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jlou , to technology
MediaActivist ,

It’s what happens when we have libertarianism without socialism. One without the other is bad news.

sculd ,

Libertarianism is one of the worst ideology I have ever seen.

It claims to be for freedom but whenever someone tries to implement it, it turns to be extremely oppressive.

quoque , to random
@quoque@masto.ai avatar
paninid ,
@paninid@mastodon.world avatar
vincent ,
@vincent@mastodon.coffee avatar

@paninid @quoque @histodons I'm in this video, and I'm okay with that.

isthereanydeal , to steam
@isthereanydeal@mastodon.social avatar

For late tip of week 46/2023 we picked

by KO.DLL (Karel Matejka) and published by CINEMAX s.r.o.

It's currently on a release sale at Fanatical store and @steam https://isthereanydeal.com/game/bzzzt/info/

Ellenfelicity , to random
@Ellenfelicity@bookstodon.com avatar

I don't usually start a book and instantly get the impression I'm going to love it, but it's happening with Penance by Eliza Clark

Ellenfelicity OP ,
@Ellenfelicity@bookstodon.com avatar

I quite liked Western Lane and If I Survive You, but gave up on This Other Eden after one chapter (which is very unlike me, but I just did not get on with it at all)

Ellenfelicity OP ,
@Ellenfelicity@bookstodon.com avatar

Well, thanks to the library I did end up giving everything shortlisted for a go. Study for Obedience. Have heard a lot of criticism of the writing style, but so far I'm enjoying this quiet, eerie book. @bookstodon

elonjet , to random
@elonjet@mastodon.social avatar

Landed near Brownsville, Texas, US. Apx. flt. time 42 min.

wkfry ,
@wkfry@mastodon.social avatar

@elonjet That's weird. I did a Teams meeting to save fuel today. 🤔

niestadt ,
@niestadt@mastodon.social avatar

@elonjet what is the annual fuel consumption of Musk’s jet?

jblue , to random
@jblue@mastodon.world avatar

Strongly recommend this book.

Author clearly explains how private equity firms are destroying essential industries, how they avoid legal responsibility for the disastrous consequences, who’s empowering them and how they can be stopped.

Private equity’s is to blame for much of the worst aspects of health care, housing crisis, the economy as well as the deepening wealth gap.

@bookstodon

kest ,
@kest@kbin.melroy.org avatar

@jblue interesting

kest ,
@kest@kbin.melroy.org avatar

oh he didn't know what private equity was until 3-4 months into writing his book... and his employer is the Department of Justice which is the government? He looks a little egotistical considering he doesn't have much experience, feels like a smear job.

and his interviewers are even more pushing anti-capitalist rhetoric... and they make things about specific politicians...

I think they're just upset capitalists figured out how to dodge taxes by using debt lol

this is sounding less like an interesting book =[

I don't think he knows anything deep, I think this whole thing is an opinion piece

elonjet , to random
@elonjet@mastodon.social avatar

Took off from Austin, Texas, US.

Laking86 , to random
@Laking86@nerdculture.de avatar

1 of 2023

The Penultimate Truth
Philip K. Dick

Part of the SF Masterworks Collection. Despite being nearly 60 years old the narrative around the manipulation of the truth feels incredibly prescient. Wondering whether David Whitaker had read it before he came up with story The Enemy of the World.

Laking86 OP ,
@Laking86@nerdculture.de avatar

48 of 2023

The McCartney Legacy Volume 1: 1969-73 by Allan Kozinn & Adrian Sinclair

Absolutely loved this. I’m a huge McCartney fan and not only did I enjoy reading about his early post-Beatles career in minute detail, but it was also great to revisit those early solo and Wings records with the added context the book offers. Heartily recommend to any other fans and I look forward to future volumes.

