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Environment @beehaw.org

Report Names Donors Bankrolling Climate Change Disinformation In The U.S.

Technology @beehaw.org

Systems used by courts and governments across the U.S. riddled with vulnerabilities

Animals and Pets @beehaw.org

The only place where whales come to watch you

Politics @beehaw.org

Internal emails from Springfield, Ohio reveal what has happened in the city after U.S presidential candidate Trump and his running mate Vance spread the conspiracy that Haitians are eating pets

World News @beehaw.org

Chinese students in Canada accuse Beijing of targeting them and their families back in China with online threats, harassment — part of a campaign to crack down on dissent abroad

Politics @beehaw.org

U.S. Government Agencies Flooded with Information Requests: Have Government Employees Mentioned Climate Change, Voting or Gender Identity? The Heritage Foundation Wants to Know.

Canada @lemmy.ca

Chinese students in Canada accuse Beijing of targeting them and their families back in China with online threats, harassment — part of a campaign to crack down on dissent abroad

Feminism @beehaw.org

Afghanistan: How the Taliban’s new ‘vice and virtue’ law erases women by justifying violence against them

Science @beehaw.org

Penguin chicks miraculously survive tearaway iceberg

Entertainment @beehaw.org

Kris Kristofferson, Songwriting Legend and Actor, Dies at 88

U.S. News @beehaw.org

Lawmakers passed a law designed to limit reproductive rights in Louisiana. But it may also limit patients’ chances of surviving common life events like miscarriages and births.

Politics @beehaw.org

The New York Times is failing the U.S.: a great news organization would care more about democracy than entertainment.

World News @beehaw.org

The case for giving Ukraine long-range striking power in Russia --

Technology @beehaw.org

Tor Project & Tails Join Forces -

World News @beehaw.org

Rights group exposes German carmaker Volkswagen’s sham audit in China's Xinjiang region: leaked document reveals misleading claims and forced labor risks

World News @beehaw.org

An Afghan child bride won the right to divorce - now the Taliban say it doesn't count

World News @beehaw.org

Mass walkout as 'global pariah' Netanyahu addresses UN General Assembly: public rebuke of Israeli PM, said one observer, "demonstrates the international community's rejection of genocide"

Politics @beehaw.org

U.S. vice presidential candidate JD Vance to do town hall with Christian nationalist who thinks we are all literal demons

Politics @beehaw.org

'This is not trivial stuff’: The Republican's Project 2025’s plan to ally the U.S. with authoritarians worldwide --

World News @beehaw.org

'Slowly killing' Jimmy Lai: After the protests of 2014, freedoms in Hong Kong have further eroded, with one of the city’s leading pro-democracy figures facing life in prison

  • One thing that's obvious here on Lemmy is that whataboutism works only in one direction. If an article is critical of China, Russia, Iran, or other dictatorships, you'd read, "But about U.S./EU/the West". But there are tons of articles here critical of Western countries, and it's accepted. Why is this? Just wumaos?

  • It raises some good points. It's also said that there is 'nothing people can do' about surveillance. For those interested, there is a good documentary what happens if and when someone tries to do somethong about it:

    Total Trust

    Total Trust is an eye-opening and deeply disturbing story of surveillance technology, abuse of power and (self-)censorship that confronts us with what can happen when our privacy is ignored. Through the haunting stories of people in China who have been monitored, intimidated and even tortured, the film tells of the dangers of technology in the hands of unbridled power. Taking China as a mirror, Total Trust sounds an alarm about the increasing use of surveillance tools around the world – even by democratic governments like those in Europe.

    If this is the present, what is our future?

  • I suppose that's the mechanism they're using to centrally manage the economy, by controlling fund transfers to lower levels of government.

    I would agree with this view. The local governments are responsible for the majority of spendings (including pensions, health care), but they can barely raise funds themselves.

    The central government has already said that the new debt will be forwarded to the local government, and that it will be 'off-budget', meaning the money goes to LGFVs. The future will tell us how this ends up, but the risks are high imo given the country's debt burden is so much higher than in most other countries as you suggested.

  • The real change in retail pricing might be discrimination pricing (or 'surveillance pricing' as it is now called sometimes). Simply speaking, it uses personal data to personalize prices not just for each customer, but also for each customer depending on actual circumstances such as day time, weather, an individual's pay day, and other data, collected through apps, loyalty cards, ...

    As one article says, there is One Person One Price:

    "If I literally tell you, the price of a six-pack is $1.99, and then I tell someone else the price of a six-pack for them is $3.99, this would be deemed very unfair if there was too much transparency on it,” [University of Chicago economists Jean-Pierre] Dubé said. “But if instead I say, the price of a six-pack is $3.99 for everyone, and that’s fair. But then I give you a coupon for $2 off [through your app] but I don’t give the coupon to the other person, somehow that’s not as unfair as if I just targeted a different price.”

    The linked article is a very long read but worth everyone's time. Very insightful.

  • ... it's actually about confidence in asking for more upfront

    I think this is a good point. I'm wondering whether one reason why men still earn more than women could be that men negotiate more assertively for themselves than.women do because of gender roles that are deeply ingrained in our society.

