• 87 Posts
  • 3.18K Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 14th, 2023

help-circle



  • There have been no confirmed downings of F-35’s.

    Several “oops this plane just fell off the flight deck, oh well, shit happens” articles in recent memory. A great way to explain why the Navy is suddenly down a vehicle without having to explain to anyone in the general public what happened.

    I wouldn’t lean on foreign propaganda any more than I would domestic propaganda.

    Americans are putting these jets into service and a surprising number of them are failing.

    Whether Iran/Yemen have successfully struck any of them or the Navy can’t get them on and off the flight deck reliably is almost a moot point. A downed plane is a downed plane.





  • Why Drug Dealers Live With Their Moms

    So the top 120 men on the Black Disciples’ pyramid were paid very well. But the pyramid they sat atop was gigantic. Using J. T.’s franchise as a yardstick – three officers and roughly 50 foot soldiers – there were about 5,300 other men working for those 120 bosses. Then there were the 20,000 unpaid rank-and-file members, many of whom wanted nothing more than a chance to become a foot soldier. And how well did that dream job pay? About $3.30 an hour.

    A crack gang works pretty much like the standard capitalist enterprise: You have to be near the top of the pyramid to make a big wage. But selling crack is a lot more dangerous than most menial labor. Anyone who was a member of J. T.’s gang for the four years covered in the notebooks stood a 1-in-4 chance of being killed. That’s more than five times as deadly as being a timber cutter, which the Bureau of Labor Statistics calls the most dangerous job in the United States.

    The one thing I have a problem with is this conclusion:

    So if crack dealing is really the most dangerous job in America, and it pays less than minimum wage, why on Earth would anyone take such a job? Well, for the same reason a pretty Wisconsin farm girl moves to Hollywood. For the same reason that a high school quarterback wakes up at 5 a.m. to lift weights.

    The assumption that people are just easy to hook on “Get Rich Quick” schemes is an easy and popular answer. But it belies a more depressing reality. I would argue that many of the people in this business are “unemployable” thanks to a combination of entrenched privatized segregation, criminal convictions from over-policing, and poor economic conditions in the immediate area. That gets us to OP’s headline. They aren’t doing this work because they want the job, they’re doing the work because they want any job.

    Incidentally, one burgeoning jobs program in the modern American economy is… Paramilitary policing of low-income communities.

    Not a coincidence that many of the folks at the top of the current state and national governments are, themselves, drugged out degenerates and mafia ringleaders in their own right. So we’re seeing the possibility of climbing out of poverty hedged by the same ladders being lowered into the scrum.

    We are, quite literally, paying one half of the proletariat to kill the other.


  • Cause, sure, you can poke around with pointers and references in C++ but it can also be used just like any other OOP language

    Fair. It is harder to break things in C++ than C. Although I’ve definitely created a few memory leaks.

    I’ll admit I haven’t actively fucked with C++ in over a decade, but in my experience you’re not going to find the kind of native integration with - say - Azure or SQL that’s baked into more modern languages. You can work around this with libraries. But eventually you’re just emulating a higher level language.


  • It’s so surreal to see how the media treats relations between China and Taiwan (their second largest trading partner, with $290B in exports just last year on a $700B Taiwanese GDP). Over a third of their national economy is on civilian ships traveling across the Straight of Taiwan. Setting aside the obnoxious presentation of the article - making it very difficult to read and discuss - they’re effectively saying… what? Taiwan should strangle trade with its next door neighbor because China uses industrial freight ships to move military hardware and personal?

    Meanwhile, the US maintains a suffocating embargo of Cuba, with the largest body of trade simply being resupply and transfer of troops between Florida and Guantanamo Bay military base - a location Cuba claims is illegally occupied, but the US refuses to divest from. I’ve never seen an American news journal report the torture prison as a possible means of infiltrating anti-Cuban rebels. I’ve never seen them suggest Cuban Exiles or their descendants preparing to reconquer the island. I’ve certainly never seen anyone suggest the US could do a rerun of The Bay of Pigs with Miami’s extensive fleet of civilian craft, despite this being central to Operation Northwoods and Operation Orsac.

    What these articles always seem to breeze over is that China’s strategy towards Taiwan has historically been economic, not military. Chinese businesses have been buying up Taiwanese capital since 2014. Taiwanese businesses have been integrated into the Chinese export markets for even longer. FoxConn - the notorious manufacturing company for US and Japanese electronics - is one of Taiwan’s largest firms, but primarily employs Chinese workers in and around Hong Kong.

    All the fearmongering around China as a military threat never seems to touch their economic sphere of influence. Perhaps that’s worth interrogating more thoroughly than the “flashlight under the chin” coverage of a few civilian transport ships.



  • Feels a bit like being told to do brain surgery and getting handed a hatchet, especially in the modern era.

