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/)TH
Posts
11
Comments
580
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I've read that the UN atomic energy commission has also said that they haven't measured any increases in radiation, so it doesn't look likely to me that Iran is hiding anything.

    I also saw an article where they showed satellite images indicating that Iran may have evacuated a lot of materiel from Fordow shortly before the strikes.

  • Yellow card for faking injuries

    Make it red, and add a multi-match ban for repeat offenders. This is a culture problem in the sport that should have been dealt with years ago. I can only imagine how effective it would be to just send off a player for simulating. No questions asked. I would love to see the look on their face when they flop down and are immediately escorted off the pitch.

  • If anything, Israel and the US have clearly showed Iran that they will never be safe unless they develop military capabilities strong enough to deter attacks.

    Like... what kind of message do you think you're sending when you attack a country trying to develop nukes because they see you as an existential threat? Iran has been shown that the only way they will ever be safe from Israel is by developing nukes such that Israel doesn't dare attack them.

  • I mean, he has admitted to cheating online. People that know a lot more about chess and statistics than myself say he's probably cheated more than what he admits to.

    Regardless, he comes off as such an asshole that I can't help but enjoy it every time he gets his ass handed to him.

  • Why are you being mean? I made a pretty simple point, and you're wilfully misinterpreting it, and I don't understand why.

    I quite simply said "death threats are not inherently terrorism", and encouraged people to not misuse the word. You're acting like I said something completely different. You're trying to argue against something I've never said, and you're doing it in a pretty unkind way when you're starting with this "Having a bad day" stuff.

  • I never said it wasn't. I see this comment section full of a very un-nuanced and frankly incorrect "death threats are terrorism" sentiment. That's just wrong.

    You say "don't be thick", but it seems you didn't catch the opening sentence where I said that "this case may very well be terrorism".

  • Stop diluting the word "terrorism" of its meaning. A death threat can be terrorism, and in this case it may very well be terrorism, but often it is not terrorism.

    A gang member threatening to kill someone if they snitch isn't terrorist. A guy threatening to kill someone if they don't lay off his girl is not terrorist. Someone threatening to kill a person abusing their friend is not a terrorist.

    Death threats are not inherently terrorist.

    Edit: Are people misunderstanding something about what I'm saying here? I'm not condoning death threats in any way. Threatening someones life is categorically wrong and illegal. I'm just saying that something being wrong and illegal doesn't make it terrorist. Terrorism involves instilling fear to achieve ideological or political goals, death threats don't inherrently fulfill that criteria.

  • Killing someone out of hate is an ideological goal.

    In most cases, no. All hate is not ideological hate, and most killings are not ideological either. Most of the violence we see in the world is due to people's personal relationships with each other, or are the result of some spontaneous fight.

    The problem with what you're doing here is you're diluting the meaning of the word "terrorism". You wrote out the definition, but you don't seem to understand it. The key element is that terrorism is not just instilling fear, but using that fear to obtain political or ideological goals.

    If instilling fear is sufficient to make someone a terrorist, any violent criminal or anyone threatening others becomes a terrorist, and the word loses its meaning.

  • We've had a couple cases in Norway in recent years where police were investigated for some thing or other. Based on the evidence I've seen, they're definitely held accountable when they over-step.

    To name a specific case (where the cop was found not guilty), there was a huge case when a cop punched a guy in the face while he was on the ground. After several rounds in court, it was decided that he was using reasonable force, because the guy was wrestling him, and he noticed that the guy had a knife on him.

    The point is that a policeman punching someone at all became a huge court case with national coverage, so I would say they're held accountable.

  • As mentioned by others: No matter how it's weighed, and no matter what it lands on, there's a 1/6 probability that the other dice will land on the number you need to get seven. The probability of getting seven is independent of the "first" dice.

  • That isn't the point. The point is that a single heavily armed guard is enough to deter a hundred people from even trying to fight until they are desperate.

    The point is that, even though those hundred people would win a fight, and even if they know it themselves, those hundred people are individuals. Unless they are desperate, none of those individuals are willing to stick their neck out to fight.

    We see this in prisons. We saw this under slavery. We saw this in concentration camps. A few armed people are sufficient to suppress lots of unarmed people. Sometimes the unarmed revolt, and when they do, they often succeed if they are willing to take massive casualties. That doesn't change the fact that they rarely try to revolt in the first place.

  • You need to roll two dice to get a sum of seven. Consider two fair dice: No matter what the first dice lands on, there's a 1/6 probability that the second dice lands on the number you need to get a total of seven.

    Consider now that one dice is weighted such that it always lands on 6. After you've thrown this dice, you throw the second dice, which has a 1/6 chance of landing on 1, so the probability of getting seven is still 1/6.

    Of course, the order of the dice being thrown is irrelevant, and the same argument holds no matter how the first dice is weighted. Essentially, the probability of getting seven total is unaffected by the "first" dice, so it's 1/6 no matter what.

  • I was commenting on the general situation of "are you justified in treating someone brandishing a weapon as a lethal threat?", not the specifics of this situation. I haven't seen the video, so won't comment on whether this person specifically was brandishing or not.

  • I use it to spitball programming ideas, which I've found it decent for. I can write something like "I'm building XYZ, and I'm considering structuring my program as A or B. Give me a rundown on pros, cons, and best-practice for the different approaches."

    A lot of what I get back is self-evident or not very relevant, but sometimes I get some angles I hadn't really considered. Most of all, actually formulating my problems/ideas is a good way for me to get my thought process going. Essentially, I'm "discussing" with it as I would with an inexperienced colleague, just without actually trusting what it tells me.

    Yes, I also have a rubber duck on my desk, but he's usually most helpful when I'm debugging.

  • Brandishing a weapon is not the same as carrying it. Brandishing is what you do when moving the firearm in a way that indicates you are threatening to shoot. In the worst case, it involves pointing the firearm at someone.

    If someone purposely points a firearm at you, you have every right to fire in self defence. At least those were the rules of engagement we were taught regarding interactions with civilians at home when I was in the army.

  • I think the overwhelming media directive (...)

    I don't follow German media much, so I can't comment on that. The media in Norway is typically pro-Palestinine. The pro-Isreal pieces that are published are usually debate pieces written by fringe politicians or pieces written by Isrealian officials.

  • As mentioned in one of my other comments: Yes, the Holocaust targeted other groups than Jews (Slavs, Romani, Gays, etc.). However, in learning about the Holocaust, there is usually a strong focus on Jews. In short, most people learn a lot about how Jews were targeted, and a lot of memorials and media focus on Jewish prosecution by the nazis.

    At the same time, Russia has been built up as an adversary since the beginning of the Cold War, and committed plenty of their own atrocities before, during, and after WWII. The same cannot be said about Romani, Gays, Jews, or other groups targeted during the Holocaust.

    With all this in mind, it's not very hard to understand why "Holocaust guilt" is centered on Jews more than other groups, and why Russians are largely exempt from the feeling altogether. I'm not saying that's fair or right, I'm saying it's very understandable.

    On the other hand: I really don't see any motive from Germanys side to support genocide on Palestinians. So my argument is essentially trying to understand why Germany would support Isreal despite

    <waves at Israel in general>

    . The only good explanation I've found is centred on "Holocaust guilt", and the way it's been portrayed and conveyed the past eighty years.

  • For prepaid cards, I'm talking about the kind you buy for cash at a store, that aren't registered to your identity. Essentially an anonymous debit card that can't be refilled, and can be used online. Don't know if you have them where you are?