CAVOK

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
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Security officials report that hundreds of tankers are traveling from St. Petersburg to India or China. Putin is apparently circumventing Western sanctions by navigating his oil shipments past the Swedish island of Gotland. Residents feel threatened.

 

The social media platform founder and his company are being investigation over allegations of complicity in selling child sexual abuse material and in drug trafficking, fraud, abetting organized crime transactions, and failing to help law enforcement.

 

German far-right supporters have demanded action in response to a stabbing attack by a Syrian immigrant. EU officials are nervous about what the policy response might be

Good morning. News to start: French President Emmanuel Macron has refuted Moscow’s allegations that the arrest of Russian-born Telegram founder Pavel Durov was politically motivated, after prosecutors said the billionaire was detained on allegations his messaging app was used for drug trafficking and sharing of child sexual abuse material.

Today, I unpack what Germany’s response to a stabbing attack this weekend could mean for Europe. And our man in the Balkans has news of weary Bulgaria’s seventh general election in three years.

Knife edge A fatal knife attack in Germany has convulsed the country’s politics ahead of regional elections this weekend — but is also worrying officials across the EU nervous about the rise of the far right and anti-immigration rhetoric.

Context: A Syrian man stabbed three people to death and injured eight more on Friday night in the west German city of Solingen. The attack has boosted already strong support for the far-right nationalist Alternative for Germany party ahead of elections in the states of Saxony and Thuringia this Sunday.

Yesterday, alongside promising to tighten Germany’s laws on weapons, Chancellor Olaf Scholz pledged to reduce the inflow of irregular migrants and increase deportations. That followed remarks by Björn Höcke, the AfD’s leader in Thuringia, who blamed the attack on what he called: “This multicultural experiment on our country.”

There are two major concerns for Brussels from the Solingen tragedy.

Short-term, it has rammed home the political dangers posed by a resurgent far right across Europe, just weeks after centrist parties celebrated what they saw as European election results that confirmed their dominance of the EU’s political stage.

Longer-term, many in Europe worry that a knee-jerk reaction in Germany — potentially including new border controls and possibly even checks on movement inside of the country — could prompt a rash of similar unilateral moves by other countries where anti-immigration politicians are popular.

That would undermine the core principles of the EU’s Schengen free movement area, and further strain a fundamental aspect of the bloc’s single market.

“We can’t react to this by slamming the door in the faces of people who are often themselves fleeing from Islamists,” said Kevin Kühnert, general secretary of Scholz’s Social Democrats party.

Many in Brussels hope that calmer response prevails.

[–] CAVOK 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

There's no working windows version of iMule is there? I haven't found it if there is.

[–] CAVOK 7 points 1 year ago

That's... not great.

Still, zlatinb doesn't seem to be involved anymore, and the software is still interesting.

[–] CAVOK 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Also included in the zip file I think. I took it all from the torrent.

Edit: Apparently not in the zip, just checked, but @kivullallo provided the link to the source.

[–] CAVOK 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Donald Trump is targeting the European Union for a potential slew of punitive trade measures designed to address long-standing grievances should he retake office, according to people familiar with his team’s nascent economic-platform discussions. The two sides are still at odds over tariff increases Trump imposed in his first term as president on steel and aluminum, which were partly suspended in 2021 after President Joe Biden took office. If Trump wins in November, the EU undoubtedly will be one of his chief targets on trade, according to conversations with several Trump advisers.

A likely starting point in a second Trump administration would be the EU’s inclusion in a broad minimum 10% tariff, which would also be applied to China, his allies said. He might also assemble counter-measures against European digital services taxes that implicitly go after US technology champions, using Section 301 of the US trade law, the allies added.

Trump supporters cited a variety of motivations for the plans. Among them: frustration that the EU has been reluctant to take a more aggressive approach with regard to China, in terms of its own duties on Beijing and restrictions on strategic investments by Chinese companies. The potential measures against Europe also would serve as a major component of a broader initiative to overhaul US trade in goods. The nation has had long-standing, large deficits with the EU, with 2023 data on track to mark a third straight year of an imbalance exceeding $200 billion — a pattern Trump advisers argue is an illustration of unfair trade practices.

“Trump uses trade and tariffs as a negotiating tactic to get these countries to act in the interest of the US — you saw that with NATO,” said Stephen Moore, one of Trump’s informal economic advisers. He was referring to the way Trump in his first term had demanded that NATO allies contribute more money for defense.