    Like, its a great learning language precisely because it does force you to think about what’s actually under the hood of your objects and attributes. You actually have to learn what a pointer is. You actually have to think about memory usage and system states. Its like Bio 1 when they have you dissect a rat.

    But without a ton of library support, you’re doing so much heavy lifting. And with a bunch of library support… why not just use C#?




  • This is a bit like when someone claims China has entered Taiwanese airspace, while neglecting to report that Taiwan claims airspace over mainland China.

    Part of Taiwan’s air defense identification zone actually extends over the Chinese mainland, but Chinese flights are challenged by Taiwan only if they cross the median line – the halfway point between the island and the mainland above the Taiwan Strait.

    Click-bait journalists love to print headlines that take advantage of their audience’s naive understanding of international law and gullibility when it comes to claims of foreign countries doing sinister things. In fairness to the Brits, anyone familiar with Russian media gets fed a similar deluge of “NATO is going to attack us at any moment!” scare pieces.

    Great for ratcheting tension, driving up military recruitment, and galvenizing the public to hate anyone suspected of foreign origin or sympathies. Not particularly useful when informing the public of safety concerns.



  • My perspective was purely based on places like China and India.

    During the famine of the 1960s, China’s population numbered around 400M and it was the poster child for “overpopulation”.

    Sixty years later, they’ve functionally eliminated food insecurity. Nobody in China goes hungry because the shelves are bare. Their population now stands at 1.3B.

    Maybe I’m indeed wrong and this is not a problem

    Industrial agriculture has dramatically increased the agricultural productivity of post-WW2 China and India in the same way it transformed Europe and the US half a century earlier. Modern fertilizers, irrigation techniques, and ecological protective measures combined with industrial era logistics and transportation have ended the threat of famine at the national level… at least for the time being (squints at the impacts of climate change).

    What famines we see in the modern era are fully the consequence of human policy. They’re either collateral damage - wars in Ukraine and Sudan and the Congo that disrupt agricultural and human traffic - or a deliberate consequence of imperial foreign policy - the '91 famine in North Korea, the famine in Iraq following Operation Desert Storm, the blockade of Cuba, the segregation of Hispaniola into Haiti and Dominican Republic, the genocide in Gaza.

    What the article illustrates is the relative ease by which these huge (sometimes deliberate) logistical failures of food trade could be solved with a tiny appropriation of the military budgets that (sometimes deliberately) create them.


  • you’re delusional.

    So much of the existing Trump Regime is simply couched within the “Unitary Executive” established under Nixon, Reagan, Clinton, and Bush. What he is able to do is a direct consequence of the accumulated policies of prior administrations.

    There are degrees of criminality, corruption and pure evil.

    If you think Operation Dirtbag is meaningfully different than Operation Wetback, you’re just coasting on recency bias. The US has a long and storied history of unleashing its military, paramilitary, and vigilante agents on minority groups and immigrant communities. This is horrifying to you because it is on your TV every day, rather than in your history textbook a few times back in grade school.



  • Revelations is a revenge fantasy of an oppressed minority (Roman age Christians) aimed at the occupying imperial army (Rome).

    It can be summarized as “When Rome fails, the world will end and everyone will get what they deserve”.

    Meanwhile, there’s an extensive prior catalog of religious texts in the New Testament that absolutely do tell you to share the wealth, care for your neighbors, and pursue a utopian paradise free from inequality in God’s name.


  • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.worldtoWorld News@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    23
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    23 hours ago

    what does “ending world hunger” mean?

    Distributing agricultural surplus at market rate relative to population demand rather than market demand.

    Would not food security lead to higher birth rates

    Firstly, no.

    The higher the degree of education and GDP per capita of a human population, subpopulation or social stratum, the fewer children are born in any developed country.[

    Pulling people out of starvation tends to reduce family sizes, as people don’t plan their families with the expectation of high levels of child mortality.

    Secondly, “you need to starve to death because we’re afraid you might live long enough to have kids” is a fucked public policy on the scale of Israeli genocide in Gaza.

    Finally,

    lead to higher food requirements, when sometimes it already feels somewhat unsustainable?

    Sustainability is a consequence of land use policy, not population rate. India and China are the classic case studies of this in practice. But you can see the pattern repeated across the planet.

    Vegetarian agriculture is significantly less taxing on the ecology than animal agriculture. When you compare arable land requirements per Ethiopia, Bangledish, or Thailand residents to the dietary demands of Americans, Israelis, or Argentinians, what you discover is the enormous toll animal farming takes.

    The unsustainable clear cutting of jungle and near-malicious misuse of limited irrigation drives up costs and cripples availability in even the wealthiest (and most thinly populated) nations on Earth.

    Meanwhile, significantly more populace regions can thrive on a primarily vegetarian diet.