Absolutely! Imperialism is bad when Russia does it, and when American/Israel does it.
Hello, tone-policing genocide-defender and/or carnist 👋
Instead of being mad about words, maybe you should think about why the words bother you more than the injustice they describe.
Have a day!
Absolutely! Imperialism is bad when Russia does it, and when American/Israel does it.
That’s an interesting way of framing Russia ending the world in a nuclear holocaust because Ukraine didn’t want to be a part of Russia’s sphere of influence.
It would be best for everyone if Russia would stop the escalation, and I hope they do. If not, we have to find a better solution to imperialism than appeasement, because that doesn’t work long-term either.
That is a rad *fetch image 😎
Hopefully Russia ceases their invasion soon then. They could have ended it any time they wanted, but for some reason, they insist on keeping their “three-day, special military operation” going.
I’m rooting for peace. Hopefully, Russia comes around.
Yeah. The far-right border bill that aided in the demonization of immigrants we’re seeing today. The fact that so many democrats attached their name to it only served to launder the right’s racist fear-mongering about immigrants.
Fuck that bill. It’s bad policy and bad politics.
Too bad Biden put forward a far-right border bill that laundered the right-wing narrative that there’s a “border crisis” and that people are flooding in. Fast-forward a few months, and here we are.
The politicians that attached their names to that bill are in-part to blame for legitimizing the racist, anti-immigrant lies we’re hearing today.
Dems need to grow a spine and meaningfully protect minority groups instead of naively aiding the right in demonizing them.
The Democrats laundered the reich-wing narrative that immigration is bad and that there’s a “border crisis” when they put forward the far-right border bill that Trump thankfully tanked (for his own selfish reasons, but still good that it didn’t pass).
Now, months later, after the anti-immigrant narrative has been laundered and normalized, we get to hear about how immigrants are “eating your pets” and how Venezuelan gangs “are taking over apartment complexes”.
The ratchet effect is real. We need to stop demonizing people that were born on the other side of a border and Democrats need to grow a fucking spine and push back on these racist lies instead of enabling them.
Yeah. Piracy is alive-and-well. You can even acquire and play PS5 games right now if you wanted to.
It’s also worth noting that even Sony can’t be bothered to properly emulate the PS3, which has resulted in many PS3-era games being remade into either native PC versions, or PS4/5 titles.
While it’s true that there are still some PS3-exclusive games that aren’t available in other formats, many of them are, so most people can get pretty far without needing PS3 emulation.
I only bring that up for anyone that may think they need PS3 emulation, but maybe haven’t been made aware of newer remakes or native PC ports of the games they’re actually looking for.
The Green Party literally turned in a referrendum form instead of a ballot form. The judge approved what they turned in.
This fuckup is 1000000% the fault of the unserious members of the local Green Party. They may as well have signed it in crayon too.
Maybe next time, The Greens can take their jobs seriously and run a serious candidate and file the correct forms instead of whinging at the Democrats for their own mistake.
Now the question is: is Jill Stein 🤔?. The people will let democracy decide on their ballots.
This is so true. The state of gaming on the Steam Deck is great right now. Even the foreboding unsupported
status is only ever really a problem with asinine anti-cheat, and that’s just like a handful of games that aren’t worth playing in the first place.
She didn’t. She just said “as a Jewish American” and whomever transcribed it added the #
, I guess for the engagement, which is good because the message that Jewish people stand against ethnostates and genocide is one that unfortunately many people still need to hear.
So anyway, god bless Chase Oliver, Jo Jorgensen, Gary Johnson, Ron Paul, and all other right-wing spoiler candidates. We thank you for your service o7o7o7
Also, we had this exact same conversation a few weeks ago, and it’s …interesting… that it followed the exact same dialogue tree and not at all suspicious of the integrity of your account… 🤔
I never said anything about fairness. You keep fixating on it.
US electoral politics have nothing to do with fairness. They are downright anti-democratic. Gotta play the game and make as few tactical mistakes (like voting for Grifting Jill) as possible.
