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Cake day: July 4th, 2023

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  • For a recent example, they said the president cannot deport people under the Alien Enemies Act and that the government needs to give people a reasonable timeline to get a lawyer and mount a legal defense.

    The federal government lost that one (for now at least… they sent the question of Alien Enemies Act back to lower courts… but not habeus corpus)

    What happens if in a couple of months, the federal government just sends some people to El Salvador under the Alien Enemies Act- directly ignoring the SC?

    This would fit in with the administration’s strategy. Do legally dubious things to cause chaos. Ie sending troops into LA totally unnecessarily. Why? Cause protests, legal doubts about whether or not federal government has a right to use military against domestic citizens.

    Or the military parade… or the tariffs… defunding NOAA hoping for a destructive hurricane, etc. It’s chaos for the sake of chaos. Same reason they deported the Venezuelans in the first place without habeas corpus.

    It’s a concerted and consistent effort to weaken the public institutions until they feel like enough is enough and deal the final blow. The moment where they finally roll the die and cross the Rubicon.

    The SC is the only one that has the potential to stand up to the administration. I firmly believe there will be a showdown.

    Note- The “official acts” thing has more nuance although that can of worms is not something I have time for. But when that ruling happened, I read the opinions the justices.

    Not everything counts as an official act. For example Reagan’s Iran Contra business would not have fallen under the definition.

    You or I may not agree with the SC on every ruling. But the individuals on there, for the most part, are scholars of the constitution and hold a deep respect for it. It’s why even people like Kavanaugh who was appointed by Trump will sometimes rule against his interests.

    We may disagree on some interpretations but these people genuinely believe in the rule of law. This will inevitably clash with the administration.






  • kava@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    9 months ago

    but_what_about_.jpg

    whataboutism isn’t some magical phrase that you can utter every time someone brings up hypocrisy

    if we’re going to support sanctioning civilians based on their countries breaking international law, then we should not have double standards. otherwise it’s very clear to anyone paying attention that this is a geopolitical issue and not a moral one.

    and that’s what this is actually about. the US sanctions on Russia are a geopolitical tool meant to make the Russian re-subjugation of Ukraine more expensive. that’s it. US doesn’t actually care about Ukraine- neither this administration or the last.

    to me, that doesn’t justify banning individuals from participating in OSS projects. anybody that wants to contribute should be able to.


  • kava@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    9 months ago

    Attacks against civilian targets are war crimes. When you do it through sanctions its OK.

    I’m just asking that we are more honest about it. For example instead of putting sanctions on Venezuela we could have just done what Israel is doing to Gaza and gotten similar death toll.


  • kava@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    9 months ago

    Research has shown it has historically had very little to no impact on policy. What it does do is harm the lowest rungs of society.

    For example a 2019 report on Trump’s Venezeuala sanctions estimate up to 40,000 people died. Mostly poor people who went without healthcare and medicine because the US froze all of the government’s funds and access to credit.

    In my opinion, I’d prefer if we just bombed civilians in the countries we sanction. It’s more honest. It really is a form of low level warfare. Something akin to a medieval raiding party




  • imagemagick handles almost all image files

    images ) ls
    001.jpg  002.jpg  003.jpg  004.jpg  005.jpg
    images ) convert 001.jpg example.pdf
    

    ffmpeg handles almost all video files

    ex ) ls
    rock.mp4
    ex ) ffmpeg -i rock.mp4 rock.avi
    

    if you use gnome there’s a nice little feature of the file explorer where you can just drag and drop scripts into ~/.local/share/nautilus/scripts/

    for example

    make a fish script (ignoring error checking for brevity here, my real script had a couple guard rails)

    /#!/usr/bin/env fish
    set file $argv[1]
    convert $file (basename $file .png).pdf
    

    then when you right click on a file in your gnome file explorer you can click the scripts option

    example

    and the script is right there so you can just easily convert with the press of a button

    example

    note, i crossed out some stuff that includes client names

    tldr: there are so many ways to do what you need to do there’s no reason to trust random websites you don’t know. there’s a lot of slimey people out there wanting to take advantage of people. and everybody should strive to be at least a little computer literate. the examples i gave here aren’t complicated. they’re simple commands






  • kava@lemmy.worldtoNews@lemmy.worldFlorida is now a solar superpower
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    9 months ago

    That’s true although it’s quite impressive regardless.

    First, the Florida state government is actively hostile to solar. Just a couple years back they passed a law that made it so you couldn’t sell your excess power back to the grid- a huge benefit of installing solar.

    This was at the request of FPL (Florida Power & Light) because just like in the federal government, the Florida government is essentially bought and paid for.

    So I don’t know the specifics in CA, but I’d imagine their government is more friendly to renewable energy.

    And we also need to consider CA has a little less than double Florida’s population and a little more than double Florida’s GDP.

    So the fact that Florida surpassed California’s solar usage is actually quite impressive, especially considering CA had a significant head start.

    It’s really a testament to how useful this technology is. Solar is not growing in Florida because it’s renewable or has lower carbon emissions, etc. It’s growing because it’s economically feasible.

    And I think it’s a good sign for the future of renewable energy. Also goes to show Florida is rapidly growing. Few years back we surpassed NY as the 3rd largest state (in terms of population).

    Right now Texas & Florida (and certain states in the SE like S or N Carolina) are the fastest growing states. Meanwhile states like New York, California, and Illinois are stagnating.

    In the next couple decades, Florida and Texas will eventually surpass NY and CA as the two most important states. And I predict they will both turn blue just like what happened to California.


  • The federal government’s countermeasures will come into effect at 12:01 a.m. on March 13. The 25 per cent tariffs will hit steel products worth $12.6 billion and aluminum products worth $3 billion.

    In addition, Canada is hitting another $14.2 billion worth of imported U.S. goods with fresh tariffs, totalling $29.8 billion in retaliation.

    I wasnt aware new ones from yesterday. It was for $30B, though. Combined with the last set of tariffs its $60B total out of $350B of US exports to Canada

    So about 17%. So let’s say Canads is at a conservative 3 generous 4


  • pretty much. we all grew up in the US being taught it’s a country of immigrants and the “bring me your weary your hungry your whatever masses to be free”

    it’s actually kind of fascinating to see that ideology shift so fast it’s giving whiplash. turns out we actually kinda need these people for our economy otherwise we’ll end up like European countries with stagnating economies until we eventually get overrun by China