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@DCR hey, wenn er das als anstoss sieht das loch in der seele zu flicken bin ich froh. das hilft mir und ihm :)

Dass man die #Telefonnummer bei #Signal verbergen kann, ist wichtig. Trotzdem müssen wir weiterhin darauf vertrauen, dass die Nummer in den Händen von Signal und deren Dienstleistern sicher bleibt. Man erinnere sich an den #Twilio-Hack (Twilio ist für die Registration und Verifikation der Telefonnummer bei Signal verantwortlich): support.signal.org/hc/en-us/ar

Wenn #Anonymität das wichtigste Kriterium ist, empfehle ich aber weiterhin einen #Messenger/Dienst zu nutzen, der die Telefonnummer gar nicht erst erhebt, z.B. #Threema, #DeltaChat, #XMPP / #Conversations oder #Matrix. #SimpleX entwickelt sich ebenso gut. Eine gute Übersicht über verschiedene Möglichkeiten findet ihr in der Messenger-Matrix von @kuketzblog: messenger-matrix.de/messenger- #Security #Privacy

@DCR @OeconomicusRatio@mastodon.social boah macht mir das alles kacklaune inzwischen.

die ganze unsägliche kriegsrhetorik von unseren herrschern ist auch echt gruselig langsam. könnens alle kaun erwarten.

@OeconomicusRatio@mastodon.social mich widert am meisten an das unsere politiker die angeblich so humanistisch sind solche bilder ignorieren. der gute krieg hat jetzt schon so viel mehr leid verursacht als jeder schlechte frieden, aber hier will man lieber mehr waffen reinstecken. bis zum sieg - oder letzten mann.

Photo of the day (Farmington Bay & Wasatch Mountains, Davis County, Utah)

@OeconomicusRatio@mastodon.social kannste echt nur heulen bei soonem bild wie am anfang.

das einfach welle nach welle reingeschickt wird ist allerdings seit jahrhunderten russische doktrin und keine überraschung.

must have struck a nerve about the broken souls 😬

@danielsreichenbach @StephanSchulz @dmoser
i'm not exactly sure who extorts money off of me though. except the state, which you probably don't have in mind with this.

your sarcastic commentary and the facepalm emoji _again_ only proves my point of people having broken souls, sorry. have a funny raccoon.

@danielsreichenbach @StephanSchulz @dmoser
you are indeed correct that these things happened on a larger timeframe.

unfortunately it's mindrot all the way down. the things i'll describe not necessarily happened in linear order but they happened nonetheless.

first was splitting large family units into "core families", everyone living apart. this largely happened during the industrialization. where parents or siblings could have helped, now there is a void. it was another small step to less kids from there, because one person alone can't realistically handle more than maybe three kids (yes, this means children have to be abused at least psychologically in institutionalized child care). still, people are starting families relatively early: a few decades ago, many people had e.g. their house done at age 30. things were cheaper _and_ they were fully trained for their job in their early 20s.

now many people start their career at 30 with some racked up debt and likely a prescription for psychiatric medication (one third of the population and counting, iirc). they pushed away having children to where it almost certainly requires medical intervention at birth. that people are very distanced from their animal nature and effectively are spiritually dead doesn't help with that. birth alone has a good chance of being traumatic for at least the mother.

so they likely will have one, maybe two children tops. spending most of their time with paying off debts or just fighting pure cost of living. instead of spending time with their kids. who are in whole day schools or kindergardens anyway so the parents are able to work their asses off.

this is the mindrot of the successfully "implemented cultural habit" of replacing family - nature, in a sense - with institutionalized child care and other services of a god-like mechanistic state.

it's the wet dream of everyone who wishes for a perfectly controllable population.

thanks for coming to my ted talk. you can keep the tinfoil hats as souvenir.

@danielsreichenbach @StephanSchulz @dmoser
you literally named many things proving my point.

change in demographics is largely due to "only get kids when you have settled down"-mindrot instilled into genx and millenials combined with "let's kill every chance of settling down". this of course echoes into the size of the workforce and other things. it's hard to have 2+ kids when you start at early 30s instead of mid 20s.

public infrastructure is the same or worse in most regions except big cities. there is the occasional new building, the big picture is one of decay. there are no more heated waiting rooms in countryside train stations for example.

a class of ten people is obviously better than 40, qed.

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