NFT's are still a thing?It's on NFTs and Trump.
NFT's are still a thing?It's on NFTs and Trump.
Well, undoubtedly someone's still mucking around with them, although they're probably well past peak insanity, and may well have morphed into some slightly less ridiculous form.NFT's are still a thing?
Oh, I'm not surprised that the lesser evil is evil, I just don't see a not evil alternative. System's rigged, clutching at straws is all that seems to be left.Well personally I'd prefer not dying at all so I'm going to vote accordingly. You can keep handing the keys over to one of the two sides slowly killing us (see the rest of my quote you cut off) and then being confused Pikachu face why we're still all dying.
There's that, yes.I'd ask whether it will actually be "the exact same death", or whether it will actually be just a tiny bit slower.
On the first question: there will obviously be major differences. Had the Democrats won, we wouldn't have a Secretary of Health & Human Services pulling RNA vaccine development. USAID wouldn't have been shuttered. Those two things alone could end up accounting for thousands of lives and livelihoods every year.
You could argue they might happen eventually anyway. But not even most Republican administrations have attempted moves this brutally destructive. It's quite likely that had Trump been defeated this time, these things simply wouldn't have happened.
Then we have climate. The increase in drilling, the efforts by the administration to remove protection for the Alaskan Wilderness Reserve. Every single year is vital at this point; every year is another year of biodiversity loss etc, which then makes recovery more difficult. Damage done sooner is inordinately worse than damage done later. Time matters. Climatologists are exceptionally clear on this point: earn time, and our chances of survival increase.
Rigged? To an extent. Maybe in a less conspiracy-ish way, the system is just incompatible with the world many voters want.Oh, I'm not surprised that the lesser evil is evil, I just don't see a not evil alternative. System's rigged, clutching at straws is all that seems to be left.
Rigged is an overly emotive term, true.Rigged? To an extent. Maybe in a less conspiracy-ish way, the system is just incompatible with the world many voters want.
In many places, a really lefty sort of government doesn't come to power. A somewhat left of centre one, perhaps, but that's not really the same.It is an incredibly troubling question: why doesn't the left do all that lefty sort of stuff like raise taxes?
Certainly, yes, though one imagines should a landslide victory occur, as happens occasionally, the winners can be a bit more risky with their popularity.It is an incredibly troubling question: why doesn't the left do all that lefty sort of stuff like raise taxes? What if... it doesn't work? As we have witnessed in several ways, governments don't necessarily rule supreme in the way we imagine and they might pretend. Liz Truss was run out of office in a jiffy for offending against the markets, and even Donald Trump, leader of the world's dominant economy, chickened out abruptly when they spasmed with alarm at his policies.
Okay, but why doesn't a really lefty sort of government come to power?In many places, a really lefty sort of government doesn't come to power. A somewhat left of centre one, perhaps, but that's not really the same.
I'd say that it's because left wing parties tend to be less popular with voters. An ideology not working very well is no reason for it not to get voted in, lack of left wing parties in power does not mean that they'd not be able to function adequately if they were.Okay, but why doesn't a really lefty sort of government come to power?
What if it is because... they kind of don't work? Like, maybe some of their ideas really just don't work well - suppresses the economy, and it turns out people won't tolerate lower growth. Maybe it is more systemic: if they try to do something, the financial markets lose confidence and crash their currency, or international investors take fright and undermine their growth and development.
Maybe part of the postwar period was realising that lefty governance is just suboptimal, or maybe something about the way the world worked changed to gradually make it harder for lefty governance to be successful. And so all the lefty parties moved towards the centre.
We know that's not the reason, because catastrophically buffoonish not-working governments of the centrist and right-wing stripe get elected constantly.Okay, but why doesn't a really lefty sort of government come to power?
What if it is because... they kind of don't work?
It's the latter. That shift specifically was the reliance on international markets, investment, and ultimately 'market confidence', which prioritises the performance of conglomerates over the wellbeing of a populace because the former guarantees returns. So left-wing policies are not 'suboptimal', and may in fact be both popular and potentially successful in improving wellbeing. But they're costly in the metrics that matter most to investors (and by extension, the governments desperate to attract them).Like, maybe some of their ideas really just don't work well - suppresses the economy, and it turns out people won't tolerate lower growth. Maybe it is more systemic: if they try to do something, the financial markets lose confidence and crash their currency, or international investors take fright and undermine their growth and development.
Maybe part of the postwar period was realising that lefty governance is just suboptimal, or maybe something about the way the world worked changed to gradually make it harder for lefty governance to be successful. And so all the lefty parties moved towards the centre.
I mean...for a whacky and crazy experiment, maybe we should actually TRY to do any sort of lefty government instead of having Democrats hamstring the actual left and do everything in their power to fight Leftys (even if it means their "enemy" The Republicans get in office instead).Okay, but why doesn't a really lefty sort of government come to power?
What if it is because... they kind of don't work? Like, maybe some of their ideas really just don't work well - suppresses the economy, and it turns out people won't tolerate lower growth. Maybe it is more systemic: if they try to do something, the financial markets lose confidence and crash their currency, or international investors take fright and undermine their growth and development.