    It could be that girls are still expected (and brought up) to be accommodating, concerned with the well-being of others, while boys are taught how to.compete and being profit-oriented. Are girls and women still considered to be relationship-oriented from an early age, while boys and men are expected to be assertive?

    If so, women may feel more uncomfortable negotiating their salaries forcefully over fears of some sort of 'social backlash' in the labour market and in the workplace.

    I say 'could' and 'may' and conclude that I don't know whether that's reasonable. I don't know of any research in this field but I am not an expert on gender studies.

    (But, yes, I would also assume that pay gaps exist within male and female groups for similar reasons. Not all women and men are alike.)

    Addition: To whom it may concern: Just stumbled upon the Institute for Women's Policy Research in the U.S., they seem to have a lot of research.

  • After the Trump verdict, most Republicans say they're OK with having a criminal as president

    Last week, Donald Trump was convicted on 34 felony charges in the hush-money case against him. Compared to before the verdict, the biggest changes we found in a post-conviction poll conducted between May 31 and June 2 are in Republicans' positions on felony, crime in general, and the presidency. They have shifted in a way that puts the verdict in a more favorable light and keeps Trump's candidacy viable. For example, fewer Republicans think it should be illegal to pay hush money for the purposes of influencing an election than did a year ago, and more now say felons should be allowed to become president than did a few months ago.

  • You can't make such a decision based on simple financial calculations, not in the least as there is no way to make reasonable predictions in our current market environments. Ask any investment advisor, and they will tell you to buy your home if you can afford it.

    This is off-topic: Why is the NYT accessing the camera when going to the linked article?

  • Israeli activists battle over Gaza-bound aid convoys

    Months after some Israelis started to protest against aid lorries entering Gaza at the main Kerem Shalom crossing, the battle has moved to other key junctions, where rival groups of activists do their best to block or protect aid convoys [...]

    Right-wing activists, including Jewish settlers living in the occupied West Bank, have uploaded dozens of videos of crowds, including some very young children, hurling food onto the ground and stamping on boxes of aid.

    You'll find a short video embedded in the linked article.

  • I doesn't seem so given Israeli officials' statements. But it will have a long-term political impact if Israel ignores that imho. It could lead to a higher degree of 'diplomatic isolation' for Israel and its allies for a long time. That's just my opinion. And there're arrest warrants, too.

  • As international support for an independent Palestine grows, here’s what Israelis and Palestinians now think of the two-state solution

    With the announcement by Norway and Ireland that they have recognised Palestine as an independent state, and Spain expected to follow suit by the end of May, it appears that international momentum for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is growing.

    The concept has long been supported by the US and its allies, as well as most Arab states and the United Nations [...] Could things be different under different leadership? To answer this, we need to know whether the Israeli and Palestinian people could be persuaded to accept such a plan. Here it’s worth taking a look at what polling tells us.

  • Just stumbled upon this:

    Academic calls for upgrade to sewage systems to protect health

    The risk to public health from human faeces in our [UK] rivers and seas will increase without action to create a wastewater system fit for the future, according to Professor Barbara Evans, Leeds’ Professor of Public Health Engineering at the University of Leeds.

    The report [led by Professor Evans]says collective action by industry, government, public bodies and the general public is required. It makes 15 recommendations, including: review current bathing water regulations; prioritise maintenance of the existing sewage network; return to collecting widespread data on faecal bacteria; develop a long-term strategy for better designing cities to reduce flooding, and the appointment of a dedicated wastewater champion.

    Here is the report (pdf).

  • You can't build and scale a start-up fast enough, say, in case of a crisis. Furthermore, China will use such investments to gain political influence in the foreign country -in that case Canada-, and they won't stop in this particular industry. Countries must think more in vertically-integrated supply chains and strategic clusters rather than in industries, and they must include geopolitical issues.

  • This article is highly biased and misleading imo.

    First of all, it doesn't make sense to compare economic policy performance by a single metric, be it inflation or GDP or anything else, let alone if you compare economies in different periods.

    For example, the high inflation during president Carter's term was mainly due to the oil crisis in the 1970s. President Biden started his term in 2020 - right when the pandemic broke out and subsequent interruptions of global supply chain caused a soaring inflation. You may or may not agree with both presidents' economic policies, but you can't obviously blame Carter or Biden for the oil crises and the pandemic, respectively.

    The articles also says:

    Neither the Fed nor economists in general view housing prices as inflation. The economic illiterates do not count asset prices in general as inflation.

    The 'economic illiterates' use inflation to measure prices of consumer goods and services but explicitly not to measure prices of assets. This is why rent can reasonably be part of such an index, but house prices probably not (exactly because a house is an asset and not a consumer good). This is also one reason why you should always look at a dashboard of metrics and interpret them to the individual circumstances (e.g., in different epoches, cultures, etc.) rather than looking at just one measurement.

    So the inflation and the way how it is measured (there are multiple ways to do so) is certainly an imperfect metric, but this is true for any metric. And comparing the economic policies over several decades by just using a single metric doesn't make any sense.

    (Edit typo.)