@bookstodon

Laking86 OP ,
@Laking86@nerdculture.de avatar

49 of 2023

A Season in Sinji by J. L. Carr

A novel combining war, cricket and a battle for love. Enjoyed this. It’s jolly in places and then hits you with a bleaker reality. Helps to love cricket as much as I do I would imagine given its importance in the story.

@bookstodon

oatmeal , to random
@oatmeal@kolektiva.social avatar

West Bank settlers are exploiting the “propitious moment” created by the war that started to expel thousands of Palestinians from their homes and lands. They are terrorizing them through various means in order to drive them from their villages. Far from everyone’s eyes, the West Bank is changing almost irreversibly.

https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/2023-11-17/ty-article-opinion/stop-israels-warmongering-settlers/0000018b-d9ec-dffa-adef-ffec7d150000

If you can’t afford a subscription install bypass paywall for to read the full article https://gitlab.com/magnolia1234/bypass-paywalls-firefox-clean

@israel
@palestine

oatmeal OP ,
@oatmeal@kolektiva.social avatar

"As horrific as the massacre was, it does not absolve Israel of its past crimes against the Palestinians, does not justify the ethnic cleansing Israel is currently carrying out in both the Strip and the West Bank."

"When the very mention of context itself is considered anti-Semitic, then pretext takes its place. The massacre serves as a pretext for ethnic cleansing in the Strip and West Bank and an excuse to muzzle and intimidate the Palestinian citizens of Israel."

It's not always easy to take Professor Ilan Pappé for his word when it comes to vigorous historical research, but his commentary is always interesting, and in this case also reflexive.

====

The holy rage: the plight of the Israeli left

My heart goes out to Jewish-Israeli leftists these days. They vent their distress on the pages of daily newspaper, while directing their anger at the global left, or at least the Western left. They are in a reality I found myself in some 15 years ago: ostracized and alienated from Jewish society for my “betrayal” of it on the one hand, yet on the other hand, not accepted as a credible partner by Palestinian society, whose national movement I supported as a researcher and political activist. Luckily that stage of my life is behind me.

When you don't belong to any group of reference, you are in a societal and intellectual limbo. This is exactly the distress of the Israeli left. The massacre carried out by on October 7 exposed the difference between it and the global left. The global left is an organic part of the solidarity movement with the Palestinian liberation movement.

This liberation movement is no longer as institutionalized as it was, and is much more fragmented and weakened compared to its heyday in the 1970s. But it remains robust and its solidarity movement remains as well. The concepts and language of the solidarity movement have always been different from those of the Israeli left. This movement has not supported the two-state solution idea for years, and has long defined as a settler colonial movement and Israel as an state.

The sins of this movement, as they appear in the righteous indignation articles of writers like Eva Illouz,, Ofri Ilany, Haim Levinson and many others, are mainly twofold: comparing to colonialism, and mentioning the historical context of the massacre carried out by Hamas.

But the global left does not talk about Israel as part of global colonialism, but as part of settler colonialism. It is worth recalling, even for a moment, what characterizes settler colonial movements. These are movements of European refugees, who sought refuge and shelter from a Europe that did not want them and even persecuted them. They arrived in countries inhabited by native populations, who the new settlers saw as a fundamental obstacle to their dream of building a new Europe of their own.

Destruction of the local population or its expulsion were a precondition for the success of this new settlement. This is the story of the founding of the United States, Canada and Australia. The Zionist movement was also such a movement, and like the other movements relied on an empire to gain a foothold in a foreign land, found religious justification for settlement, and engaged in the search for ways to get rid of both the empire that assisted it and the native majority population.

Indeed, this is the perception of the global left. It includes defining Israel as an apartheid state, and was not born on October 7. It does not prevent condemnation of Hamas' actions, but it certainly provides a much more convincing explanation for this terrible event than defining Hamas as a bloodthirsty organization that seeks to kill for the sake of killing.

Israel reacted with rage to the mass killing in the Gaza Strip, yet the Israeli left still expected the global left to be outraged along with it and relate to the horrors of that Shabbat outside any context. This is the global left's second sin, and this is the sin of the secretary general: mentioning the context.

