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2 yr. ago

  • President =/= Prime minister in France

    The president is elected during the presidential elections, he then appoints (a nomination) his prime minister, who will be the head of the government, and in turn nominates his ministers.

    It is common (but not the law) to appoint a prime minister that is from the party that has the parliament majority (through parliament elections that happen after the presidential elections)... Or whenever the president dissolves the parliament prompting new parliament elections. This is what happened here after the results of the European elections).

    If the parliament disagrees with the nominated prime minister, they can hold a "No confidence vote" which forces the nomination of a new prime minister if it passes. So it's not easy to be prime minister because you have to be "accepted" by the parliament. iirc last year the left tried 3 times to vote a no confidence in the previous prime minister, and was very close to succeed every time.

    Usually the president is in charge of international affairs, and the prime minister of the national affairs, but we french have a hard on for king-like figures of state, so the president is kind of seen as the most important person in the government. The prime minister is mostly just his lap dog, a yes man that follows his orders 🥲

  • I played Heroes of Hammerwatch which is the multiplayer equivalent of that game, fun with friends but it keeps making me fall asleep

  • Fascism always walks veiled

  • The far left (NPA, LO) has zero candidates left running in the parliament elections, so I'm not sure why you're bringing them here haha

  • "significantly below" is an overstatement

    250 is extremely close to the majority, and with the more extreme members of the "regular right" and potentially some of the aligning with them, they very well may have control over the parliament

    Macron asked numerous time for the French left to vote for him against the far right then disrespected those voters by pushing far right policies, now his candidates are uncomfortable promising to vote for left candidates against the far right...

  • Ah shit, didn't think about that, sorry

  • I believe they should be broadcast by the national public television (France Television) which you can watch live on https://france.tv/ ; that's if you don't mind french lol

    They may ask for an account but there's no email check, just type whatever and you can watch it

  • I bought The Falconeer yesterday, haven't played it yet, I'm looking at my wishlist and considering more options

  • If there's one thing I disagree with it's your generalisation of Lemmy, unlike Reddit or other centralised social media, there is no overarching culture and ethos that you can sum up in one specific description. Because of its federated nature, you cannot predict the mentality of Lemmy users, every instance is its own thing, and there may be so many reasons why someone would use Lemmy

  • That's super interesting, I do remember being taught as a kid how to use Google Image search (circa 2005), Gimp for photo manipulation around the age of 12 in 2008, we had technology classes with electronics, technical drawing, even some plastic bending machine, and light programming (made a robot figurine execute recorded moves in sequence)

    I do wonder if it's still the case in my own country

  • Computer literacy is weird because it feels like millennials were born into it and had to learn how to use the tools available... Then said tools were made a lot simpler with a lot less control over them, and Gen Z was born into apps and saas and did not have the chance to properly learn

    We generally only taught a single generation to master our tech, I think it's scary, but also I trust the Zoomers to figure it out, they're creative

  • Man what an incredible space, I'm jealous

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  • This is the important paragraph on the article

    Because Proton has no venture capital investors, we can take this additional step to secure the future. Swiss foundations do not have shareholders, so Proton will no longer be dependent upon the goodwill of any particular person or group of persons. Instead, Swiss foundations and their board of trustees are legally obligated to act in accordance with the purpose for which they were established, which, in this case, is to defend Proton’s original mission. As the largest voting shareholder of Proton, no change of control can occur without the consent of the foundation, allowing it to block hostile takeovers of Proton, thereby ensuring permanent adherence to the mission.

  • I don't know why Gabe Newell would die before 75

  • Oh you're right thanks for the correction !

  • When I was thinking about it, I came to the conclusion that sports that don't require confrontation should just evolve and give up on the competitiveness. Swimming, javelin, whatever shouldn't have the winner be the best out of every contestant, we should celebrate each and everyone's force of will to better themselves first. We already have that with high jumping, where individual performance is rated Vs their height goal.

    Give up competitiveness in sports where it isn't needed, and you no longer have people melting down because someone has more muscular mass, or a different gender than expected.

    Give up competitiveness in sports and you return to a celebration of the human body and it's physical prowess, instead of childishly fighting for who's best.

    Obviously this doesn't work in football, or sports with direct confrontation, that i haven't found a solution yet, maybe during the next shower ?