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7 votes
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Trump’s calls with foreign leaders have long worried aides, leaving some ‘genuinely horrified’
11 votes -
What do you prefer diesel or petrol?
So what do you prefer a Diesel or a petrol ?, I personally love Diesel I think they are superior to petrol in many ways
9 votes -
Richard Dawkins in conversation with Penn Jillette at Live Talks LA
6 votes -
So I went along
Time for a story. Some of you might remember that I was planning on going abroad. I intended to visit New York City with one of my best friends, setting foot in the United States for the first...
Time for a story.
Some of you might remember that I was planning on going abroad. I intended to visit New York City with one of my best friends, setting foot in the United States for the first time in my life. I have had reservations about the actions and the state of politics of the US for a while, but I'm by no means an activist; I largely settle for small discussions regarding this topic, online or among friends. This means that I had not considered the current administration as a deterrent to my week-long trip.
For the sake of what I'm about to talk in the rest of this post, some additional personal details are needed for context. I am a EU citizen and a second-generation immigrant, child of a parent born in North Africa. I was fortunate enough not to have to go through having to acquire a "real" visa as my country is part of the ESTA program. This program is a fast track of sorts that allows a non-citizen to get clearance to get into the US by providing information through an online form. As I went through that automated process, I arrived at one step that worried me: they asked about being a citizen of another country. Now, I have both an EU ID and passport but I have double-nationality from my parent and so I also have ID and (an expired) passport from that country.
That country is not unstable or known to host terrorists or extremist organizations but I was wondering if I would be lumped in with immigrants from more troubled countries and so I hesitated to put that information at all. But then I figured that it would be a bad idea to lie and then have to explain why I lied if they figured out. And I didn't visit that country for a decade. So in the end I did input that info. This decision stayed with me and caused me anxiety until the end of the 72 hour waiting period. I thought about being denied while having already spent roughly a thousand bucks on the airplane ticket and the hotel. Fortunately in the end everything went through. That put my fears at ease.
Let us fast forward to the day of the trip. My friend and I had the good idea to stay up really late the night before even though our flight was outrageously early. I think I slept for 3 hours if that. And during the 8 hour flight I absolutely could not sleep despite my best efforts. This is just me setting the stage for some heavy sleep deprivation.
Arriving at JFK, we eventually stumble upon the horribly long queue for customs. When we got to an officer, my friend went first, giving his passport and scanning his fingerprints. I went just after him, doing the same. However, the officer seems to have an issue. They close their booth and ask me to follow them. My friend's watching and is like "wtf is going on", the only thing I manage to say is "welp later I guess", maybe not realizing what is going on.
My passport withheld, I'm led to a waiting room... and told to wait there, no reason given. The officer tells me that "it" should be quick. As I scan the room, I mostly see Arab or Asian people with an additional one or two white-passing people. I sit and get my phone out to message my friend where I am and what I was told, when an agent immediately tells me that no phone is allowed. I can only imagine how panicked my friend was getting at that point.
An hour passes.
With still no reason given for what I'm going to call an arrest, I then had had time enough time to see people go through, leave and for others to take their place all the while I listened to the officers talk to each other and interact with the visitors.
The ratio of people stayed mostly the same, meaning the majority was comprised of Arab and Asian people, roughly half didn't speak English at all. There were two types of processing. The first one was people waiting 20 minutes and getting called to a counter in the same room, getting their passport back and being allowed to leave. The second one was people waiting at least half an hour and getting summoned to go with an officer to an ominous corridor, staying at least half an hour and then being allowed to leave.
The officers at the counter chatted within themselves in a friendly manner, typing on their computer at the same time, a nice front immediately shattered by how they talked down to everyone. One elderly person went to get something in their luggage placed at the opposite end of the room when two officers yell at them to sit back down. An asian person was using their phone unaware of the restriction when an officer warns them: "Don't use your phone. Don't use your phone! Hey! Don't use your phone! Oh for the love of- DON'T. USE. YOUR. PHOOONE." Apparently talking slowly to a visitor in a foreign language means they can obviously understand what the office is saying and that they're just acting like they don't understand. And more variations of cliché American cop tropes.
A half hour passes - still no reason given.
My friend tries to approach the room to get information and I hear an officer asking firmly for him to go away. (Un)fortunately an officer finally summons me. They lead me into a room and I'm invited to sit down. The officer apologizes for the wait, and then begins an hour long interview. They are very friendly and ask what places I intend to visit, they ask me about my childhood, my parents, my relation to my other country, my education, my hobbies, my jobs. Then I'm asked to unlock my phone. They go through every app and ask me to explain what they all do. They capture my Facebook name, contact names, what is open in my browser, and more stuff that I can't see.