Moore, a fellow at the Heritage Foundation, said that “a lot would depend on how Europe would act in terms of lowering their tariffs against US products.” With the average European country levying a value-added tax of 15% to 20%, “that puts us at a trade disadvantage right at the start,” he said. Trade experts say such duties give European companies an incentive to direct their goods to the US, which lacks a national sales tax. Overseas officials have been bracing for Trump 2.0, and frantically trying to uncover his specific plans, according to several Washington-based lobbyists.

Steven Cheung, a spokesman for the Trump campaign, said the former president “has made clear that he intends to use every tool at his disposal to defend American workers. Whether they are autoworkers, steelworkers, technology workers, or farmers, he will not stand for other countries stealing our jobs or targeting our industries for destruction.” The last time Trump was in office, the EU was able to head off what had loomed as a worst-case scenario for trans-Atlantic commercial ties: a trade war over autos. Washington lawmakers — primarily Republicans — and the American business community, with its swath of lobbyists, served as a last line of defense preventing that outcome.

Different Washington

This time around, Brussels might not get so lucky. Among the challenges: many of Trump’s critics on Capitol Hill are gone, like the moderate Republican lawmakers who oversaw key committees and tried to slow-walk his policies. Trump has had three years out of office to think about his approach if he wins this November, and is likely to move quickly. In addition to the broad 10% tariff idea, Trump has talked with advisers about banning TikTok Inc. from the US and keeping out electric cars manufactured in China, or made with Chinese parts and then assembled in other countries, such as in Europe or Mexico. Since he was last in the White House, the EU has itself taken some measures against China, including the launch last year of an investigation into Chinese state support for electric vehicles. Still, decisions like Germany’s move to clear a stake sale in a Hamburg port terminal to a Chinese state firm showcases differing perspectives with the US. Transatlantic ties have improved notably since Biden took office, though his administration hasn’t been able to unwind all of the trade actions taken by his predecessor. After two years of talks without a solution to the dispute over steel and aluminum products, the two sides in 2023 decided to punt until after the presidential election.

Lighthizer Role

That dispute resulted in billions of dollars in retaliatory tariffs by the EU, targeting American iconic products like Harley Davidson motorcycles and Kentucky bourbon. Robert Lighthizer, who advocated for tariff increases as US trade representative in Trump’s administration, continues to closely advise him on trade. He lives in Florida near Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort, giving him proximity to the former president during the winter months. Lighthizer has told associates he doesn’t want to serve again as the US Trade Representative, but some Trump allies have suggested he could make a strong White House chief of staff or Treasury secretary. Lighthizer declined to comment. Along with Lighthizer and Moore, Trump also receives advice on trade and economics more broadly from Larry Kudlow, his former director of the National Economic Council and now a CNBC commentator; the conservative economist Art Laffer; and Kevin Hassett, who ran the Council of Economic Advisers in the Trump White House. He also stays in touch with a number of long-time friends and businessmen, who inform his thinking on the economy.

The Trump team also intends to work to shield American companies from what they see as overreach on the part of Europeans on regulation and digital taxes.

Tech Firms

While tech giants like Google owner Alphabet Inc., Meta Platforms Inc., Microsoft Corp., Amazon.com Inc., Apple Inc. and Netflix Inc. may have battalions of employees hostile to Trump and his fellow Republicans, Trump considers the companies born-and-bred in the US, and consequently would like to protect them, said former Trump aides. That could be done by assembling counter-measures to European digital services taxes — which largely target the big US firms — by using Section 301 of the US trade law, Trump allies said. “The European Union does what it can to cripple American companies. He would be pretty inclined to stand up for us,” said Trump ally and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. “I do know he values tariffs because they give him negotiating leverage.”

[–] CAVOK 3 points 1 year ago (4 children)
[–] CAVOK 6 points 1 year ago

Yeah, it's not popular but it's the truth.

I don't mind taxing the rich more, but that doesn't solve the problem as you say.

[–] CAVOK 7 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Most people have shit dads? Really?

I have doubts, but I'm sorry you feel that way.

[–] CAVOK 8 points 1 year ago

Good. Even if you think migration is s problem you should be thinking twice about giving up your own right to privacy.

The crazy right in the UK seems to be applauding a proposed withdrawal from the ECJ and the weakening of human rights there. Just to be clear, I don't think there are any serious politicians in the UK wanting to withdraw, but some crazy ones, and some political commentators.

[–] CAVOK 16 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Very weird. Started with Slackware back in 97 or so. Still not a femboy and no desire to be one.

Maybe if I switched to arch?

[–] CAVOK 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I don't think you change that in i2psnark but instead change it in the router config.

http://127.0.0.1:7657/config

Hit the "Bandwidth" tab and increase the share ratio.

[–] CAVOK 4 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Sorry, should have checked the source better.

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