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Yeah, @heisinen, it's vital to remember that Trump has a long, long history of failing to get what he and others discussed for a long time. In fact, he already botched his attempt to get something like that.

And so, as @kalle indicates, reporting on the content of the deal has so far shown it to be significantly different from what has been discussed for so long.

This is a very different agreement. And that's the norm for Trump. He consistently fails to deliver what he promises.

In other words, yeah, arguably he promised colonialism, but he already botched that deal and this is different.

@daemon_nova if the software has been trash for 15 years, then maybe those weren't the people for those jobs in the first place, and the pivot to software written code is worth a shot.

Apparently the humans weren't doing such a great job.

Let's see what the results are!

@anders

This runs into my objection that, to put it glibly, isn't actually decentralized but rather re-centralized around instances. And I don't think that's the better way to go.

I think it's better to have actual decentralization, down to the user, as so many engineering and social problems can be solved that way.

You say, "I’m part of a large number of different social networks," but that's not quite right. Since these networks are fragmented it's more like there's a different you that's part of each of the networks, fragmenting you as the networks fragment, which undermines value and your abilities to engage with them all.

In the end, what you're appreciating here is a matter of UI/UX, but you're seeing it as fundamental to the foundation.

Better that we have full decentralization and work on UI problems on the UI level.

The announcement of a deal on minerals continues a pattern that people need to emphasize, that they should have been emphasizing all along: botches everything he touches.

Yet again, his personal involvement in something blew up *his own program*, and it wasn't until he wandered off that it could be cleaned up.

Had we been emphasizing this long, long history of his bungling things there could have been consensus now that he's incompetent. Instead, so many promoted ideas that he would successfully implement right-wing governance models... which validated his candidacy.

We wouldn't have a president Trump today if his opponents had pointed out his record of inability to govern instead of promoting him as an effective dictator.

@charleskeener.bsky.social I don't think those two count as particularly reliable sources these days...

@charleskeener.bsky.social But the apparent reversal is also only apparent based on questionable reporting in the first place.

Seems pretty reasonable that Amazon never really had such a plan, so there was nothing to reverse.

The pace of reporting on this story supports that version of events where it took a while to catch on.

@huntingdon ... It sounds like you are not up to speed on this topic enough to be aware of that the same argument HAS LONG BEEN MADE with regard to Islamic schools.

Just because you're not familiar with the history here doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

It just means you're making assumptions to justify some confirmation bias.

Not only does that counter example not disprove the case at hand, but it's not even factually accurate.

@Nonilex

@wjmaggos

Well, in general the problem there is one of calculation if you do the math different ways with different weightings, then different strategies will maximize outcomes.

But more to the moment, the question before the court is about discriminating against religious organizations, which doesn't actually have very much to do with outcomes of education.

It's just a different topic before the court.

@Gregvan except that's not really what's happening in cases like this.

It's not about "them" choosing the Christian religion to promote, they aren't making the choice in the first place, the question is whether they can block the Christian religion when other people choose to promote it.

That distinction is critical.

@NewsDesk @npr

@jpaskaruk I think you are conflating technical problems with social problems, and they really are two completely separate domains that need to be addressed separately.

It's the old thing where technical solutions don't solve social problems well, and vice versa.

But it sounds like you're lumping them all together.

@enbrown.bsky.social I think it's the frustration of seeing energetic people with the best of intentions trying to make the world a better place, even as they are factually misinformed and so their efforts are going the wrong direction.

@knutson_brain

The problem is, this has it backwards: Congress already made a bunch of stuff illegal, so it doesn't make sense to pass new laws to protect all judges from things that the rest of us are still required to do.

Just because you're a judge doesn't mean you're above the law. In fact, I would say it's the opposite.

@sccdp

@CuriousMagpie The headline is missing context, though.

She said that if Supreme Court justices actually break the law, yeah, they're subject to arrest for doing so.

She was not talking about arresting them over their lawful work as is suggested, but yeah, if a Supreme Court Justice shoplifts, they are subject to arrest.

It's not that crazy a statement!

@maeve But he already has hesitated, so like so many other statements coming out of this administration, this is nonsense.

@MusiqueNow I mean, he already has though...

So this sounds like somebody you should probably shouldn't listen to.

@Wileymiller If you're talking about the US system, you have that backwards.

The US system emphatically and actively is designed to keep that kind of authority away from the courts. We don't give the courts that authority to override democratic processes.

And so enforcing court orders is emphatically left to the Congress. We elect the people that we want to handle that enforcement.

This is a core part of separation of powers in the US system.

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#Mastodon
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Mastodon Exit Interview | Rob’s Posts

v.cx/2025/04/mastodon-exit-int

I am currently winding down the Mastodon bots I used to post sunrise and sunset times. The precipitating event is that the admin of the instance hosting the associated accounts demanded they be made nigh-undiscoverable, but the underlying cause is that it’s become increasing clear that Mastodon isn’t, and won’t ever be, a good platform for “asynchronous ephemeral notifications of any kind”. I’d also argue (more controversially) that it’s simply not good infrastructure for social networking of any kind. There are lots of interesting people using Mastodon, and I’m sure it will live on as a good-enough space for certain niche groups. But there is no question that it will never offer the fun of early Twitter, let alone the vibrancy of Twitter during its growth phase. I’ve long since dropped Mastodon from my home screen, and have switched to Bluesky for text-centric social media.

volkris boosted
OpenDyslexic font looks like this. I'm not dyslexic, but I was curious whether it improved my reading. it doesn't, but here's what it looks like.

it is available here: https://opendyslexic.org/

@ben any chance they're specifically mentioning you in their posts?

@cwarzel.bsky.social don't discount the possibility that they are, in fact, overreacting!

There actually is a ton of overreaction around, and part of the problem is that overreaction to one thing can mask more pressing problems elsewhere.

But that's an understandable thing, where a group of likeminded folks build up each others' perceptions, skewing them without a skeptical, balancing force.

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