I cannot describe how distressing it is to see an officer of the law go through your phone. I could not predict if they would stumble problematic material or if they would interpret things the wrong way. This is why I hate people that say "oh I don't care about privacy, I've got nothing to hide". You think I have anything at all to hide?! I am a law-abiding citizen of my country, I have never harbored any intention of committing a crime in my entire life, I can't harm a fly for heaven's sake!
And finally after all of this I am allowed to go. I get to my friend and hug them and try to get out of this place as fast as possible.
Maybe you're wondering if I tried to oppose any of this? Hell no. Not using my phone, waiting without reason, giving an ungodly amount of personal information and give access to my phone to a stranger, I did not fight through any of this. Why? I was afraid. I was an alien going through customs in the Patriot Act era. It was very clear to me that if I tried to block any of this process I would not go out of that airport to the US. I have my principles in privacy, but I did not want to waste a literal thousand bucks and more of my time.
So I went along.
50 votes -
Rush: "Working Man" slowed down to 33 rpm
9 votes -
So can you post images or videos I don’t think I’ve ever seen any ?
I don’t have any images or videos to post just wondering if you can because don’t think I have seen any so far
10 votes -
Tom Waits - Chocolate Jesus [Live] (2006)
6 votes -
The meaning of Donald Trump’s crazily damning self-defence
16 votes -
Why Japan lost its comparative advantage in producing electronic parts and components
10 votes -
Walkability a key factor determining upward mobility of a city’s residents
10 votes -
The Asian MMA unicorn taking on the UFC
7 votes -
How Ireland's Kerrygold butter became a mainstay in US kitchens
9 votes -
Joker - Discussion thread
Seeing as there's no discussion post about this movie yet, and especially in the light of the hype (both positive and negative) I was curious to hear everyone's thoughts on the movie.
20 votes -
Go Proposal Process: Representation
4 votes -
Neuromonakh Feofan & Slot - Drievnierusskaja Dusha (2017)
4 votes -
Amager Bakke, the incinerator and the ski slope tackling waste
3 votes -
World of Warcraft Classic and what we left behind
7 votes -
Denmark calls for EU ban on all diesel and petrol cars by 2040
13 votes -
SQLite 3.30.0 Released
7 votes -
The first video game
9 votes -
I made a (very, very) basic Tildes scraper and CLI browser ruby gem
Here's the ruby gem page and here's the github. Right now it comes with a command line browser that can browse the front page and group pages with no sorting options, and you can view the contents...
Here's the ruby gem page and here's the github. Right now it comes with a command line browser that can browse the front page and group pages with no sorting options, and you can view the contents of a topic (link or text) aswell as the comments. The methods defined in lib/tilde-scraper/api.rb can be used to scrape tildes pages into Group, Page, Topic, and Comment objects.
Right now it's super basic and messy, but I figured if anyone was interested in it it would be the people here.
9 votes -
What is a subject you could talk for 2+ hours about with a great degree of accuracy and no preparation whatsoever?
I'll start: as a film major, I could talk in length about several aspects of filmmaking, especially writing and directing. EDIT: I'm overwhelmed with such a high number of interesting responses....
I'll start: as a film major, I could talk in length about several aspects of filmmaking, especially writing and directing.
EDIT: I'm overwhelmed with such a high number of interesting responses. You guys and girls know a lot of interesting stuff that goes way beyond my intellectual abilities. This is not an attempt to be modest or to draw empty compliments, it's quite simply the truth. That is the reason I did not answer to any comment yet. I wanted to make a proportional effort (I also got a new dog and he's awesome, but that's unrelated hahaha). I will try to do so tonight, and probably create a related thread to you guys can speak a little more about your awesome obsessions. Cheers!
39 votes -
I need ideas for philosphical questions relating to technology. (More details below)
So I have a philosophy and rationality class in cegep. Currently, the topics are pretty general since that's well, what the class is about but well, those don't interest me as much as the debates...
So I have a philosophy and rationality class in cegep. Currently, the topics are pretty general since that's well, what the class is about but well, those don't interest me as much as the debates around Open Access, Copyright, Open Data, Free Software, Piracy, etc. relating to technology
but well, in some of those cases, it would be hard for my teacher to be able to grade if what I'm saying is true so well, I'm creating this in the hopes that some of you have ideas for questions which might interest me but still be easy to enough for my philosophy teacher to well, be able to evaluate my work.