I support actual left-wing parties when they’re viable, but Jill Stein and Cornell West need to fuck right out of presidential elections and end their grift. The Greens and other third-parties that run in other elections they can actually win have my support and my vote.
Not a question of fairness for me. It’s a question of if it’s more likely to bring good things or bad things. Spoiler for repugs = good. Spoiler for dems = bad.
I wish the right-wing spoiler candidate the very best o7
Article text because I was getting an “access denied” when trying to read it initially:
Some regions of Texas have already run out of water — and the rest face a looming crisis, the state’s agriculture commissioner said on Sunday.
“We lose about a farm a week in Texas, but it’s 700 years before we run out of land,” Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller told WFAA’s Inside Texas Politics show on Sunday.
“The limiting factor is water.”
The front lines of the crisis is the Rio Grande Valley, where international disputes, declining groundwater, over-pumping from big agricultural growers and — above all — a deteriorating climate has eroded the ability of Texas’ Winter Garden to produce fruits and vegetables amid broader fears of cities in the state running out of water.
“We’re out of water, especially in the Rio Grande Valley,” Miller told WFAA “Our tomato production in the Valley is just about gone.”
“They usually grow five crops of vegetables in that area,” he added. Now “they have enough water to grow one. So, our production’s down 80 percent And it’s all about water.”
Meanwhile, in the West Texas town of Pecos, once known for its melons, “you can’t get a Pecos cantaloupe anymore,” Miller said. “The wells are dry out there. You can’t find one anymore because the farmers are gone. There’s no water. They had to leave.”
Miller spoke to WFAA weeks after state lawmakers, policymaker and water experts from the state’s constellation of water conservations districts found massive shortfalls between state water spending and the scale of the onrushing crisis, as KAMR reported.
While the state passed $1 billion for the Texas Water Fund in 2023, the amount needed to overhaul the state’s water infrastructure sufficient to head off shortages is estimated to be more like $80 billion, per KAMR.
Even if the state were sufficiently funding its water plans, it would be running a 2.4 million acre-foot-per-year deficit, Sen. Charles Perry (R) said at the Texas Alliance of Groundwater Districts meeting last month.
That’s more than the entire 2 million acre-foot volume of the Highland Lakes system that the city of Austin depends on.
With state spending “a drop in the bucket, no pun intended,” Perry said last month, the true shortfall was more like 10 – 12 million acre-feet per year.
In his interview on Sunday, Miller called on Texas legislators to act to ensure the state water supply holds. He called on the oil and gas industry to stop using potable water for fracking and on city and state officials to embrace reuse and desalination.
But as reporting from KAMR noted, the ability of the state legislature to pass anything next session will be handicapped by the vicious inter- and intra-partisan fights — starting with the hyper-contentious proxy war for the House speakership.
With the state’s legislature increasingly acrimonious, and longtime moderate Republican House leaders on complex water issues retiring amid the infighting that followed the impeachment of Attorney General Ken Paxton, passing serious legislation will be a challenge, Sarah Kirkle of the Texas Water Conservation Association said last month, KAMR reported.
“The vibe,” Kirkle added, “is not great.”
The boss makes a dollar,
I make a dime,
That’s why I poo on company time
Yes. The US is also authoritarian. Yes, there is a clear media bias when it comes to the headlines that western media outlets are willing to run. In particular, painting non-western countries as more authoritarian than the US (which is sometimes true).
It’s valuable to point this out. Dog knows the shitty media bias bots used in other communities won’t.
However, the overall tone of your comment seems to suggest that it’s okay for non-western governments to do authoritarian bullshit, just because the US does. I trust that wasn’t the point of your comment, but I assume that’s why some may not take kindly to it.
For what it’s worth: my instance disables down votes, so I literally can’t down vote posts I disagree with.
That has nothing to do with what’s happening. Twitter can’t be fucked to appoint a legal team to comply with Brazilian law, so they don’t get to operate there. Simple as.