flamingos

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Matelt changed it to Public after seeing my comment, so it federates now.

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 16 points 5 months ago (26 children)

And I disagree that that counts as making use of the service. Lemmy also sends Webmentions, if someone with a world account posts a blog post from someone and world then sends a Webmention to that blog, does lemmy.world's TOS apply to the blogger? TOS applying over distributed systems is frankly impracticable.

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 22 points 5 months ago (44 children)

I'm really not sure how the TOS apply given it opens with:

This Terms of Service applies to your access to and active use of https://lemmy.world/, it's API's and sub-domain services (ex alt GUIs)(we, us, our the website, Lemmy.World, or LW) as well as all other properties and services associated with Lemmy.World.

Sag wasn't accessing or making active use of lemmy.world itself. This would be like an email provider blocking a particular address from another service because the user of that address doesn't comply with a part of their TOS.

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 38 points 5 months ago (4 children)

Can't believe she's messaging everyone but me, just look at !nicole@feddit.org and yet I'm still being ghosted 😭

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 13 points 5 months ago

What a wild thing to publish on International Women's Day. Almost like this "we don't talk about young men" stuff the media is pushing isn't about helping young men but telling women to shut up.

None of this is to deny the many inequalities faced by females in a patriarchal society.

"Faced by females". There's quite a bit of bioessentialism in this that attempts to essentially say violent men have no agency. Like I'm sorry, having a shitty childhood or high testosterone aren't excuses. The culture shift needed to help young men is to treat them like people, capable of feeling the full range of human emotions, and part of being a person is being responsible for your actions.

Also, no amount of women capitulating to reactionary rhetoric is going to bring about a culture shift that young men don't want, young men are just as responsible for making their lives better as everyone else. Yes, they need more support structures (we all do), but young men need to want to get better and I'm not sure a lot of them currently do.

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 33 points 5 months ago

Gonna? My fellow user of Linux, it's already happening.

SQL prompt: lemmy=# select count() from local_user join person on local_user.person_id = person.idwhere person.local and local_user.accepted_application and person.published > '2025-02-28';count = 202lemmy=# select count() from local_user join person on local_user.person_id = person.idwhere person.local and local_user.accepted_application and person.published > '2025-03-5';count = 137

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 2 points 5 months ago

Profile picture (no I don't know why the f is included).

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 0 points 5 months ago (4 children)

Just an FYI, but you've made this community local only, meaning most Lemmy users won't be able to interact with it. If this is intentional then just ignore me.

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 4 points 5 months ago (1 children)

You could use Mojeek then, they even have a Lemmy presence @mojeek@lemmy.ml.

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 15 points 5 months ago (1 children)

My favourite moment from them was when they were getting downvoted, so they accused the CCP of infiltrating the space.

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 22 points 5 months ago (5 children)

The trick is to post more Linux stuff, Lemmings love their Linux.

[–] flamingos@feddit.uk 9 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Ace Attorney 'Objection' bubble

You claim I talk too much and yet you have over 4,000 posts, over 8 times my number of posts. Clearly you must have an abundance of kidneys to give.

 
 
 

Rachel Reeves has promised to "get Britain building again" by bringing back compulsory housebuilding targets as part of a wide-ranging plan to reboot the UK economy.
[…]
She and her team worked through the weekend on the speech to business leaders and investors who have held back on investment in Britain in recent years amid the political chaos of the post-Brexit years and the Liz Truss mini-budget.

It is hoped her plans will unleash tens of billions of pounds of investment in green industry and housebuilding.

Ms Reeves made a pitch to investors who might have avoided the UK in recent years by promising stability.
[…]
Speaking to business leaders at the Treasury, Ms Reeves said:

  • Planning decisions for major infrastructure projects in Britain will be made nationally rather than locally in an attempt to stop important projects becoming tied up in years of red tape
  • Green belt boundaries will be reviewed to prioritise brownfield and so-called "grey belt" land, which are poor-quality areas in the green belt such as disused car parks or areas of wasteland
  • The transport and energy secretaries will prioritise decisions on infrastructure projects that have been "sitting unresolved for far too long"
  • Additional planning officers will be recruited to speed up the planning process
  • An assessment of the country's public finances has been ordered and the results will be presented before parliament's summer break, before a full Budget is held later in the year

[…]
In the absence for now of a surge of public money, Labour will need the private sector to deliver its homebuilding plans.

 

In his first interview since finishing third last week in the [Clacton] election, Owusu-Nepaul insisted he had fought hard, and said he understood the need for the national campaign to take priority. But he warned that Reform should be a cause for concern “because of the type of politics they represent”.

“It was my first time standing in a parliamentary election and I would be lying if I said that at times I didn’t feel concern for the safety of those around me on the campaign,” he said.

