wiki-user: Clairvoidance

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  • 27 Comments
Joined 6 days ago
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Cake day: April 21st, 2025

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  • My parents had some of the ancient ubuntu (or ubuntu based?) distros that they let me play with, I myself tried Manjaro in 2017 for a month (very scuffed back then), and then full Arch Linux since March or Apr 2021

    Haven’t bothered switching since, but if I did, I’m lightly curious on the NixOS hype. Why yes, I just installed Arch Linux for the archbtw, but also it feels like it just works for me at this point (yknow, till the next fuckup akin to the grub2 fiasco)


  • Power Off to secure that things get updated and resetting float integers in case they would go haywire

    Poweroff could use more write cycles on the SSD because it has to read everything at startup, but suspend has to keep supplying power to the RAM

    for this, I would say SSD is more valuable personally, so if that was my only reason, I’d suspend to RAM every time

    My computer’s generally doing stuff I have it set to do, so I don’t suspend to RAM

    Laptop gets turned off when going outside, also encrypted















  • I can only concede to needing structural improvements, tho I wanna stress that I think it was fair decision-making overall in the moment as the EP did get final say, (when we’re saying that Weber was EPs choice, which again misses the nuance that he managed to come out on-top but lacking more than 50% to even have a majority of votes (182/376 when EP has 751 seats), with nobody wanting to coalition, which is what matters, just like with coalitions needing a majority of seats to form government in parliamentary systems)

    An army would definitely also need a clear “fuck no, im out” option for every decision anyway, or a lot less resources than I’m currently comfortable looking at them being gung-ho about. My understanding is that the cooperation means a lot less collective money spent due to each country’s specializations, but that is probably something where each nation need absolute “yes/no” power in regards to committing actual bodies to a cause.


  • The Spitzenkandidat system is not part of EU law, but more of a political agreement that was hyper new and with no obligation, and saying that the European Parliamanet through the spitzenkandidat should be the only voice ironically weakens the voice of national governments, particularly for smaller and less powerful countries that we want to account for. (You voiced something akin to that too)

    Most people also probably couldn’t tell you the process of the EP or focused much on how your vote would affect EP voting, so it’s hard to on its own justify to have a democratic mandate (not that you can’t take it into account. I like the idea, though I think I’m stuck between it either requires more teaching voters about bureaucratic processes that are going on, or is too much logistical tactical voting to take account for when voting). It also wasn’t a real majority result in the EP, which both undermines its practical use, but also more importantly the European Council proposed a compromising team of candidates, and the EP still has to confirm the commission president and carried through with doing so. Compromise is a huge part of being in a democracy.



  • That company stuff is weird, especially how she’s apparently not just paying the tax debt on it. She also says she’s contested it but for some reason there’s no public cases whatsoever to look at.

    You do speak to something overall I can concede, when I’m retrospecting with the sentence that she punches left, I think I have to give you that she could’ve had a way way bigger progressive part of the tent if she wanted to, especially with the disregarding of Gaza.