Of course I've already asked my teacher if I could do a question which isn't necessarily related to the class beforehand but he's a little scared of what I might come up with, hah.
6 votes -
Jason-2 oceanography satellite ends eleven-year mission
4 votes -
Ten years ago, Balloon Boy captivated the country. For the first time, we reveal the true story behind the hoax.
14 votes -
The next big thing in dining: virtual restaurants
5 votes -
Donald Trump administration will deny visas to US immigrants who cannot prove they will have health insurance or the ability to pay for medical costs
6 votes -
A more casual, cheaper version of Gloomhaven will come to stores in Q3 2020, with 24 scenarios and 4 new characters
@cephalofair: As others have reported from the SHUX panel today, there is a more casual version of Gloomhaven scheduled to come directly to stores in Q3 2020. No official title as of yet, but it's a 24-scenario campaign in a $40-50 box, with the barrier to entry made as low as possible.
7 votes -
Mega Drive - Active Denial System (2019)
6 votes -
Ron Johnson says he was blocked by President Trump from telling Ukraine foreign aid was coming
11 votes -
Mitch McConnell vows to block former US President Donald Trump impeachment in fundraising pitch
11 votes -
PayPal drops out of Facebook’s Libra payments network, as other financial partners reconsider their involvement
13 votes -
US Customs officer harasses Defense One journalist at Dulles Airport
7 votes -
Humble Monthly November 2019 Early Unlocks: Call of Duty: WWII, Crash Bandicoot N-Sane Trilogy, Spyro Reignited Trilogy
10 votes -
Lab-made primordial soup yields RNA bases
7 votes -
Trine 4 - Game overview
6 votes -
Steven Universe Future - Cartoon Network
9 votes -
Squash and Stretch - The twelve principles of animation and how they apply to games
5 votes -
Adding native scheduled/recurring topics, let's figure out which ones we want to have
I've just pushed up a commit that adds the backend for configuring and posting topics automatically on a schedule. I'm still working on the UI to be able to set them up through the site, but I can...
I've just pushed up a commit that adds the backend for configuring and posting topics automatically on a schedule. I'm still working on the UI to be able to set them up through the site, but I can add them manually pretty easily now.
So first, thanks very much to the people that have been manually posting these recurring topics for months. They've been a source of lots of great conversation, and I really appreciate people making sure to keep posting them regularly. Thanks also to @hungariantoast and @deing specifically for doing the work of writing a script to do automatic posting, and the kinda-API-wrapper that it uses. That made sure that multiple of those topics were posted consistently for quite a while before I got around to implementing this.
I'd like to start setting up all of the recurring topics "properly" in the new system, so let's talk about which ones we already have, and potentially some others that we'd want to add. We should probably also try to space them out a little, so there's not a dump of them at the same times. Here are some of the ones that come to mind immediately for me, but I'm sure I'm missing some, and if there are others that you think would be good to have, let me know. I know there are other ones that have dropped off and it would probably be good to resurrect them:
There are also some others that vary every week, so I probably won't be able to set those up yet (like @aphoenix's recent ~games.tabletop weekly discussions), but once there's a UI we should be able to start configuring them ahead of time.
Any thoughts on those existing recurring topics, suggestions for new ones to add, or old ones to bring back?
62 votes -
According to leaked emails from Natalia Veselnitskaya, Russia’s disinformation campaign may have broken U.S. law and exposed details of a witness who later fell from a window
6 votes -
Millions of the comments posted during public US debates like the Federal Communications Commission's net neutrality repeal process have been faked by political operatives using false identities
18 votes -
The Good Place S04E02 - "A Girl From Arizona: Part 2” discussion thread
A discussion thread for the latest episode of "The Good Place." Of note is that was billed as a second part to last week's season premiere.
9 votes -
Kino - Konchitsia Lieto (Summer Will End) (1990)
4 votes -
Éliane Radigue - An incandescent force field: the electronic composer’s Chry-Ptus is reissued.
3 votes -
Plain Text Accounting | Double-Entry Accounting with Plain Text Files in the Command Line
12 votes -
Martin Ødegaard named player of the month in La Liga
6 votes -
Pricing niche products: Why sell a mechanical keyboard kit for $1,668?
8 votes -
Battle of the bridge – Malmö FF and FC Copenhagen collide in Europe in a Europa League group match
4 votes -
Enough: The Architecture of Degrowth – The Oslo Architecture Triennale celebrates ideas over new products
8 votes