berg

joined 1 month ago
[–] berg@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 days ago

Either use bare wireguard or netbird/zerotier/tailscale.

does it open the port to the internet, for anyone to see or connect to?

Yes, it will be accessible on the local network if incoming connections to your port are not blocked by a local AP or switch, and from the internet if incoming connections to you are also not blocked at the router.

It's generally a bad practice to expose apps (syncthing, etc) directly to the internet with

allow from anywhere

rules, but it's not an issue for services like wireguard and ssh when used properly.

[–] berg@lemmy.zip 6 points 2 days ago

That'll show 'em.

[–] berg@lemmy.zip 8 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Sun trail through a corn dog.

[–] berg@lemmy.zip -2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

You don't get one without the other. You don't get to choose.

 

The threshold the Israeli authorities have set for the use of a nuclear weapon is dangerously low.

Israeli strategic thinking has long been shaped by the fear of an existential threat. Unlike most nuclear states, whose doctrines revolve around deterrence or competition with other nuclear powers, Israel’s security narrative is rooted in the belief that the country could face destruction if a war turns decisively against it. Israeli leaders have repeatedly framed regional conflicts β€” from the wars of 1967 and 1973 to present confrontations with Iran and armed groups in Gaza and Lebanon β€” as struggles for national survival. That mindset matters enormously when nuclear weapons are involved.

[–] berg@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 week ago

NY Post. Fair and balanced.

[–] berg@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 week ago

There's a good chance she won't make it to then. American life expectancy is only mid-70s and declining.

[–] berg@lemmy.zip -4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

A deterrent for being old, having no realistic alternative to driving, and a failed licensing program?

[–] berg@lemmy.zip -1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

Why should she keep her composure?

This is coming from the leader of the country that launched their own 'surprise' and killed over 250,000 of her country's civilians.

[–] berg@lemmy.zip 6 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Both are important.

Legal cases create precedents which can be used to fight similar cases in the future.

[–] berg@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 week ago

This is not a humanitarian or ethics question

From Israel's perspective nuclear weapons are a last resort

Correct.

Their leadership and military may be genocidal, but they still have a sense of self-preservation and act somewhat rationally

Genocide isn't perpetuated by rational thinkers, is not an act of self preservation, and does not protect the wellbeing of it's perpetrators. The absurdity of this cannot be understated.

I am not making a moral argument. I am stating Israel has shown the depravity to use tactics of absolute destruction and barbarity, an established doctrine promoting the use of nuclear arms if Israel were to take heavy damage, and the fact that Israel is taking significant damage as their defenses continue to weaken as additional fronts open. These are all key requirements for the use of nuclear arms by Israel, and they are increasingly being met. Suggesting the US is more likely to deploy nuclear weapons from their position of relative safety is just laughable.

[–] berg@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 week ago (2 children)

So that's making a very critical assumption: that Israel's territory is being existentially threatened. Iran simply does not have the military capability to do that.

Israel already claims that every one of their neighbors is an existential threat to their existence. The truth of the matter is irrelevant, as it is Israel that decides whether or not to launch Israel's nukes. They do not have enough interceptors to indefinitely outlast Iran's missiles and drones. Their defenses are failing to prevent direct strikes on targets in Israel, which the Israeli population are largely unaccustomed to. It is unlikely that the idea of suffering a prolonged bombardment would be popular or deemed acceptable. Iran will be hesitant to negotiate, because US and Israel have a history of attacking during negotiations.

Israel's small size and geopolitical situation basically requires such deterrence against a neighbor who might decide to blitzkrieg into Tel Aviv. Iran simply does not possess that capability.

Last time I checked, there are many small countries without nukes that are doing just fine. For decades, Israel has launched attacks on their neighbors, all while vehemently claiming that they are actually the ones being unjustly persecuted.

There's very little a nuke would do that Israel can't do to Iran with conventional weapons. While there's a whole lot that nukes don't do to a prepared enemy with spread out military and command infrastructure.

Nobody is debating the tactical or strategic usefulness of a nuclear strike. Possession of nukes is strategic, but their use is not. Israel has already used the equivalent of 6 nuclear bombs on Gaza. They target schools, hospitals, cultural sites, journalists, first responders, and everything else which is supposedly held sacred. They have already displayed an appetite for complete destruction.

Using nuclear weapons as anything but a last resort is therefore an awful gamble

Using nuclear weapons on population centers (Samson Option) is always unacceptable.

Israel has already shown a willingness to commit the crimes we associate with the use of a nuclear warhead (and more), and their leadership has an ever worsening victim complex. It would be tragic, but not unsurprising, if Israel launched a nuclear attack against Iran after suffering heavy bombardment from their enemies.

[–] berg@lemmy.zip 6 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Israel has already shown their willingness to flatten cities and a blatant disregard for civilian life. Their president and a large majority of citizens believe "there are no innocents in Gaza", and that every child born is "already a terrorist from the moment of his birth".

Israel would consider a launch far before the US ever would. The US can sail away to safety whenever they choose, but Israel cannot. In the event Israel suffers enough damage, the Samson Option would be considered.

 

The United States attended India's International Fleet Review and MILAN 2026 training events, just days before attacking an unarmed Iranian warship that had also been in attendance.

India held their first MILAN event in 1995, and has since hosted additional events every two years. The event requires vessels be unarmed or carrying minimal munitions. The United States had also previously attended in 2022 and 2024.

The Iranian ship was attacked on March 4, less than a week after the conclusion of MILAN 2026 on February 26.

Having frequently attended these exercises, the United States likely knew the IRIS Dena was not carrying munitions as they torpedoed the returning Iranian vessel.

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