benignintervention
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- 14 Comments
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
Science Fiction@lemmy.world•Shadow of the Leviathan, first two booksEnglish
2·4 days agoSweet thanks, adding to the list
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
Science Fiction@lemmy.world•Shadow of the Leviathan, first two booksEnglish
2·6 days agoI forgot about the nebulas! My list just grew
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
Science Fiction@lemmy.world•Shadow of the Leviathan, first two booksEnglish
3·6 days agoI really enjoyed those books! I found them when I was digging through the Hugo’s for something to read and these definitely seemed like they deserved it. I generally avoid mysteries because it seems they have a tendency to intentionally mislead the reader but these felt complete. Every detail is important and contributes to the story without being out of place or a distraction. Highly recommend
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Make Microsoft's CEO cry by installing Chrome's 'Microslop' extensionEnglish
2·7 days agoWell I just dumped windows and MS office. For machine vision I’m only dabbling with openCV, so that’s already open source. The switch to libre office has been pretty nice though
Pulse Water Modulation
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
A Boring Dystopia@lemmy.world•The Minnesota National Guard is attempting to recruit high school kids by insinuating their parents might be deported if they don't sign upEnglish
241·8 days agoCommenting for some context.
I have some experience with this since I was a recruiter for a couple years (Disclaimer: before trump). I did officer recruiting and had no quota, so I had the freedom to be more honest with people. My first question was always, “Do you want to join the military?” And if the answer was “no” I’d tell them to go do anything else. If the answer was “yes,” I’d try to figure out what they really wanted. Often what they wanted was something they could find elsewhere and I would tell them so and how to get there. Occasionally someone would just be pro-military and I put a lot of energy into explaining that there are no promises, no guarantees, and the government will do what it wants with you whether you like it or not. My goal was to dismiss misconceptions (often generated by media/movies or recruiting ads themselves). This was before this insane trump era and I had fewer reservations if someone truly wanted it AND had the wherewithal to be a decent human about it.
Enlisted recruiters don’t necessarily have the same leeway. They are directly graded on the number of enlistments they get in whatever reporting period. Their promotions often depend on it. They are also given materials and information to use. The message above looks like a mixture of someone trying to meet their enlistment quota through outreach and a certain well-intentioned blindness that comes from years of indoctrination to trust the system. I’d be hesitant to say this recruiter is personally trying to round up immigrants, although there is always a chance. It seems more likely that this either came from higher in the organization, like Pentagon level directive (arguably more concerning), or comes from short-sighted intention to help without considering or being aware of the broader dangers so they’re trying to disseminate info about programs that could have been helpful in the past without understanding how they can also be weaponized.
That being said! Intention doesn’t matter. This is a program that can be weaponized and it should be ridiculed as such.
PSA: Everyone should always be highly skeptical when dealing with recruiters, now more than ever, especially since they are graded on number of enlistments. If anyone you know is considering an enlistment tell them that recruiters are not there to help you get what you want, they’re there to make numbers. The incentive structure for them is not in anyone else’s best interest. I’ve found this argument to be effective where more ideological arguments may not land or may further entrench.
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Make Microsoft's CEO cry by installing Chrome's 'Microslop' extensionEnglish
1·9 days agoCool thanks, I’ll stick with it! At least until I’m familiar and want to try something new
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Make Microsoft's CEO cry by installing Chrome's 'Microslop' extensionEnglish
2·10 days agoNo worries, it’s all part of the experience
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Make Microsoft's CEO cry by installing Chrome's 'Microslop' extensionEnglish
4·10 days agoHmm, okay. Yeah I was trying to set up an environment to dabble with machine vision and had trouble finding good instructions or guidance for programming env setup. I think in college we used something-Unix but it’s been so long I don’t really have a frame of reference anymore. So I’m looking for a low-overhead daily driver that’s also relatively common or amenable to maker communities
If that makes sense.
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Make Microsoft's CEO cry by installing Chrome's 'Microslop' extensionEnglish
4·10 days agoDamnit I just switched to Ubuntu. That explains why I kept getting lost. What about Debian?
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
News@lemmy.world•‘Absolutely no detail’: experts alarmed as Trump unveils healthcare planEnglish
49·10 days agoIt’s almost a concept of a plan
benignintervention@piefed.socialto
politics @lemmy.world•Interview With "How to Hide an Empire: A History of the Greater United States" Author Daniel Immerwahr | New Yorker Radio Hour (podcast)English
3·16 days agoGreat book, I need to listen to it again. But the interview will do for now!



Ice chains for traction. It might be a type of crampon, I’m not certain what the distinction is.