The Israeli left demands focus on the event as pure evil without context. Mentioning the context does not justify it but explains it, and above all offers a different explanation than that adhered to by Israeli politicians, pundits and journalists. In vain, the Israeli left will ask people of conscience worldwide to focus on the horrors of October 7, and therefore forget about the horrors of the occupation and siege prior to October 7 and those of the days after October 7.

The global left has always focused in the past - both in its historical perception and moral viewpoint - on contexts that gave birth to difficult actions of those who rebelled against Western oppression. Therefore, those who supported the abolitionist movement did not see the terrible massacre of whites led by Nat Turner in 1831, an event that harmed the struggle to abolish slavery, as an uncontextualized evil. Those who supported the Algerian liberation movement did not demand constant condemnation of the terrible massacre carried out by the rebels in July 1962 of white settlers in the city of Oran as if it had no historical context of over a hundred years of French abuse and oppression of the Algerian people.

These contexts explain the event, they do not justify it. They certainly clarify for us why the chorus of the Israeli left is shocked by what it defines as an insufficient response from the global left, and why its prominent spokespeople accuse the global left of anti-Semitism and immorality. As horrific as the massacre was, it does not absolve Israel of its past crimes against the Palestinians, does not justify the ethnic cleansing Israel is currently carrying out in both the Strip and the West Bank.

Moreover, and perhaps most importantly. As terrifying and horrible as it is, this is not a constitutive event: Israel will remain a settler colonial state, with features of an apartheid regime, Palestinian resistance will continue, global civil society will continue to support it, and Israel will rely solely on the support of Western elites. This is a clear recipe for continued bloodshed, with no winners, only losers, a reality in which calling for a ceasefire, which could lead to the return of the kidnapped, is considered treason, and the continuation of fighting and abandoning the kidnapped to their fate is preferred.

When the very mention of context itself is considered anti-Semitic, then pretext takes its place. The massacre serves as a pretext for ethnic cleansing in the Strip and West Bank and an excuse to muzzle and intimidate the Palestinian citizens of Israel. It also serves as a pretext for the United States to return its army to the region, from which it was expelled in disgrace after the failed attempt to impose democracy by force. It serves as a pretext for Western governments to severely undermine freedom of expression and opinion in the name of fighting terror.

Moral compass and awareness of contexts exposes the pretexts and their disaster-laden results, and above all focuses on what matters now: recognizing again that Palestinians and Israelis have only two options: mutual destruction or living together.

Professor Ilan Pappé, at the Centre for Palestine Studies, University of Exeter, is the author of "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine."

Hebrew: https://www.mekomit.co.il/הזעם-הקדוש-מצוקת-השמאל-הישראלי/

@israel
@palestine


@academicchatter

oatmeal OP ,
@oatmeal@kolektiva.social avatar

It's not always easy to take Professor Ilan Pappé for his word when it comes to vigorous historical research, but his commentary is always interesting, and in this case also self-reflective.

====

The holy rage: the plight of the Israeli left

My heart goes out to Jewish-Israeli leftists these days. They vent their distress on the pages of daily newspaper, while directing their anger at the global left, or at least the Western left. They are in a reality I found myself in some 15 years ago: ostracized and alienated from Jewish society for my “betrayal” of it on the one hand, yet on the other hand, not accepted as a credible partner by Palestinian society, whose national movement I supported as a researcher and political activist. Luckily that stage of my life is behind me.

When you don't belong to any group of reference, you are in a societal and intellectual limbo. This is exactly the distress of the Israeli left. The massacre carried out by on October 7 exposed the difference between it and the global left. The global left is an organic part of the solidarity movement with the Palestinian liberation movement.

This liberation movement is no longer as institutionalized as it was, and is much more fragmented and weakened compared to its heyday in the 1970s. But it remains robust and its solidarity movement remains as well. The concepts and language of the solidarity movement have always been different from those of the Israeli left. This movement has not supported the two-state solution idea for years, and has long defined as a settler colonial movement and Israel as an state.