Maybe part of the postwar period was realising that lefty governance is just suboptimal, or maybe something about the way the world worked changed to gradually make it harder for lefty governance to be successful. And so all the lefty parties moved towards the centre.
like the assassinations?or maybe something about the way the world worked changed to gradually make it harder for lefty governance to be successful.
Maybe. As you say, investor-centric metrics matter. But where centre and right-wing buffoons take power, should they fail the investor class, the investor class switch support. Post-Johnson, for the most part the UK business community decamped to support Labour. (Would they still have abandoned the Tories if Corbyn were in charge?) Also, despite the buffoonishness, one can make the point that under the hood, Trump's USA is serving most of the investor class okay: Trump pushed his luck on the tariffs, but when they pushed back he folded. Generally they're still making a fortune, so the rest of the turbulence isn't very important.We know that's not the reason, because catastrophically buffoonish not-working governments of the centrist and right-wing stripe get elected constantly.
It literally can be worse than half the country being a missed paycheque away from being homeless on the streets: like mass unemployment where half the country don't have a next paycheque. Or the national debt spirals out of control and a potential default? A currency collapse, with mass inflation meaning everything's wildly more expensive - people unable to afford basic staples?It can't be much worse than...*waves hands all around myself* where like half the fucking country is a missed paycheck away from being homeless on the streets...
It literally can be worse than half the country being a missed paycheque away from being homeless on the streets: like mass unemployment where half the country don't have a next paycheque. Or the national debt spirals out of control and a potential default? A currency collapse, with mass inflation meaning everything's wildly more expensive - people unable to afford basic staples?

Why would you vote for objectively bad candidates? People that vote for either party is completely illogical.Voting for a third party in a two-party system when one of the two parties is lead by a narcissist demagogue with dictatorial tendencies is foolishly naive at best.
The left needs more than good wishes, positive vibes, snappy social media posts and other pixie rainbows. Willing the hand grenade that lands at your feel to not go off won't stop it going off. Left-leaning policies need to rigorously theorised, scrutinised and even tested, not float on a cloud of internet posivity and moral superiority. If they're not practical, all they're going to do is make life shitter for a load of people they're supposed to help and make it even harder for the left to win the next election.
Then all we're going to do is get more Trump because clearly "Nothing will fundamentally change" has somehow not convinced people to keep voting Democrats.The left needs more than good wishes, positive vibes, snappy social media posts and other pixie rainbows. Willing the hand grenade that lands at your feel to not go off won't stop it going off. Left-leaning policies need to rigorously theorised, scrutinised and even tested, not float on a cloud of internet posivity and moral superiority. If they're not practical, all they're going to do is make life shitter for a load of people they're supposed to help and make it even harder for the left to win the next election.
People like them have already given up hope and are part of the problems, if they go to people like trump or someone just as bad and worse. They're bitches you are too selfish to think about anyone other than but themselves and think they're the smartest ones on the planet. And everybody else is a mindless lamb or peon. When people like them are usually the thing they hate the most.
Which again only helps Trump by staying "neutral and beating the system". People who do that are usually only out for themselves or so.Cynical, they think nothing they do matters until it visibly affects them. Yet they'll still blame it on somebody else when said other else wasn't involved at all with their self inflicted misery or misfortune.stop participating at all because why play a rigged game).
The sad reality of US politics at the moment is that you have a two-party system, either a Democrat or a Republican wins in your elections.Why would you vote for objectively bad candidates? People that vote for either party is completely illogical.
Character assassination
As though killing him was not enough, trolls supporting Israel and its state ideology Zionism have been trying to assassinate his character as well, before and after his killing.
“For weeks since the start of this war, Refaat has been receiving numerous death threats and hateful messages from Israeli accounts on social media after prominent public figures singled him out for harassment and incitement,” Euro-Med said.
One such public figure was Bari Weiss.
Weiss singled out a tweet Refaat had written about a thoroughly debunked hoax that Palestinian militants had burned an Israeli baby alive in an oven on 7 October.
“Here is Refaat Alareer joking about whether or not an Israeli baby, burned alive in an oven, was cooked ‘with or without baking powder,’” Weiss wrote.
Refaat received death threats and hateful messages on social media afterwards.
“Many maniacal Israeli soldiers already bombing Gaza take these lies and smears seriously and they act upon them,” Refaat wrote at the time.
Zionist trolls are now using the same tactic to try and assassinate the character of Refaat, an internationally known academic who was loved and respected by generations of Palestinians and people around the world.
Targeting academia
Days before Refaat was murdered, Israel assassinated Dr. Sufyan Tayeh, the president of the Islamic University of Gaza where Refaat was a professor of English literature.
Israeli forces also planted explosives and bombed the medicine faculty at the Islamic University of Gaza this month as well.
The right-wing commentator Yinon Magal celebrated that attack by calling it a “Hanukkah gift” from a division of the Israeli military.
