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@JustusWingert

You wouldn't know unless you manually compared fingerprints... so do that?

In Nostr users are identified by public key, right? So if you're posting with a separate key then you're not pretending to be a the user, you're identifying yourself as a different user mirroring all the posts.

I don't think this criticism is especially valid since it seems to be saying Nostr offers no protection except the one it offers.

@taylanb@mstdn.social

@vegafjord I had the same reactoin that @maegul did.

Maybe we should aspire to a day when and interfaces were that intuitive and technical issues weren't so intrusive, but that's not where we are today.

Everything from cross-instance addressing through security through "why am I not seeing all the comments?" intrude into user experiences, putting instances pretty front and center at this point.

Societies shunning each other is (hopefully) not nearly as apparently in day to day usage as this other stuff.

@Craktok

As I recall, I called for Trump's impeachment for the exact same reason: his refusal to oversee his agencies.

Heck, these days I tell every Republican who would listen that they need to be running against Trump based on his failure to manage his branch. It's amazing that so many of the exact things I hear conservatives complaining about come directly out of Trump's epic failures in the job, that they allow him to trumpet as successes without calling him on it!

Unfortunately it's such an echo chamber in here I can't find many conservatives to ask them, what are they thinking?

@Craktok

I am willing to believe that Biden sharked his responsibilities like that, and I would consider that to be an impeachable dereliction of duty.

The DOJ operates subordinate to the president, the head of that branch of government. Should a president so proudly declare that he won't exercise oversight of the most powerful law enforcement agency in the country, that's a pretty big deal!

And it's a shame that we would tolerate it as it is a very dangerous precedent to be setting.

@nus@mstdn.social

Well that's one part I think I can clarify without repeating: upset? No I'm not upset. I just got a kick out of the absurdity of your statement. It made me laugh!

This whole story is not one with enough substance to get anybody upset over, IMO.

@goatrodeo

It's like this person is so obsessed with a particular bit of drama that they are willing to overlook how governance in the US actually works, and that's a real shame.

I mean the system specifically prevents such unelected people from having such major roles in governing, handing them little more than appellate jurisdiction opinions.

The actual governing mainly takes place in the other branches of the federal government, and for a really good reason!

@nus@mstdn.social

You are incorrect, and I just didn't want to repeat myself above.

You seem to have misunderstood what I wrote above, but again I just feel like I would be repeating myself should I restate it, so that doesn't look productive.

@xankarn

Oh no it's quite the opposite: It is in support of liberal democracy that we need to highlight the political branch, the representative branch, and focus on electing better congresspeople instead of being distracted with all this mess.

After all, if we don't want a particular justice on the court anymore the process for making that happen runs right through the people we elect to Congress.

They are free to impeach and remove any justice anytime their political responsibility to voters arrives at that compulsion.

It is BECAUSE liberal democracy is so important that we need to focus much more solidly on the branch that is there to engage liberal democracy.

@nus@mstdn.social

Oh, no, not at all! I didn't find your claim the least bit interesting. It comes across as anecdotal projection relying on subjective and normative comparisons with little actual insight.

volkris boosted

@nus@mstdn.social

I didn't say anything about your complaints about the scaling.

But it jumped out at me that you were making this particular complaint, about the graph about identity focusing on identity.

I would have other questions about this research, about its methodology, that go far beyond how they scaled their graph, but then, I don't actually think this claim is particularly substantial enough to track it down.

@markxs

I'd say that's a pretty odd take on the cause of the US Civil War, not to mention the political history between declarations from state houses and the first shots fired.

@nus@mstdn.social

In a graph about how people identify, I think you're reaching a bit when complaining that it presented how people identify.

If the chart is about identification, then having ideals is a different matter, so you're complaining that the chart measured what it said instead of what, I suppose, you would have preferred to study.

@liveposting

@writingmonicker

Yeah, it's such a shame that so many rather loud voices refuse to see that value to the platform

Well, a vocal minority, hopefully.

@xankarn

Well that gets a bit circular: Americans who aren't informed about the protections will consider inadequate the protections that they're not informed of?

Anyway, really the general public has so little understanding of basic civics, things like the role of the Court in the US judicial system, that such polling isn't all that meaningful, ESPECIALLY considering that the Court was specifically set up to be independent of such political questions.

@xankarn

But there is evidence of self-policing.

The justices engage with each other to discuss these controversies, and it's even reported that the internal processes were followed even in these specific charges being circulated lately.

@codefolio

Well right but this sounds like it is talking about information that is being handed over voluntarily.

If it's not served it's not served.

@lauren

@lovelylovely

It's so funny how people are casting opposition to a prosecutor as fascism.

Like yeah, it's fascism to NOT back the police and their activities against the public?

It's fascist to be critical of the police?

@nprpolitics

It's a bit foolish to promote such rhetoric when the statutes governing presidential elections gave Trump the runway that he used to challenge the election.

It's not about the fragility of the structure of democracy. It's about, well this is the structure of democracy. He was allowed to challenge, and he did, so there's just no meat there.

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