The sins of this movement, as they appear in the righteous indignation articles of writers like Eva Illouz,, Ofri Ilany, Haim Levinson and many others, are mainly twofold: comparing to colonialism, and mentioning the historical context of the massacre carried out by Hamas.

But the global left does not talk about Israel as part of global colonialism, but as part of settler colonialism. It is worth recalling, even for a moment, what characterizes settler colonial movements. These are movements of European refugees, who sought refuge and shelter from a Europe that did not want them and even persecuted them. They arrived in countries inhabited by native populations, who the new settlers saw as a fundamental obstacle to their dream of building a new Europe of their own.

Destruction of the local population or its expulsion were a precondition for the success of this new settlement. This is the story of the founding of the United States, Canada and Australia. The Zionist movement was also such a movement, and like the other movements relied on an empire to gain a foothold in a foreign land, found religious justification for settlement, and engaged in the search for ways to get rid of both the empire that assisted it and the native majority population.

Indeed, this is the perception of the global left. It includes defining Israel as an apartheid state, and was not born on October 7. It does not prevent condemnation of Hamas' actions, but it certainly provides a much more convincing explanation for this terrible event than defining Hamas as a bloodthirsty organization that seeks to kill for the sake of killing.

Israel reacted with rage to the mass killing in the Gaza Strip, yet the Israeli left still expected the global left to be outraged along with it and relate to the horrors of that Shabbat outside any context. This is the global left's second sin, and this is the sin of the secretary general: mentioning the context.

The Israeli left demands focus on the event as pure evil without context. Mentioning the context does not justify it but explains it, and above all offers a different explanation than that adhered to by Israeli politicians, pundits and journalists. In vain, the Israeli left will ask people of conscience worldwide to focus on the horrors of October 7, and therefore forget about the horrors of the occupation and siege prior to October 7 and those of the days after October 7.

The global left has always focused in the past - both in its historical perception and moral viewpoint - on contexts that gave birth to difficult actions of those who rebelled against Western oppression. Therefore, those who supported the abolitionist movement did not see the terrible massacre of whites led by Nat Turner in 1831, an event that harmed the struggle to abolish slavery, as an uncontextualized evil. Those who supported the Algerian liberation movement did not demand constant condemnation of the terrible massacre carried out by the rebels in July 1962 of white settlers in the city of Oran as if it had no historical context of over a hundred years of French abuse and oppression of the Algerian people.

These contexts explain the event, they do not justify it. They certainly clarify for us why the chorus of the Israeli left is shocked by what it defines as an insufficient response from the global left, and why its prominent spokespeople accuse the global left of anti-Semitism and immorality. As horrific as the massacre was, it does not absolve Israel of its past crimes against the Palestinians, does not justify the ethnic cleansing Israel is currently carrying out in both the Strip and the West Bank.

Moreover, and perhaps most importantly. As terrifying and horrible as it is, this is not a constitutive event: Israel will remain a settler colonial state, with features of an apartheid regime, Palestinian resistance will continue, global civil society will continue to support it, and Israel will rely solely on the support of Western elites. This is a clear recipe for continued bloodshed, with no winners, only losers, a reality in which calling for a ceasefire, which could lead to the return of the kidnapped, is considered treason, and the continuation of fighting and abandoning the kidnapped to their fate is preferred.

When the very mention of context itself is considered anti-Semitic, then pretext takes its place. The massacre serves as a pretext for ethnic cleansing in the Strip and West Bank and an excuse to muzzle and intimidate the Palestinian citizens of Israel. It also serves as a pretext for the United States to return its army to the region, from which it was expelled in disgrace after the failed attempt to impose democracy by force. It serves as a pretext for Western governments to severely undermine freedom of expression and opinion in the name of fighting terror.

