I want to see a version of this with the first and second halves of "NOTICE" printed in different colors, to drive home an additional point.
26.01.2026 11:02 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0@lotharsson.bsky.social
I want to see a version of this with the first and second halves of "NOTICE" printed in different colors, to drive home an additional point.
26.01.2026 11:02 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0I want to see the version where the first and second halves of "NOTICE" are different colors, to further drive home the point.
26.01.2026 11:01 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Just say the government is **gaslighting**.
To me at least, that conveys that they're not just telling lies, they're trying to deceive/propagandize/brainwash on an industrial scale.
Give them a week's notice every single week of the year, and then turn up at a time of your own choosing any of those weeks, pointing out you've given them at LEAST a week's notice.
01.07.2025 07:20 β π 6 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0If merely saying it made it so, you'd have an actual argument.
27.06.2025 15:38 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0This portion of the dissent much indicts the Supreme Court majority as enemies of the Constitution - of the Republic.
And she's not wrong about that.
There's another distinct inherent centralising factor when stablecoins are meant to be a proxy for real USD. Exchanges licensed for USD-coin conversion become centralised entities in the system...for obvious reasons.
And IIRC there tend to be centralising forces in market-making as well.
But it's worse than that.
They not only get richer, they get COMPARATIVELY richer, compared to the rest. Once you have an edge over the rest, your edge gets bigger, and bigger, and bigger...
...until it's not economically viable for any other actors to even try to compete.
Because they comprise reward structures that disproportionately provide stochastic rewards to those actors/entities with the most coins or the most $$$.
It's a classic "positive feedback loop" in engineering terms. In financial terms it's "the rich get richer".
Every accusation is a confession...
...and I suspect every unhinged defense of another power-drunk madman is a confession too.
They all reward increasing monopolisation, which means they centralise into the monopolies that inherently develop.
You can nitpick that it's not the SAME centralised monopoly as for fiat currencies, but arguably it's even worse than that.
LOL!
26.06.2025 04:13 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0And all of the technological mechanisms cryptocurrencies rely on inherently centralise over time.
26.06.2025 04:11 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0^^^^^^^^^^ THIS!
24.06.2025 22:07 β π 4 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0And it sounds more Trump-ish ... actually, given his family history, more Drumpf-ish - in the original German.
21.06.2025 06:23 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Over the last couple of days I've seen several reports (with photos) of masked kidnappers using vehicles with no plates :-(
If so get the VIN if you can (Google where to find it). You have to get much closer to photograph it, but it's also a much stronger identifier than plates are.
There may be parallels with the bounty hunters snatching anyone with detectable levels of melanin in the North.
I've seen claims the government is offering bounties for snatching potential deportees - but note I haven't seen any decent evidence to back that up.
And I don't see how people who are stopped and their story is subsequently covered in the media are using it for "clout".
For one thing, the coverage can only HINDER any future attempts to enter the US.
Your hypothesis presumes that you're observing an unskewed random sample of those who've been stopped. That's exceedingly unlikely. People who ALREADY have more public exposure or "clout" are far more likely to be covered in the press and social media.
21.06.2025 05:14 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Yes, agreed on all counts.
I haven't seen good evidence bounties have been offered, especially to freelance bounty hunters - but if that's happening it would explain a lot (including the appallingly unprofessional conduct, quite apart from what seems to be unlawful actions).
And the fact that it is all strongly consistent with the regime's repression of anyone - within the country, and at the border, and even attempting to suppress dissent OUTSIDE the US - that they can possibly repress or suppress who does anything other than cheerlead Israel's genocide in Gaza.
19.06.2025 18:55 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0For instance, you have to also dismiss two stories about it by the eminent national broadcaster in Australia, e.g. www.abc.net.au/news/2025-06....
And stories in other outlets.
And the guy's substack: substack.com/@alistair which contains a bunch of historical posts that line up.
Yes, that's exactly how you can defend your cognitive dissonance.
But such efforts have to grow, and grow, and grow, over time.
AFAIK there's no effective way to do this, quite apart from the fact that ICE often goes out of its way to make their detainees harder to track.
And I suspect the kidnappers are relying on that fact.
I've seen claims that there's a bounty per detainee, offered to various ... people ... who aren't necessarily directly employed or otherwise contracted by DHS, ICE or any other law enforcement force.
That might help explain some of their behaviour.
The same person's story has been written up in The Guardian, amongst other outlets if I'm not mistaken.
Please don't be so gullible that this story is way beyond what CBP and DHS will do in these times, especially given all the other stories from major news outlets over the last few months.
I've seen that too.
19.06.2025 12:15 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Thanks for the clarification!
19.06.2025 12:14 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0You might be right, but he person who said that cited a statute that (presumably was the relevant one) and I don't recall it being restricted to immigration arrests.
19.06.2025 11:07 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0I believe they can only do that if the alleged perpetrator is likely to get away if they don't and there's a good chance they will permanently evade arrest.
That certainly wasn't true here.