The fact that the building was not struck by warplanes but rather by soldiers planting bombs there in person, suggests that there was no “risk” to their lives and that they were not targeting Palestinian resistance inside the building.
One picture depicts an Israeli soldier posing next to the medical faculty building with a giant menorah outside as a sign of conquest.
The placard with the name of the building and the donor who helped build it is vandalized with the words “ours now” in English.
Don't let any of the political or media class try to shuffle this out your memories, cos they will try relentlessly. and don't let them forget it neither. Nothing will improve if people refuse to remember and contend with their parts in all this.Refaat Alareer was assassinated by Israel
Tamara Nassar Rights and Accountability 9 December 2023
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Dr. Refaat Alareer at the 2022 graduation ceremony of students at the Islamic University of Gaza. (Via Instagram)
Israel assassinated the writer and educator Dr. Refaat Alareer.
The Israeli airstrike that killed Refaat and several members of his family on 6 December was “apparently deliberate,” the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor concluded.
Refaat had worked closely with The Electronic Intifada and was among the most prominent opponents of Israel’s genocidal war against Gaza.
He was sheltering at his sister Asmaa’s apartment in the al-Daraj area of Gaza City. Around 6 PM on Wednesday, it was “surgically bombed out of the entire building where it’s located,” the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor said, citing corroborated eyewitness testimony and family accounts.
Refaat was killed along with his brother Salah and one of his brother’s children, Muhammad. His sister Asmaa and three of her children – Alaa, Yahya and Muhammad – were also killed, in addition to one of their neighbors.
Other family members were also injured by the Israeli attack.
“The airstrike surgically targeted the apartment on the second floor where Refaat was in a three-story building, and not the entire building; indicating the apartment was the target and not possible collateral damage,” the Euro-Med group said.
Refaat had been displaced multiple times within the Gaza Strip after his home was attacked during the second week of Israel’s genocidal assault on the coastal enclave started on 7 October.
Days before he was killed, Refaat had moved with his wife and children to a school run by the UN agency for Palestine refugees (UNRWA) in the al-Tuffah neighborhood of Gaza City.
A close friend of Refaat told the human rights group that he may have been contacted by the Israeli army while at the school.
“He had received an anonymous phone call from someone who identified himself as an Israeli officer and threatened Refaat that they knew precisely the school where he was located,” the group said, citing the close friend.
Israeli forces “were about to get to his location with the advancement of Israeli ground troops,” the group added.
While the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor says “the credibility of the threat itself is unclear,” it was definitely one of the reasons that prompted Refaat to relocate to his sister’s home, “believing it was more concealed than an open and overcrowded school where it would have been difficult to hide.”
The group concluded that Refaat was likely targeted by Israeli forces.
“Everything is intentional”
A recent investigation by +972 Magazine and Local Call exposed how the Israeli army is using artificial intelligence to generate more targets to hit in Gaza.
Citing intelligence sources, the report said that “the Israeli army has files on the vast majority of potential targets in Gaza — including homes — which stipulate the number of civilians who are likely to be killed in an attack on a particular target.”
“Nothing happens by accident,” one source said.
“When a 3-year-old girl is killed in a home in Gaza, it’s because someone in the army decided it wasn’t a big deal for her to be killed — that it was a price worth paying in order to hit [another] target,” the source added.
“We are not Hamas. These are not random rockets. Everything is intentional. We know exactly how much collateral damage there is in every home.”
The fact that the home of Refaat’s sister was the only apartment attacked in the building that evening contributes to the conclusion that he was deliberately targeted.
Bombed before
This wasn’t the first time Refaat was bombed since 7 October.
The Israeli army bombed the building where Refaat lived in Gaza City without any warning on 19 October. Two flats were completely destroyed and five others, including that of Refaat’s family, were severely damaged.
Refaat was hosting four displaced families at the time that his building was bombed. All his family’s guests were women and children.
Refaat’s home had a power generator, fuel for a couple of months and solar panels at the time.
“Since Israel’s attack began, we have helped countless numbers of people to pump water, charge their electronic devices and keep their freezers functional,” Refaat wrote in The Electronic Intifada on 22 October.
“I believe that is a reason why our building was hit.”
Others in Refaat’s extended family believed he was targeted specifically for speaking out.
“We do not know why the building was targeted. My mother-in-law insists it is because I talk to the media,” he wrote.
“My mom also raised the same concern.”
Refaat and his family were displaced since that day. They had taken shelter in a hospital and then a school.
The family at one point stayed at the Rantisi children’s hospital in Gaza City but had to evacuate as Israeli forces drew near.
He wrote an article for The Electronic Intifada exposing the lie that Hamas was operating out of the hospital.
Refaat and his family had been targeted by Israeli forces numerous times in the past, killing dozens of his relatives.
His first written contribution to The Electronic Intifada remembered his brother Mohammed, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike on his home in 2014.
“My brother will be martyr number 26 in my extended family,” Alareer wrote at the time.
Other members of Alareer’s family lived, died and were killed under the shadow of Israel’s brutal siege and consecutive assaults on the Gaza Strip.