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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/)SW
Posts
14
Comments
732
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Jesus, if you’re still using a browser that like 10 major versions old, you’ve got bigger problems than worrying about a privacy plugin no longer being supported!

    Versions are meaningless. It's just numbering.

    128 came out in July of last year, which means that Firefox will deliberately block use of products after eight months.

    That's fucking garbage. Software development and release lifecycles have turned into a "release-ignore-discontinue" cycle of barely long enough for consumers to constantly upgrade to.

  • Nope. @JohnnyCanck has a good explanation of what just happened, but some other info to add.

    We're heading into a federal election soon, and the Conservative Party (right of the Democrats, and infused with a handful of Trump-level nutbars) held a solid lead for several months. When Trudeau announced he was stepping down, followed by Trump's tarriffs, the lead shrunk to roughly the margin of error.

    Carney is fairly conservative for the Liberal party - he was appointed to lead the Bank of Canada by a (very!) Conservative PM, and then went on to head the Bank of England. He's a money manager for the rich, which is concerning, but also might draw some of the centrists back from the extreme right.

    There's a fair chance that our next government will - again - be a minority, which will require the collaboration of parties, and often is when the most good gets done. Or we might get a CPC/Poilievre majority, in which case we'll be sucking up to Trump like a vacuum for four years.

  • I'm Canadian, and I plan to never visit the USA again.

    Ever.

    There is no "...until" for me. The world without the US is easily big enough for me.

    Two places I always wanted to see were New Orleans and Hawaii. The latter might end up breaking away, but New Orleans is probably off my list forever.

  • True enough, but we can get stopgap gen 4.5 fighters at about half the price of the F-35, and with a vastly lower operational cost.

    Get a fleet of Gripen Es, and run them in parallel with our existing Hornets, replacing the Hornets as they age out over the next decade or so. By then the new GCAP fighter should be in full production.

  • A lot of people - including me - instinctively say "good, let's make it the four eyes and exclude the US."

    But really, we need to do away with the x-eyes program entirely, in its current form.

    Shared intelligence is great, but the biggest advantage to 5Eyes has always been that it indirectly allows countries to spy on their own citizens. It's invasive, illegal bullshit that needs to stop.

  • Screw this "waiting another 10-15 years." We need to join the GCAP program, and get seriously active.

    Lead time is necessarily immense, but we could both shorten it and improve the end product.

    "Waiting for someone else to develop" has been a symptom of Canada's Aerospace industry since the Arrow was shitcanned, and has crept into our national subconscious stream. We need to attack that attitude.

  • I think Canada needs to accept a stopgap measure - the Gripen, Typhoon, Rafale, or Super Hornet - and dive headfirst into GCAP. FCAS is tempting as well, but GCAP is farther along and the countries are probably closer in goals to Canada.

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  • Gen-X guy with possibly too much interest in the subject.

    Shaving it bald for women started to become normal about 15 years ago. Trimming it was more common then, and going back to end of the 1980s, shaving was a rare and weird fetish in the western world.

    As for why, I'd say it's because porn normalized it - and porn did it because as mainstream content became more explicit, shaved pubes were both easier to keep clean for the actresses, and (more importantly) showed more.

    I find it funny that now that it's become mainstream, hair is becoming a growing fetish.

    As an aside, since pubic hair is a sign of sexual maturity, some of the generations that grew up with hair down there have a subconscious connection between bald and sexually immature, i.e. children.

  • Sorry, but this is pathetic.

    edit To be clear, celebrity boxing matches for charity are a common, fun thing. The head coaches of two rival sports teams, or the mayors of different cities do this sort of thing. Sometimes as part of a friendly rivalry when trade negotiations are getting tense, sure.

    But the US is declaring war on us. The time for fun and games with the US is over. We deal with them politically, diplomatically, and economically; and as coldly as possible.

  • I actually has psyche written down, and changed it.

    It's not exactly the normal use of zeitgeist and maybe volksgeist would be a better term (except tthat we don't use it in English), but I feel that this is a relatively new aspect to Americanism, starting in WWII. It's still more of a growth on their psyche than a fundamental part of it.

    It also has some parsllels with British exceptionalism up to the endnof the 19th century

  • I'm a Canadian who has lived and worked in the US, so I've got some familiarity with it.

    There is a pervading sense of exceptionalism buried deep in the American zeitgeist. It runs so deep that most people don't even notice it - even on the outer edges.

    Case in point: My closest friends down there were staunch leftists. In a land of gun owners and meat lovers, they were vegetarians and pacifists who marched in protests against the government. Most of the time they were quiet, charming, soft-spoken, but firm in their beliefs. Pretty much the polar opposite of the "loudmouth American tourist abroad" stereotype.

    And yet if you asked them if the US was the greatest country on earth, they'd say "well yeah, which is why we have to fight for it." An admirable sentiment, but the "well yeah" speaks volumes for how the country sees itself.

    The protest singers who lived through McCarthy are the same. Woody Guthrie and his son Arlo would probably say that for all of its flaws and horror, the US is still the best nation we've got so far.

    When you know deep in your soul that you're the best, it's hard not to let some subconscious arrogance show through.