“I am not saying this was a direct consequence of Farage but from his supporters there was vitriol and from the very beginning a sense of intimidation. I had people tear my leaflets up. We had people come out and spit at us. I had my name constantly interrogated about where I was ‘really from’.

“On social media I got a torrent of abuse all day, every day. It has only given me further resolve to keep going because it made me realise that there are many people online, trolls or whoever they are, who want to silence me and silence others who share a similar belief system.”

He added: “It felt like I had become a proxy for some of the things they hated. My profile had kind of got bigger and with that there was endless abuse. It was from people who were quite explicit about their intentions and who they were going to support, and that was Reform.

“The campaign was never about me. It was about ensuring that principles and values were communicated to voters. But I did learn a lot about the role of ethnic minorities in public life.”
[…]
Owusu-Nepaul said he believed the political atmosphere had permeated through to the local community. He said: “I spoke to a lady who was telling me her eight-year-old son was beginning to experience racial abuse in the playground. She said that [I] have to vote for you because Nigel Farage’s party has been whipping up emotions. She was desperately sad and angry.

“That really brought things home to me, the extent to which divisions were being stoked, and they were even manifesting in the school playground.”

He echoed Neil Kinnock – who has warned Labour not to ignore the nationalist threat posed by Farage – and said he believed the best way for the left and progressive politicians to defeat the surge in support for the populist right was to address people’s material concerns.

“In Clacton I saw the type of endemic poverty which is a problem all over the country and goes back generations. It’s also been juxtaposed with a lot of over-promising and under-delivery. It’s become ingrained while the scapegoating of others has become a way of avoiding doing anything,” Owusu-Nepaul said.

He predicted that Farage would be a “one-term MP” because he would use the platform to serve his own ideological interests while local people in Clacton would lose out.

 

Archive

Starmer spoke to his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday and said he was committed to continuing the “vital co-operation” between the two nations to deter malign threats.

On the Israel-Hamas war, Starmer set out the “clear and urgent need for a ceasefire”, the return of hostages and an immediate increase in humanitarian aid to civilians in Gaza.

He stressed the importance of ensuring the long-term conditions for a two-state solution in the region, including that the Palestinian Authority had the “financial means to operate effectively”.
[…]
The UK prime minister also turned to the topic of “ensuring international legitimacy for Palestine” and said that his “long-standing policy on recognition to contribute to a peace process had not changed”, adding that it was the “undeniable right of Palestinians”, according to his statement.
[…]
Three aspects of the Labour administration’s policy on the conflict remain unclear, starting with its assessment of the lawfulness of continuing to license arms exports to Israel.

The second is whether it will reinstate funding for the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, which the UK suspended following Israeli claims that some of its staffers belonged to Hamas and had participated in the October 7 attacks.

There is also the question of what the UK will do if the International Criminal Court presses ahead with issuing arrest warrants, for which its chief prosecutor has applied, against Netanyahu and Israel’s defence minister Yoav Gallant for suspected war crimes in Gaza.

While Lammy said in May that the UK would seek to enforce such warrants if they were granted, Starmer has been more circumspect, commenting that: “I will deal with that when the court has made its decision.”

 
 

A projection of how the election results would look if we used Additional Member System (AMS), like in Scotland and Wales.

Party AMS FPTP Seat change
Labour 236 411 +175
LibDems 77 71 -6
Green 42 4 -38
SNP 18 9 -9
Plaid Cymru 4 4 0
Reform 94 5 -89
Conservative 157 121 -36
Northern Ireland 18 18 0
Other 4 6 +2
 

From the BBC:

Party No. Seats Δ Seats Vote % Δ Vote %
Labour 412* +211 33.7% +1.6%
Conservatives 121 -250 23.7% -19.9%
Liberal Democrat 71 +63 12.2% +0.6%
SNP 9 -38 2.5% -1.3%
Sinn Fein 7 0 0.7% +0.1%
Independent 6 +6 2.0% +1.4%
DUP 5 -3 0.6% -0.2%
Reform 4 +4 14.3% +12.3%
Green 4 +3 6.8% +4.1%
Plaid Cymru 4 +2 0.7% +0.2%
SDLP 2 0 0.3% -0.1%
Alliance 1 0 0.4% 0%
UUP 1 +1 0.3% 0%
TUV 1 +1 0.2% +0.2%
Workers Party 0 0 0.7% +0.7%

* Includes Speaker

Turnout: 60% (-7.6% from 2019)

Currently waiting on South Basildon and East Thurrock (Should be out later) and Inverness, Skye and West Ross-shire (delayed to Saturday). Will update when they're out.

 
 
 

The 2024 Labour manifesto may be titled ‘Change’, but it underscores the paucity of ambition in the economic plans of the government-in-waiting. Consisting of a few minuscule tweaks to tax provisions and loopholes and some pocket change in terms of additional expenditure — around £10bn annually, or just 0.4 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) — the economic programme they have laid out is modest in the extreme.

