ToAllPointsWest

joined 11 months ago
[–] ToAllPointsWest 1 points 1 month ago

What about the rest of Gaza?

[–] ToAllPointsWest 10 points 2 months ago

This is going to be really awkward when they run into all the girls named Summer and Autumn

[–] ToAllPointsWest 2 points 3 months ago

The tragedy here is that supporting genocide isn't a criminal offense. Censure at a minimum, but he really needs significant legal consequences

[–] ToAllPointsWest 2 points 3 months ago

Okay "Adolph"

[–] ToAllPointsWest 11 points 6 months ago

Red pill, and I'll have more than 10 million by the time I'm an adult

[–] ToAllPointsWest 26 points 6 months ago

Remember Israel also stole Palestinians tax money. Effectively charging them for their own imprisonment

[–] ToAllPointsWest 3 points 8 months ago (1 children)

When did they say this? Also when his ass was quiet when literal Nazis paraded around, he can stay quiet now

[–] ToAllPointsWest 13 points 8 months ago (2 children)

This! So much this!! It's as if others can't grasp how being under siege by a foreign occupier might make you actually hate the foreign occupier

[–] ToAllPointsWest 7 points 8 months ago

Exactly I can't even recall the last time Israel paid a consequence for any of their crimes against the Palestinian people

[–] ToAllPointsWest 41 points 9 months ago (2 children)

Remember China disappeared Naomi Wu

[–] ToAllPointsWest 10 points 9 months ago (1 children)

In my defense, Portugal is not that big

 

The highly anticipated 2.0 patch for Cyberpunk 2077, along with the forthcoming Phantom Liberty expansion, is on the brink of release. As the developers add the finishing touches to the game, some have taken to social media to unveil new details, particularly regarding CPU support enhancements

 

Building Mesa from source with custom patches to test Raytracing performance

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Mesa 23.1.7 Released (www.linuxcompatible.org)
submitted 10 months ago by ToAllPointsWest to c/linux_gaming
 

Remember, this is bugfix release

 

When China's prodigious tech influencer, Naomi Wu, found herself silenced, it wasn't just the machinery of a surveillance state at play. Instead, it was a confluence of state repression and the sometimes capricious attention of a Western audience that, as she asserts, often views Chinese activists more as ideological tokens than as genuine human beings.

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