uncommon to find bullets in it from the last time it was harassing a village. Polar bears are big and scary and we are destroying their habitat.