[…] [Labour argues] that, because the Tories have so damaged the economy, resources aren’t available immediately to do all the things that are needed — that the country can’t afford a transformative programme, and that public spending increases will have to wait for (and be predicated on) future increases in economic growth. Hence the straitjacket into which they have willingly placed themselves with their ‘fiscal rules.’

This argument is economically illiterate and historically obtuse. Britain is the sixth richest country in the world today — and one of the wealthiest societies in all of human history. Despite the dire state of the country, the problem is not a shortage of resources, but rather that plentiful resources are hoarded at the top. After more than four decades of neoliberalism, the situation is one of vast private affluence amidst widespread public squalor. That Britain does not feel affluent is a result of the extremes of growing inequality and the diversion of wealth and productive capacity away from public goods and services to elite private accumulation and consumption.

[…] Even if had Labour maintained their now-abandoned £28 billion-per-year green investment pledge, that would have represented only 1.3 per cent of GDP, or — as has been pointed out — around half of the annual increase in wealth of the top 200 families in Britain since the start of COVID-19 pandemic.

It is not only the scale of Labour’s economic programme that falls short, but also the underlying approach to economics it represents. We are told that we lack sufficient resources to make the public investments that are required, and that we must therefore avoid frightening the horses with taxation or nationalisation and instead create the stability business craves, delivering an economic strategy that will encourage increased private sector investment and result in growth (‘wealth creation’) that will benefit all.

Everything about this approach is wrong — especially the backwards causal relationship between public investment and growth — and its name is ‘trickle-down economics.’

But it gets worse. In the absence of public investment, Labour is betting the house on attracting more expensive private capital. What meagre additional public funds are to be made available will largely go to ‘de-risking’ (whereby the public agrees to absorb the greater part of any risk of losses on highly favourable terms for private capital), which will supposedly help fill the public investment gap through forms of public-private partnership — a model we have seen in the past in the form of the Private Finance Initiative (PFI) under the Blair/Brown era New Labour governments. At the heart of all this will be the financial sector — whom both Starmer and Reeves have encouraged, publicly and privately, to get their ‘fingerprints’ all over Labour’s economic policy.

Starmer’s Labour, we are told, is ‘set to land billions in new investment from banks and international firms within months, as part of a plan to use private finance’ for infrastructure investment and the green transition — PFI on steroids! One of the journalists who broke this story described Labour’s plan as being akin to ‘getting BlackRock to rebuild Britain.’

Here we find the most momentous of Labour’s economic policy commitments, a pledge to privatise and mortgage the future through handing over infrastructure investment and the green transition to private finance so they can monopolise, profit, and extract from the next economy as well as our present one. This is the polar opposite of the Green New Deal. It’s not new, it’s a terrible deal, and the danger is that, in elevating financial returns over environmental ones, it won’t be green either.

The real term for the Starmer/Reeves approach, properly situated in the recent history of Britain’s political-economic development, is ‘financialisation’. Financialisation (to borrow a definition from economists Michael Hudson, Dirk Bezemer and Howard Reed) is the diversion of financial flows away from the real economy of production and consumption and towards asset markets in pursuit of capital gains.

Financialisation is a complex phenomenon, but has enormous explanatory power as to the causes of Britain’s highly unequal and dysfunctional economy of growing poverty in the midst of plenty. Far from boosting productivity and increasing efficiency in the non-financial economy, the growth of the financial sector functions as a subtraction from the real economy, as ‘financial flows are diverted to unproductive uses and… the resulting revenue flows benefit a minority. As financialisation gathers pace, rising wealth and debt detract from income for the majority.’

In such an economy, what is counted as ‘growth’ matters a great deal. Every financial asset is at one and the same time someone else’s financial liability — and as the holdings of the financial sector have increased, so too has the debt held by households and businesses in the non-financial economy. This process helps explain the squeeze-play of recent years, whereby nominal economic growth has in reality been experienced as reduced income through increased extraction and indebtedness.
[…]
The financial sector, then, is extractive from the real economy. And given that all income groups are paying ever more into the finance sector in fees and interest charges and for underlying assets while the payouts from the sector are even more concentrated than those of the economy as a whole, the finance sector has also become the locus of the production of increased inequality in the UK economy.

This, then, is the economic engine that Labour has installed at the heart of its economics — a machine that lowers not increases growth, and concentrates the returns amongst the wealthiest asset owners, driving inequality and indebtedness.

The plan now is to deploy this machine for financial extraction increasingly in public services, including the NHS, and in energy markets and infrastructure to supposedly drive the green transition. It will be a veritable bonanza for finance capital — and a very costly exercise for the rest of us. Astonishingly, Starmer and Reeves have effectively doubled down on one of the principal causes of Britain’s poor, uneven, and unequal economic development and rebadged it as the solution.

 
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