[-] davel@lemmy.ml 6 points 3 days ago

That is the famine I’m talking about.

[-] davel@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 days ago

Corporate media copy editors: Enough with the slams & blasts already! The Outline “slams” media for overusing the word

[-] davel@lemmy.ml 12 points 3 days ago

Neither Stalin nor Mao were genocidal. Famines had been a common occurrence in Russia and China throughout recorded history. Soon after their socialist revolutions, Russia and China experienced one more famine, and have not experienced one since. They ended famines.

[-] davel@lemmy.ml 16 points 3 days ago

Settings | Block instance 👋

[-] davel@lemmy.ml 8 points 4 days ago

The very fact that you posted this is all the citation anyone needs.
Everything coming from you is phony because you’re a big fat phony!

[-] davel@lemmy.ml 11 points 4 days ago

Okay, pseudonymous person on the internet, I’ll definitely take your word for it over a peer reviewed Nature paper.

That’s proven and quite famous russian propaganda. Including that in their study has me doubting their motivations.

Sure, Jan. Everything people don’t like is quite famously Russian propaganda these days.

[-] davel@lemmy.ml 7 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

★☆☆☆☆ I would give it zero stars if I could.

[-] davel@lemmy.ml 16 points 5 days ago

A day will come when they enshittify their platform, but it is not this day.

[-] davel@lemmy.ml 17 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Damn, out of 4,000 years of literature.

4
2024 Stack Overflow Developer Survey (survey.stackoverflow.co)
submitted 1 month ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/programming@lemmy.ml
153
submitted 1 month ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/degoogle@lemmy.ml

https://beta.maps.apple.com/

It doesn’t seem to support Firefox or mobile browsers, at least not.

Maps on the web is compatible with these web browsers

On your Mac or iPad

  • Safari
  • Edge
  • Chrome

On your Windows PC

  • Edge
  • Chrome
50
submitted 1 month ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/apple@lemmy.ml

https://beta.maps.apple.com/

It doesn’t seem to support Firefox, or not yet at least.
Maps on the web is compatible with these web browsers

On your Mac or iPad

  • Safari
  • Edge
  • Chrome

On your Windows PC

  • Edge
  • Chrome
2
Test (lemmy.ml)
submitted 1 month ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/test@lemmy.ml

xyz

18
submitted 1 month ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/usa@lemmy.ml

In the confidential assessments, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said 11 of the 22 large banks it supervises have “insufficient” or “weak” management of so-called operational risk, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the information isn’t public.

That contributed to about one-third of the banks rating three or worse on a five-point scale for their overall management, the people said. The scores are the latest sign that US regulators are concerned about the level of risk at the country’s largest banks in wake of a series of failures last year.

Operational risk is one of the categories by which regulators evaluate overall risk at the banks they oversee. Each bank’s individual ratings are closely held, but regulators sometimes use aggregate data on banks’ grades to highlight areas of concern in discussions with other agencies and the industry.

5
submitted 2 months ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/china@lemmy.ml

Our understanding of China — and U.S.-China relations — has become a defining feature of all global politics. The China Report is a new show produced in collaboration with Pivot to Peace where every week, hosts Amanda Yee and KJ Noh will be helping through all the propaganda with an independent view of the country we are told to hate, but know so little about.

First two episodes:

I’d never heard of Pivot to Peace.

4
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by davel@lemmy.ml to c/mediacriticism@lemmy.ml

[…]

But rarely do we have examples of propaganda so flagrant from our “free press” that it is hard for readers not to notice them. This week the state-corporate media made my job a little easier. Over the past few days, it has reported on two closely comparable events that it framed in entirely different ways. Ways that all too clearly serve state-corporate interests.

The first such event was an Israeli air strike last Saturday on a school in Gaza, where Palestinian civilians, including children, had been sheltering from months of a rampaging Israeli military that has slaughtered many tens of thousands of Palestinians and destroyed most of the enclave’s homes and infrastructure.

The massive scale of death and destruction in Gaza has forced the World Court to put Israel on trial for genocide – not that you would know from the media coverage. The genocide case against Israel has been largely disappeared down the memory hole.

The second event, on Monday, was a Russian air strike on a hospital in Kyiv. It was part of a wave of attacks on Ukrainian targets that day that killed 36 Ukrainians. Let us note too that, despite huge numbers of Palestinian women and children being killed each day by Israeli missiles, the news media largely stopped covering the carnage in Gaza months ago. The BBC’s main evening news barely reports it.

The fact alone that the killing of 36 Ukrainian civilians attracted so much attention and concern from the western media, in a war that’s more than two years old, when there is a far larger daily death toll of Palestinian civilians in Gaza, which our governments have been directly aiding, and the slaughter is of more recent origin, is telling in and of itself.

So how did our most trusted and progressive media outlets report these comparable events, in Gaza and Ukraine?

The headlines tell much of the story.

[…]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Cook

8
submitted 2 months ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/mediacriticism@lemmy.ml

After nine months of an Israeli mass murder campaign in Gaza, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz has confirmed what my colleagues Ali Abunimah of Electronic Intifada (EI) and Max Blumenthal of the Grayzone reported back in October: that Israel invoked the Hannibal Directive and killed its own citizens on Oct. 7th.

According to one Israeli military source, Israeli forces were ordered to turn the boundary area around Gaza into a “killing zone” — thereby knowingly killing Israelis in that zone. Under the Hannibal doctrine, Israel’s aim was to kill its own people rather than let them be traded in a future exchange for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli prisons. The Israeli military has suppressed this killing of its own people on Oct. 7th all while manufacturing support for its rampage in Gaza ever since.

The same establishment media outlets that have long ignored this aspect of Oct. 7th smeared my independent media colleagues at Grayzone and EI for reporting it. This includes two hit pieces in the Washington Post, and even more brazenly, three pieces in Haaretz — which is now acknowledging what it has repeatedly attacked Max and Grayzone for reporting.

2
submitted 2 months ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/mediacriticism@lemmy.ml

There seems to be a rash of exoduses from The Intercept going on. Two months ago, Ken Klippenstein quit for The Grayzone: Why I'm Resigning From The Intercept

Some may recall Glenn Greenwald’s exit in 2020.

2
Yugopnik: Rich Socialists (www.youtube.com)
submitted 2 months ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/breadtube@lemmy.ml
32
submitted 2 months ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/usa@lemmy.ml
145
submitted 2 months ago by davel@lemmy.ml to c/firefox@lemmy.ml

Also from Jamie Zawinski yesterday: Mozilla's Original Sin

Some will tell you that Mozilla's worst decision was to accept funding from Google, and that may have been the first domino, but I hold that implementing DRM is what doomed them, as it led to their culture of capitulation. It demonstrated that their decisions were the decisions of a company shipping products, not those of a non-profit devoted to preserving the open web.

Those are different things and are very much in conflict. They picked one. They picked the wrong one.

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davel

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