gxgx55

joined 1 year ago
[–] gxgx55 7 points 1 year ago

From my eastern block friends they are very confused how the USA could have allow homelessness

Yeah, looking from the outside, the USA seems like it's in a mess that it needs to fix.

but they do talk about how everyone at least had a home and some standard of living - where it seems the standard of living is higher in Western countries.

It is easy to look back at worse times in the past with pink glasses of nostalgia... Yes, everyone did have a home, but the standard of living was piss-poor - except for people with connections, who had it much muuuuch better, like my aforementioned grandparents.

I'm from one of the Baltic states, and honestly the standards of living now are much better for the vast majority of people than it was in the USSR, even for minimum wage earners.

[–] gxgx55 0 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Sure, but the meme refers to the communities on the internet that unironically go full tankie, praising Stalin and Mao.

Worst of all, tankies tend to inflitrate sane leftist spaces and slowly transform them. I've witnessed it many times, and that just makes me think that Marxists-Leninists are just the most dominant form of leftism on the internet, which is horrible.

[–] gxgx55 16 points 1 year ago (2 children)

A lot of eastern Europeans actually miss/look back fondly on the USSR days…

Being from here, I can say that those are are people who either 1. Look back fondly just because they were young back then, and now they're old, or 2. Were connected enough to the party to be privileged.

Grandparents from one side of my family were the latter, and their political views nowadays are strongly pro-Russian these days, while everyone else(whose lives were improved after fall of USSR) is pro-Western. Funny how that works.

[–] gxgx55 11 points 1 year ago

Reference to this meme:

[–] gxgx55 6 points 1 year ago

This is just like how people confuse the words "profit" and "revenue". Sold for no revenue would be for free, sold for no profit doesn't mean free at all.

[–] gxgx55 24 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

send "all the money"? That alone tells me you have no understanding of American aid to Ukraine, both in scale and in nature. It's neither "all" nor is it "money" - the Americans sent old military hardware for the most part, and the monetary value is barely a drop in the bucket compared just to their yearly military expenditure that they'd spend regardless. Actual monetary support is much more of a EU thing anyways.

But sure keep whining about centre-right policies of the USA and the EU, calling them "far-left". Actual far-left people tend to not supportive of sending aid to Ukraine.

[–] gxgx55 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

It's easy to register on an instance, the hard part is choosing one. "Which one is the right one to choose and commit to?" is a newbie question that honestly is often overthought. Choice paralysis is real for some people...

[–] gxgx55 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

A central account instance rather defeats the point of a federated system.

Does it? Would it not be possible for a minimal global account system to exist, which ONLY handles logging in and identity? Any user-related data could still exist in instances, not centralized.

I am pretty new to this type of system so maybe I am wrong but it does seem like both the biggest barrier to wider adoption and rather solvable: in current terms, imagine if the "login" instance had no communities, only account log in, while other instances have no log in, but integrate the "central" one. In case decentralization is wanted, I think it'd be possible to have multiple "login" type instances exist in a consensus, at which point problems and solutions start looking similar to cryptocurrency, but without the need to deal with "currency" or any of those ethical landmines - it'd just need to do the task of multiple instances agreeing to dataset of existing users.

[–] gxgx55 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

unfortunately those are problems of successful communities, at least public ones. The only real alternative is a dead community.

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