MrEff

joined 2 years ago
[–] MrEff@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago (1 children)

There are some great lists here. I am just going to add- put a whole home water filter on the cold water line of the kitchen sink. It has changed my life. I only need to replace the filter at most once a year, it is on the cold water line that is almost as good a fridge water dispenser would be, but with more pressure. And now when I make pasta, fill up the coffee pot, make tea, or whatever other random kitchen thing that needed water, it is filtered water. Not to mention the clean taste.

[–] MrEff@lemmy.world 7 points 5 months ago

I did human intelligence. It was literally my job to interact with the people. And we did. And not just to hear what they say to our face, but to get sources and find out what people say behind our backs too. I can, with high confidence, say that close to 90% of the population wanted the taliban gone. It was the other 10% that were the issue. And they were the very loud minority that news stations loved to interview just to claim "accurately showing both sides".

Under taliban rule Afghanistan was economically devastated and the second poorest country in the world. They had one of the lowest literacy rates in the world. And they had no healthcare system to speak of other than what was gifted to them from Iran or Pakistan depending of what half of the country you were in. No to mention their lack of infrastructure with the not even completed one highway ring around the country.

That all changed under ISAF and the people noticed. And now their past is about to become their future.

[–] MrEff@lemmy.world 98 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (5 children)

Lol. I did two tours over there. The people loved us. They loved the government. They loved the schools for women. The problem is culturally, they didn't see a need to fight for it because of apathy. They figured "ISAF was always going to be here, so why need to fight for ourselves? And is ISAF isn't here anymore, then we can't support our selves, so why try?" As far as the schools go, they are voluntary. There are no truancy laws. They don't even take attendance at most of the schools. It was completely up to the family if they wanted to send their boys OR their girls. Under pre-ISAF taliban the literacy rate was about 15% and at the time of withdrawal it was almost 40%. The people wanted to go to school, the taliban just didn't let most of them or the schools that they did keep open were so severely limited in what they could teach.

The biggest red flag of this post, to me, is the use of the word Afghani. Any time someone says it with an 'i' at the end, you know they don't know what they are talking about. Afghani is a currency, Afghan is a person.

[–] MrEff@lemmy.world 19 points 6 months ago

While I understand the resentment of saying an institution is a person, and I agree- they still have constitutional rights. To say that private institutions don't have a right to free speech is the same as saying that the government is allowed to dictate what companies can and can't say. Authoritarians would love for you to push that idea.

Under your same thinking (Harvard isn't a person and has no right to a first amendment? OK): Then Harvard resisting against the trump administration is illegal and we find it treasonous to be funneling in possible spies from adversarial countries under the guise of education. We need to lock up anyine who works at any higher ed institution unless they can swear loyalty to America (trump) because they might be complicit in this spy ring. And don't forget, the universities can be searched at any time for evidence and assumed guilty without trial because they aren't a person and don't have constitutional rights! Can we charge the university entity with state laws or federal laws? Both! They don't have rights to protect against double jeopardy!

[–] MrEff@lemmy.world 27 points 6 months ago (1 children)

I find it funny that the tankies still think Russia can hold their own in a fight against NATO when they let can't even beat up on their smaller neighbor with NATO hand-me-downs and previous generation surplus gear.

[–] MrEff@lemmy.world 17 points 8 months ago (4 children)

I would also encourage people to go to midnight showings of Tommy Wiseau's 'The Room' and watch as people throw handfuls of plastic spoons at the screen. Also fun.

[–] MrEff@lemmy.world 0 points 9 months ago

This article is written with some wild speculations by both the author of the article and the source they are quoting. When cell phones are cracked for evidence they have to use write blockers when they copy the phone. They do the analysis on the copy. The original is then re-copied in court to show what was found. This way the original is never tampered with and made inadmissible, and whatever analysis bullshit you did isn't mixed in with your court room copy. What this also means is that your AI can hallucinate all it wants and make up any evidence you can imagine all day long, but when you get into the court room and have to then point to where the conclusions came from and you can't-you will be standing there with a dick on your forehead and with a case being tossed out.

[–] MrEff@lemmy.world 1 points 2 years ago

Looking passed the absolutely insane answer here, no one has even brought up the whole issue of AC vs DC. Batteries are DC, while your fridge that plugs into your wall running on AC. I know they make DC ones, but it isn't like they are interchangeable.