Eskating cyclist, gamer and enjoyer of anime. Probably an artist. Also I code sometimes, pretty much just to mod titanfall 2 tho.

Introverted, yet I enjoy discussion to a fault.

  • 16 Posts
  • 763 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 13th, 2023

help-circle
rss


  • Quick tip for anyone in this situation.

    Start by using search to clear everything in your inbox from a particular sender you know wont have sent anything important.

    Don’t catch up by going one mail at a time, catch up going one sender at a time. You’ll be done within a day.


  • I recently switched to Kopia for my offsite backup solution.

    It’s apparently one of the faster options, and it can be set up so that the files of the differential backups are handled by a repository server on the offsite end, so file management doesn’t need to happen over the network at a snails pace.

    The result is a way to maintain frequent full backups of my nextcloud instance, with almost no downtime.

    Nextcloud only goes into maintenance mode for the duration of a postgres database dump, after which the actual file system backup occurs using a temporary btrfs snapshot, containing a frozen filesystem at the time of the database dump.





  • Now you’re just being deliberately obtuse. That’s not what the word “conscription” means, and I’m pretty sure you know that.

    You’re just being an ass because a year of mandatory service is what the law uses conscription for in Finland, DURING PEACETIME.

    In wartime, being unable to leave the country, forced to fight on the front lines, is also conscription.

    Conscription, also known as the draft in American English, is the practice in which the compulsory enlistment in a national service, mainly a military service, is enforced by law.

    “you cannot leave the country and will be kidnapped and forced to die a horrible death on the front lines”

    When done by a state, that is literally still within the definition.


  • Good? No.

    Normal? Absolutely not.

    Justifiable? Arguably.

    The way it’s actually happening? I don’t even know. You didn’t initially comment on that or the posted article, you commented on the general ability of a leader being able to send citizens to fight.

    As horrifying as it is, and as someone who lives in a country where that question could become very relevant very suddenly, I think you’re wrong. The conclusion I came to, is that the ability for a nations government to “trade in” the few to save the many, is not optional, if continued long-term existence is desired.

    You’re free to disagree on where the line for where that price is too great to pay in comparison to surrender, and you surely know better than I do where it is for Ukraine.

    But it does exist. Countries the world over give their leaders the power to wield their human populations as a shield against threats. There is absolutely nothing unusual about that gruesome reality.

    As for what I’m suggesting you look into, that would be the stuff you don’t get to see from a first-hand perspective. Statistics, large scale policy, international relations, industry and economic trends.








  • Russia has mandatory military conscription. If they want to send you to war, they can, and will, paid or unpaid. Is this news to you? The laws are in place, but Putin is avoiding them for fear of national backlash.

    Do you think the country would go into uproar if he used those laws on the people who fought back for three years? I’m not sure it would even if he pulled it on his own people. Not for a while at least.

    The difference, is population size. Putin is allowing it to be voluntary, because he can still afford to (he actually can’t, and russias economy is eating itself alive to be able to keep paying fighters more and more, as normal jobs have to pay more and more, due to labour shortages as more and more working age adults are lost to the war… It’s a vicious cycle that’s going to culminate in involuntary conscription being the only option left to keep invading).

    But Russia can, has, and I am absolutely certain, will, send people to die against their will.

    And it is “happening again” right now. Last time, it was Georgia.


  • History is irrelevant, past “personalities” of countries do not define how they will act in the future.

    NATO is a defense pact. NATO is not what Putin is scared of, that’s just a convenient name that groups together the countries that he percieves as the “source” of the threat.

    Putin is fully aware that NATO presents absolute zero military danger to Russia.

    The only reason he hates it, is because each nation that joins, stops worrying about appeasing him, because membership significantly reduces fear of russias military power, and hence his influence over that country.

    What he is scared of, is progressive western culture. Gay people and trans rights movements give him the heebie jeebies and he doesn’t like that stuff coming closer and closer to russias borders, where imaginary lines on the map do nothing to stop the spread and intermingling of culture and ideology.

    Russia isn’t at war to survive. It’s at war because Putin is mentally stuck in the 80s and can’t handle social progress.


  • Let me put it like this.

    You are offended by a leader that sends his people to die in defense. As you should be. Such a thing is horrifying.

    What I do not understand, is your preference for a leader guilty of the very same crime, but for the difference that he sends people to die, in offense.

    If Ukraine surrenders, this will all happen again the next time Putin would like some more territory.

    And then, you and the people you care about, would be subject to the very same danger that current citizens of russia are. If not even moreso.

    Why would Putin sacrifice from his pools of supporters, when he can conscript from newly conquered territory, amassing a force to take the next slice of Europe that tickles his fancy?

    Maybe you’ll be sent to fight us finns?


  • You got out. You made your decision. You were able to decide to begin with. A lot of people don’t have that option, and that means someone is making decisions for them. I’m not saying that’s a good thing.

    But AGAIN, democracy is not a tenable ideal in wartime.

    It is a peacetime luxury, often flawed in implementation even then. Frequently too far away from a meritocracy to function efficiently.

    You keep bringing it up as if there’s some kind of hypocrisy happening, because you see “democratic” people supporting dictatorship.

    But decisionmaking during wartime isn’t something you can just “call a vote” on. Democracy doesn’t work under siege. That’s the whole reason basically every democratic government has the alternate operating mode of martial law, complete with legal systems written up a ready to go.

    By personal perspective, I mean exactly that which you are talking about. You, what your situation would be like if you were still there, what it is like right now for the people you care about personally.

    Like I said, I would probably trade in my country for those same people, too.

    But I’m not sure I could live with it. I care about other things, many of which being a subject of the current Russian state would make it dangerous for me to care about.