GooseFinger

joined 2 years ago
[–] GooseFinger -4 points 1 year ago

I don't care more about guns than dead kids, stop intentionally misinterpreting my opinion and arguments. Respond to my arguments intelligently and provide counterpoints so we can better understand each other. So far, you've provided nothing constructive.

You say that guns are "fucking murder machines" then in the same comment state that the guns we have are too weak and useless to use against an oppressive government. Pick an argument and stick with it.

If our government is launching drone strikes against me, then they're launching drone strikes against you too. We're on the same side here, except if push ever comes to shove, it sounds like you'll lay down and lick boots while others fight for you. If you're not ok with living in a dictatorship, the least you can do is not actively get in the way of the one check/balance that the people have against our government's military.

Gun ownership isn't a right for Ukrainian citizens. Imagine how it felt for citizens in Mariupol, Donetsk, or Kyiv during the first few weeks of the invasion. I'm not suggesting that lone "muh guns" rednecks would save the country from a military invasion alone, but I'd bet my ass that most people who lived this would've been safer and fewer citizens would've died if they were armed and able to defend themselves while evacuating and seeking safety. The Ukrainian government backtracked and shipped citizens in Kyiv and a few other cities guns and ammo afterwards, but because gun ownership was outlawed before that, no one was trained on how to use them so they were effectively useless.

This is what you're fighting for. A disarmed, helpless society that'd rather feel safe than be safe. It's the same fear that ushered in mass surveillance and the complete degradation of personal privacy in the name of counter terrorism. People cheered for it.

It's possible to have a well-armed society that isn't rife with murderers; your grandparents lived it. Maybe we should refocus on making our society worth living in again for the marginalized people perpetuating violence. Give gang members and hopeless people an honest way to earn a livable wage, provide free and good access to mental and physical healthcare, revamp prisons so they reform instead of punish, reduce carbon emissions so our children won't choke on their air... But you can't boil that down into a headline as short and sensational as "children murdered because people can buy murder machines."

[–] GooseFinger 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Thanks for the answer, that makes sense. Sounds like there aren't security concerns with letting others connect to my server then.

This is the first I've heard of Gluetun. Why do you suggest it?

[–] GooseFinger 7 points 1 year ago

Not all his videos are privacy focused but Louis Rossmann is a good right to repair and privacy advocate. Very entertaining to watch when he gets irritated haha.

[–] GooseFinger 17 points 1 year ago (68 children)

Why? Nuclear power is the most complex and expensive option of any clean energy source from what I know.

[–] GooseFinger 3 points 1 year ago

Yes, and I'm 100% sure you'd feel that way too if someone ever tried to kill you or someone you love. Just because you don't like thinking about it doesn't mean that bad things don't happen to good people.

[–] GooseFinger 2 points 1 year ago

I feel it needs to stay and I love my children, but you do you.

[–] GooseFinger 1 points 1 year ago

When our Bill of Rights was written, "well regulated" meant well functioning and well equipped.

I'd rather see our government spend their time, energy, and money on promoting safe firearm ownership than continue pushing their take on gun control. Tax breaks or stipends for purchasing gun safes, taking classes, and teaching basic firearm safety in school would take very little work on their part and would benefit literally everyone, gun owners and non gun owners alike.

It's fine if you disagree with the premise of our 2A, but realistically, any country's Constitution/equivalent document only holds water while the government agrees to let it. At any point, anyone or any party can legally take office, and then say "to hell with your rights."

How would you/your country's people guarantee your rights without a way to enforce them?

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

I'm not Russian so I have a limited perspective of this, but I remember people pointing out good indicators that the invasion was really going to happen during the weeks leading up to it, like how the Russian military was setting up field hospitals along the border. Obviously, hindsight makes reflecting on this difficult, and I'm not sure what information was available to Russian citizens at that time.

[–] GooseFinger 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I understand where you're coming from, but a lot of violence that police encounter is spontaneous and unpredictable.

Say they pull someone over for speeding, but the driver has a warrant for their arrest or something like drugs in their car. The cop begins this encounter expecting to issue a ticket and nothing more, but the driver knows more is riding on the line than that. Violently attacking the cop to increase their chance of getting away might sound like a good option, otherwise they'll spend years in jail for the additional charges they're avoiding.

A lot of this behavior wouldn't exist if our prisons focused on rehabilitation instead of cruel punishment. A simple drug charge can ruin someone's finances and career, which almost everyone agrees is unjust. If they're already facing many years in jail for crimes a cop would arrest them for, what's risking some additional time in jail for a chance to avoid an arrest altogether?

Prison shouldn't be something that people want to avoid at all costs, and the conditions we live in shouldn't push people to commit crime to get by. Currently, our prisons are cruel and our living conditions are terrible, pushing people to steal, sell drugs, and avoid prison at all costs.

Edit: And just to clarify, I'm only highlighting that police encounter violence in situations where people wouldn't expect it. A simple speeding ticket can end with the cop getting stabbed or runned over. Our justice system motivates people to violently avoid arrest, and our living conditions push people to commit crime. So not only do our police need reform, but we need to fix the underlying issues that push people to commit crime and avoid prison to begin with. If that's done, then police encounters that begin non-violently would more frequently end that way too.

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

I have an S21 with Android. Sync runs in the background but it doesn't use much power. It looks like about an hour or so of use each day accounts for about 5% battery drain, including background activity, and not including power used by the screen or other services running in the background.

Just a thought though - maybe Sync is making tracking attempts in the background? I recently started using Duck Duck Go's free VPN which blocks tracking attempts made by apps. Some apps, like Messenger and Robinhood, make thousands of tracking attempts every day, even when the apps are closed and not in use. Google makes tracking attempts through Sync, but I've only seen these occur while I use the app. I figured the attempts are made each time an ad loads, but I could be wrong.

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