[-] jazzfes@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Sure, but capitalism with a Fuehrer that has a lifelong seat at the head of government and portrays himself in Riefenstahl like images surely qualifies as fascism, no?

[-] jazzfes@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago

I never defended the West. You defended Putin and that is the part that is absurd.

[-] jazzfes@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago

Four weeks holidays are not left wing policies unless you think of the EU as socialist. Nothing in the reddit quote you sent sound left wing in any sense. Unions? Taxing wealth? Your post doesn't mention anything like this. Instead it refers to the mob.

[-] jazzfes@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 weeks ago

The inequality in Russia is absurd. After the fall of the Soviet Union, it the country has clearly become the textbook capitalist country in the world. Tell me, what are the great left wing achievements it has made? Putin on a horse?

[-] jazzfes@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 weeks ago

Putin's Russia is not fascist in what sense?

[-] jazzfes@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Sure, even if true, you are defending the government, not the opposition

Edit: I mean tell us, what left wing policies are pushed forward in Russia?

[-] jazzfes@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago

Buddy, you are defending a clearly fascist state here.

[-] jazzfes@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago

So are you saying that Putin or the russian government however defined is left of those?

[-] jazzfes@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago

Russia started when they invaded the Krim. All of Europe shrugged their shoulders because of cheap gas..... Russia is quite clearly a fascist state so I really do not understand your apologies for it. It's probably the only state that is more capitalist than the US, so why defending it?

1
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/music@lemmy.ml

I remember a song called "second breath" by what I believe was a former member of the "four non blondes". The video was pretty low key, with the singer dancing in her room, jumping on her couch.

Anybody know the song or artist?

1
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/parenting@lemmy.ml

"Each year across the world, kids of roughly the same age are packed into classrooms and confined to desks with the intent of learning from an adult teacher.

But is this how children were adapted to learn?

In today’s technologically dependent, economically complex world in which a particular subset of skills is critical, fact-based knowledge is no doubt best imparted from those with experience—which is usually adults.

But what about social learning? Humans as a species are set apart by their incredible dependence on one another; cooperation is at the heart of both an individual’s survival and a functioning society. So, how do children typically learn to cooperate?

Anthropological research in small-scale societies—including my work among with the Pumé of Venezuela and the Maya living in the Yucatan Peninsula—resoundingly suggests that they learn from one another.

Schooling and growing up in small nuclear families have been the norm for only the past century or so in industrialized societies—just a brief flash in evolutionary time. Childhood in these societies is commonly thought of as a period requiring intense adult investment dedicated to learning and instruction. But research in nonindustrial, small-scale societies—the kinds of communities that all our ancestors lived in both deep in the past and until fairly recently—gives a different picture.

Today children in industrialized societies spend a lot of time in supervised environments with adult direction.

..."

1
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/parenting@lemmy.ml
1
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/parenting@lemmy.ml

"Woodlands Early Education Centre, in Logan south of Brisbane, as well as nine others in the chain have recently overhauled their yards to increase children's exposure to risk.

...

While the new grounds may look dangerous — a towering fort (with open edges), 1.6-metre-high balance beams, and climbing walls (without a fall mattress) — the data shows the opposite.

There has actually been a 43 per cent reduction in reported injuries at the centre."

1
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/parenting@lemmy.ml

For the past three years, Facebook has been conducting studies into how its photo-sharing app affects its millions of young users. Repeatedly, the company’s researchers found that Instagram is harmful for a sizable percentage of them, most notably teenage girls.

“We make body image issues worse for one in three teen girls,” said one slide from 2019, summarizing research about teen girls who experience the issues. “Teens blame Instagram for increases in the rate of anxiety and depression,” said another slide. “This reaction was unprompted and consistent across all groups.”

Among teens who reported suicidal thoughts, 13% of British users and 6% of American users traced the desire to kill themselves to Instagram, one presentation showed.

The whole article reads like a horror show. Corporate representatives use Orwellian language to justify and minimise the problem... The Head of Instagram is quoted in this section:

In May, Instagram head Adam Mosseri told reporters that research he had seen suggests the app’s effects on teen well-being is likely “quite small.”

In a recent interview, Mr. Mosseri said: “In no way do I mean to diminish these issues.…Some of the issues mentioned in this story aren’t necessarily widespread, but their impact on people may be huge.”

He said he believes Facebook was late to realizing there were drawbacks to connecting people in such large numbers. “I’ve been pushing very hard for us to embrace our responsibilities more broadly,” he said.

He said the research into the mental-health effects on teens was valuable, and that Facebook employees ask tough questions about the platform. “For me, this isn’t dirty laundry. I’m actually very proud of this research,” he said.

"I'm very proud of this research and pushing really hard for change"... while cashing in and making sure that the hard push won't cause damage to the profits I'm sure.... >:(

1

Really nice, interactive illustrations to provide a really nice introduction to linear algebra.

5
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/australia@lemmy.ml

"The bill grants the Australian Federal Police and Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission new powers to combat serious crime enabled by anonymising technology using three new warrants: network activity, data disruption and account takeover.

With the warrants, both agencies can take control of a person’s online account to gather evidence about serious offences without consent, as well as add, copy, delete or alter material to disrupt criminal activity and collect intelligence from online networks."

Unbelievable....

[-] jazzfes@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 years ago* (last edited 3 years ago)

There is a difference between people advocating for human rights abuses and people saying that some actor does in fact not engage in human rights abuses. The difference is stark and even there, if the actor would in fact in engage in human right abuses.

An open society must tolerate the later. I.e. we must tolerate that people dispute that human right abuses occur or occurred. This is because you cannot judge someone purely due to getting the facts wrong or not knowing them.

If we wouldn't allow this, we would de-facto argue for a totalitarian state, since we wouldn't allow people disputing facts (which can be proven or disproven). We would have to nominate some entity that judges what is fact and what isn't, which is the opposite to gathering evidence and engaging in an open, society wide discussion.

To be clear: Allowing discussions around whether abuses occur is notably different to letting people get away with advocating for abuses. The latter is what needs strong responses. The former is what requires engagement.

I don't see anything on lemmy or in the mastodon thread that shows that human rights abuses are advocated for. What I do see is that there are some fractions that show sympathies to China which you would otherwise only see for the USA. I think its useful to compare these sympathies because they seem to express themselves in similar ways.

With all that said, I think the opinion expressed in the mastodon thread is not particularly useful. It, in many ways, minimises real human rights abuses that occur world wide, day to day, in China, USA, and many other countries in East and West.

Let's call out the abuses, let's discuss and present the evidence for them, let's not alienate people and create polarity that looks like us-vs-them.

1
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/parenting@lemmy.ml

A very emotional read....

1
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/debian@lemmy.ml
2
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/australia@lemmy.ml

Doesn't look like the gyms will open again this year .... :(

1
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/debian@lemmy.ml
1
Spot The Drowning Child (spotthedrowningchild.com)
submitted 3 years ago by jazzfes@lemmy.ml to c/parenting@lemmy.ml

Spotting drowning children, or people in general, is apparently very difficult.

The website shows some examples.

Relevant HN discussion

view more: next ›

jazzfes

joined 4 years ago
MODERATOR OF