burgerchurgarr

joined 1 month ago
[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 6 points 1 day ago

You need to get a smaller truck that fits in your regular one for driving into the city. Like with a yacht, no need to walk, that’s for losers

[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 37 points 2 days ago (3 children)

My euro brain cannot comprehend that Americans are discussing about it like it’s something weird or exotic let alone anything special.

Love you all and would love to have a huge ass truck and a shotgun and live the Pißwasser advertisement lifestyle, but it’s really just a square. Sometimes they do markets there from like 6am-9am on a Saturday though which is nice if you hate sleeping. Also there’s probably a McDonald’s. Now you know all our town square secrets

[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 4 points 3 days ago

Kycnot.me is your friend. Go to a public WiFi (ideally use a VPN), get some Monero, buy a phone plan without KYC.

[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 16 points 3 days ago

We’re to the left of the US but if you look around Europe, our parliaments and governments are full with right wing extremists. The so-called centrists are politically and rhetorically where today’s Nazis were 10-15 years ago (at least that’s how the Nazis presented themselves to the public while they still had to).

Otherwise I do think your explanation makes sense.

[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 3 points 3 days ago

Yeah you would. It depends on the exact implementation and luckily with so many countries involved there’s a lot less possibility to get consensus on privacy invasions, but from a technical perspective there’s nothing that stops the EU from later changing what they agreed upon now.

So what this means is that you’ll have to trust the EU that

  1. they implement this how they say they will
  2. they won’t later change the system to use it for mass surveillance

A proper replacement for cash is Monero. I know blockchain useless and crypto bad and all but that’s a real private digital currency where you’d have to be wanted by the CIA or Mossad to even face the threat of having your payments tracked.

[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 4 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Not sure if great shitpost or someone genuinely thought this is funny

[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 13 points 4 days ago

You can say anything you want but it doesn’t mean that what you’re saying makes any sense.

[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 1 points 4 days ago

Cool! But I’m doing calisthenics

[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 0 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Meh I think the decentralization is a pretty nice use case actually. It’s great that no one can shut it down and no centralized entity can just decide that your money is gone now (for cryptocurrencies).

Look at Monero. Since it's almost impossible to track governments are actually trying to ban it but they can’t shut it down because anyone can just spin up a node and there’s nothing any government can do about it except banning it from exchanges. I think that’s pretty neat, although the environmental cost for this technology together with LLMs are absolutely crazy

[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 5 points 1 week ago

Yeah like why would former colonial powers who both had the ambition once to conquer all of Europe be untrustworthy? I’m sure they won’t ever get drunk on power and start bullying their smaller neighbors, oh wait…

[–] burgerchurgarr@lemmus.org 5 points 1 week ago

No that was my personal take, and Germans can downvote me as much as they want but they’re a shitty neighbor and I don’t need them to show up as a "strong leader". It seems to me that even the progressives there are mostly ignorant as to how seriously bad the current trajectory is, and they expect us to trust them?

IMO centralized power is always bad but especially bad in a country that has a terrible fascist history and that seems to be repeating its mistakes while being offended by anyone who warns them about it because they still believe they learned their lesson and are now the main moral instance on combatting fascism.

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