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Cake day: January 25th, 2024

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  • “pro” tip: Whenever Ubuntu gives you a black screen it’s likely the GPU driver or desktop-environment which were borked.

    A way to reach a terminal, is to switch to another session using ctrl+alt+F2.

    From there you can run terminal commands to downgrade the GPU driver or reinstall the desktop environment.

    It’s tragic that this is still such a common issue.













  • I watched about half the video (only the intro really touches on the infighting plans). I agree with his premise about the infighting but what we’re seeing now is basically the opposite of it. The US leaving SDF to fall means that there won’t be constant infighting in northern Syria over the oil. Maybe the freed ISISrael fighters can help destabilize the region but I wonder if they can really surpass a directly US-armed SDF. Of course this would all change if the Syrian regime decides to attack Lebanon or Iran which is very possible. But they could have done that while leaving SDF in the north. Defeating the US proxy now just seems nonsensical from empire POV, but I might be missing something.

    Kevork’s views on Assad are a bit too romanticized for me. Assad was much more unpopular than for example Khamenei in Iran, because whereas Iran has a majority Shia population, Assad was heavily favoring the small Alawite sect he belonged to with cushy government jobs and heavily cracking down on others. Besides his logistical support for the Palestinian and Lebanese resistance (which was mostly out from his Iran alliance, and not ideologically) Assad didn’t have much going for him.














  • I’m actually a tad confused on why they are dropping support for the SDF. Usually the US and Israel love infighting groups and dismantling these groups seems counterproductive to the organized chaos they wish for. It might be Erdogan lobbying against the Kurds in exchange for letting Israel take the Golan and whatever else they stole.

    I wonder if it will come back to bite them since the last thing Israel wants is a unified Syria. But the Kurdish seperatists are probably stupid enough to take up the proxy-millitia mantle for the US again whenever they are needed. They seem to love getting backstabbed by the US over and over.












  • https://www.caitlinjohnst.one/p/on-leftists-and-anarchists-who-cheer

    The more power structures are absorbed into the empire, the larger and more powerful the empire becomes. Desiring their absorption is desiring more power for the US empire.

    And you can lie to yourself and say that you don’t want Iran to be absorbed into the control of the US empire, you just want its people to live in a free and democratic country. But we both know that’s not going to happen. Once the strength of the Iranian government has been collapsed there will be a power vacuum that is filled by whatever faction is able to secure control, and the strongest faction will be whichever one is backed by the US and its allies. There is no organic faction within Iran that is strong enough to stand against the installation of a US puppet regime at this time, besides the one that presently exists.

    That’s the reality of the situation. It’s not ideal, but it is reality. You can choose to be real about reality, or you can choose to psychologically compartmentalize away from it and tell yourself a bunch of fairly tales about a global people’s revolution which just coincidentally happens to be starting in all the countries the US empire hates most. I personally find the latter undignified, self-debasing, and power-serving.