Moral compass and awareness of contexts exposes the pretexts and their disaster-laden results, and above all focuses on what matters now: recognizing again that Palestinians and Israelis have only two options: mutual destruction or living together.

Professor Ilan Pappé, at the Centre for Palestine Studies, University of Exeter, is the author of "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine."

Hebrew: https://www.mekomit.co.il/הזעם-הקדוש-מצוקת-השמאל-הישראלי/

@israel
@palestine


@academicchatter

bauve , to memes French
@bauve@mas.to avatar
Sven_Ademi , to linux German
@Sven_Ademi@mastodon.social avatar

Ich habe gestern mit den neuen GPTs von OpenAI rumgespielt und mir letztendlich für meine aktuellen Projekte drei tatsächlich hilfreiche Chatbots erstellt.

Say hello to "Linux Server Admin Assistant", "Bricks Builder Assistant" und "Kirby CMS Advisor". Derzeit frei verfügbar für alle, die es brauchen und ein Abo für ChatGPT abgeschlossen haben.

"Das ist nicht die Zukunft, aber man kann sie von hier aus sehen" (DXHR)

@bastianallgeier @linuxmint @linuxnews @linux @LinuxGuides

waspentalive ,

Google Translate of the Post:

Yesterday I played around with the new GPTs from OpenAI and ended up creating three actually helpful chatbots for my current projects.

Say hello to “Linux Server Admin Assistant”, “Bricks Builder Assistant” and “Kirby CMS Advisor”. Currently freely available to anyone who needs it and has a ChatGPT subscription.

“This is not the future, but you can see it from here” (DXHR)

@bastianallgeier @linuxmint @linuxnews @linux @LinuxGuides

recursivesive ,

Könntest du einen schreiben, um deine Beiträge vor dem Posten zu übersetzen? 🤔

NewDoorBooks , to random
@NewDoorBooks@sunny.garden avatar

-area folks: Check out this super gathering on Sunday evening at Roscoe Books, including our own Janice Deal.

More info at http://sundaysalon-chicago.com/

MagentaRocks ,
@MagentaRocks@mastodon.coffee avatar
lalage , to random Dutch
@lalage@mastodon.nl avatar

Ik dacht altijd dat ‘you’ in het Engels hetzelfde is als ‘jij’, maar nu lees ik (in een boek van Lydia Rood) dat dat vroeger juist de beleefdheidsvorm was naast ‘thou’, dat is verdwenen, behalve in het Schotse dialect.

Frank_Engelhard ,
@Frank_Engelhard@mastodon.social avatar

@fifischwarz @lalage @schoudaan @boeken Ik ben verbaasd over de overeenkomst met het Nederlands . En ook weer niet. Vast van voor de invloed van de Franse taal.

mfierst ,
@mfierst@mstdn.social avatar

@lalage @fifischwarz @schoudaan @boeken
Dat viel mij ook op ja. Het laat goed zien en horen dat Engels van oorsprong een Germaanse taal is.

davidboatymcboa , to random
@davidboatymcboa@mastodon.scot avatar

@neilhimself To all you fans here on Mastodon here’s a wee link with enough Neil Gaiman, Charles Vess, Lyras Books and @rovinacaiart art to make you go oooooh whilst getting out your wallets!
The live link to buy your tickets will be available as soon as both raffles have been approved by @raffall_app

Look at this post on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/100006478443972/posts/pfbid0mEvpYWbgpcsieKUo2Ldu3kXSarkRHtN8JrrSGiVNhrXiUBKgRxoBmGXH4VABQ2EBl/?d=n

davidboatymcboa , to random
@davidboatymcboa@mastodon.scot avatar

And here is the link to the @raffall_app site for the

@neilhimself

CORALINE - The Red Thread Edition

Please READ the shipping information before you purchase any tickets

https://raffall.com/348260/enter-raffle-to-win-numbered-edition-of-coraline-by-neil-gaiman-hosted-by-linda-silliman-millar

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