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People are kind of missing the fact that you can draw a line from slave catchers and slave patrols to ICE. You don't have to go through Germany.

If anything, there's lots of writing on how Germany was ultimately inspired by socio-political events here in the USA on how to conduct their fascist behavior.

Read "Hitler's American Model". He loved what the American South was doing; the Nuremberg Race Laws were directly inspired by Jim Crow.

Not really.

Slaves were brought here against their will.

Illegal immigrants snuck in against ours.


So what? Are you're saying what ICE is doing is justified somehow?

Let me check.

Population of democracy vote for something.

President of democracy enacts stronger power for that something.

That something gets done.

People who disagree with democratic powers doing what they said they were going to do want to stop it by force.

That something now gets done, by force.

---

Sounds justified because it is.


The same should apply to all the laws ICE 'agents' are breaking in their "enforcement".

What, do you think they should not be punished, or should be immune from following the law? The laws passed by the representatives and president of the democracy you're so keen on?

If you think they are following the law, you sound crazy, because you are.


No one, absolutely zero people, voted for giving the president the power to ignore all checks and balances, taking a dump on the democracy you’re so fond of.

We know for certain no people voted for it, because the option was never on a ballot.


Yeah, I think it is a bit more subtle of an issue than this flamewar always descends into.

There's people upthread arguing that every cellphone in the country is on IPv6 and nobody worries about it, but I'm certain there are thousands of people getting paid salaries to worry about that for you.

Meanwhile, the problem is about the level of trust in the consumer grade router sitting on my desk over there. With IPv4 NAT it is more likely that the router will break in such a way that I won't be able to access the internet. Having NAT break in such a way that it accidentally port forwards all incoming connection attempts to my laptop sitting behind it is not a likely bug or failure mode. If it does happen, it would likely only happen to a single machine sitting behind it.

OTOH, if my laptop and every other machine on my local subnet has a public IPv6 address on it, then I'm trusting that consumer grade router to never break in such a way that the firewall default allows all for some reason--opening up every single machine on my local subnet and every single listening port. A default deny flipping to a default allow is absolutely the kind of security bug that really happens and would keep me awake at night. And even if I don't go messing around with it and screw it up myself, there's always the possibility that a software bug in a firmware upgrade causes the problem.

I'd like to know what the solution to this is, other than blind trust in the router/firewall manufacturer or setting up your own external monitoring (and testing that monitoring periodically).

Instead of just screaming about how "NAT ISN'T SECURITY" over and over, I'd like someone to just explain how to mitigate the security concerns of firewall rulesets--when so very many of us have seen firewall rulesets be misconfigured by "professionals" at our $DAYJOBs. Just telling me that every IPv6 router should have default deny rules and nobody would be that incompetent to sell a router that wouldn't be that insecure doesn't give me warm fuzzies.

I don't necessarily trust NAT more, but a random port forward rule for all ports appearing against a given target host behind it is going to be a much more unusual kind of bug than just having a default firewall rule flipped to allow.


You could set up a monitoring solution that alerts you if one of your devices is suddenly reachable from the internet via IPv6. It will probably never fire an alert but in your case might help you sleep better. IPv6 privacy extensions could help you too.

In practice I don't think it's really an issue. The IPv6 firewall will probably not break in a way that makes your device reachable from the internet. Even if it would, someone would have to know the IPv6 address of the device they want to target - which means that you have to connect to a system that they have control of first, otherwise it's unlikely they'll ever get it. Lastly, you'd have to run some kind of software on that device that has a vulnerability which can be exploited via network. Combine all that and it gets so unlikely that you'll get hacked this way that it's not worth worrying about.


It really seems like all the complaints about firefox are mostly ego-deflection.

People know it is wrong to stay on Chrome and empower Google to the extent that it is, but they're stuck on that workflow and don't want to change, so they find nits to pick about firefox and get very LOUD about that. Then it becomes Mozill's fault that they're still using Chrome, and you can't blame them for anything.


> all the complaints about firefox are mostly ego-deflection.

Sorry this is too handwavy for me.

According to this logic, Mozilla is likely going to die believing it did nothing wrong.


It is going to die because it won't ever be perfect enough, while Google will win because the vastly more important problems with Google's control are just the status quo.

Also, compared to the scale of harm that Google does and the risk of it de facto controlling the web with the chromium engine, all the things that Mozilla does to piss people off should be small potatoes.


And when the cost of training LLMs starts to come down to under $1B/yr, Apple can jump on board, having saved >$100B in not trying to chase after everyone else to try to get there first.


Economic models are complex and far from perfect, and we're still waiting for Hari Seldon's psychohistory models to be created to tie together macroeconomics and macropsychology.


Are you saying that human intuition does play a role? I assumed it was all pretty mathematic and deterministic already.


I have bad things to say about him. But they're firmly on pause. What Trump wants for the Federal Reserve is far worse.

And anyone who is a hard-currency quantity-theory-of-money conservative, should also be appalled by it.

Trump is way worse than what the harshest critics of the Federal Reserve think about it. Nobody right or left should support it. Only the billionaires will profit off the monetary disorder.


> Only the billionaires will profit off the monetary disorder.

Maybe not even them. Certainly not all of them.


By design, kiss the ring. It’s a natural progression of the kind of grifting that has been occurring through 2025: shitcoin rugpulls, tariff announcements, etc.


Trade protectionism in the USA will keep it going here.

We're going to look so backwards and "soviet" after a while.


I've got another kos-PEG implementation here as well, along with a really extensive bibliography:

https://github.com/lamont-granquist/KSP-KOS-PEG/blob/main/li...


> She was being commanded to step out of the vehicle

She was given conflicting order by different officers. One order to drive on, one order to step out of her vehicle.

Which is standard cop practice to just yell conflicting orders out and then wind up killing someone for not complying with one of them.

> and refused to do so while accelerating the vehicle quickly with an officer standing in front of her vehicle.

Cop was off to the left of her hood, and she had her wheels hard to the right and drove around him. She wasn't aimed at him. He wasn't in danger.


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