gAlienLifeform

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 hours ago

Yeah, like even if they did manage to break away they would constantly be getting little raiding parties and all sorts of harassment from the old government and continually have to waste all sorts of resources on defending themselves. If it gets to the point where open armed conflict with the US government seems like a good idea you might as well skip past secession to overthrow.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 3 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago)

Oof, telling everyone your strike package is a massive ordnance penetrator is just so insecure

[–] [email protected] 7 points 3 hours ago (2 children)

reveals

There is definitely no way the US military would manufacture and present information in a particular way to further their own goals, they do not "say" things and they certainly never make "claims," they only "reveal" the truth to us

/s

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 hours ago

"Oh who cares what the protesters are whining about when the other guy is clearly a racist madman? These college kids make a lot of noise, but when it comes down to it they'll show up for Humphrey."

[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 day ago

Them: "Save the planet!"

Bezos: "... and redeem it for valuable prizes!"

[–] [email protected] 14 points 2 days ago

Yeah, if they hadn't had an angry crowd of protesters show up this morning I bet they would've kept on enabliing DHS, so thank you protesters!

 

His mom, Ada Bell Baquedano Amador, said Colindres' relatives in Honduras live around four hours away from San Pedro Sula, where deportees are flown from the United States. Colindres left Honduras when he was just 8 years old and previously told The Enquirer he barely remembers living in the country.

His mother moved to the United States with her two small children in 2014 to flee persecution from gangs, she said. She applied for asylum, but was denied. ...

...

Colindres was detained by ICE officials on June 4, and his mother and sister were given less than 30 days to leave the country.

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[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago

Does Tom's Guide (arc) count?

But they have some caveats,

... due to the size and the fact there's no way to check one dataset to another, it's highly likely there's overlapping information. Meaning the researchers don't know exactly how many people have been compromised.

All we know is that, according to the Cybernews [(arc)] report, one dataset (with over 455 million records) was named to "indicate its origins in the Russian Federation". Meanwhile, a second containing over 60 million records, was named after the messaging platform Telegram.

While this is (to date) seemingly one of the biggest troves of stolen login data discovered, the researchers said the datasets they found remained exposed only for a brief amount of time.

"The only silver lining here is that all of the datasets were exposed only briefly: long enough for researchers to uncover them, but not long enough to find who was controlling vast amounts of data," Cybernews reported.

That does not sound like a silver lining?

Well either way, I'm not that familiar with CyberNews as a source, but glancing at their home page there's like 3 or 4 stories about data leaks, so idk if that's just life in 2025 or if they've got a bit of a preoccupation with that subject

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Yeah, I understand the mods' hesitance in opening that particular can of worms, but misleading and manipulative headlines are a pervasive and severe problem in major publications.

Also, little local news sites have a bad habit of writing generic headlines (e.g. saying things like "Fire in Springfield Kills 7" and assuming you know which Springfield they're talking about, or "Johnson slams Smith" and assuming you know Smith is the mayor and Johnson is on the city council), which is a shame because occasionally there's some excellent reporting or at least some hilarious townie drama in those stories.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 3 days ago (1 children)

to the voters that never hold them to account

How many of these lawmakers even had primary challengers last time they ran?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Yep, which leaves all of us citizens stuck between a violently racist organization that has lied to us repeatedly and another violently racist organization that has lied to us repeatedly. Fun times /s

[–] [email protected] 11 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Because Republicans hold a 53-47 advantage in the Senate, it will be difficult for Democrats to regularly defeat judicial nominations. But a clip of, for example, Missouri district court nominee Josh Divine trying to explain why he endorsed literacy tests for voting and analogized homosexuality to bestiality is the sort of thing that, if done correctly, would have a chance to go viral enough to get Susan Collins to have second thoughts.

The bad news is that no such clips exist, because when Senate Democrats had the chance to question the nominees in person, they decided they had other things to do or other places to be. Illinois’s Dick Durbin, California’s Adam Schiff, and Rhode Island’s Sheldon Whitehouse spent more of their allotted time lauding Federalist Society judges for sometimes ruling against Trump than they did asking questions of Whitney Hermandorfer, the pending nominee to the Sixth Circuit. Incredibly, their performances were still more impactful than those of Connecticut’s Richard Blumenthal, New Jersey’s Cory Booker, Hawaii’s Mazie Hirono, and California’s Alex Padilla, who did not say anything to Hermandorfer at all.

Democratic politicians are fond of casting Trump as a threat to democracy and the rule of law, and are very aware of the power of political theater when they have new books to promote or campaign donations to solicit via lengthy, meme-laden, green-blubble text. But it is difficult for Senate Democrats to persuade voters to care about judicial confirmation battles when they, the Democrats, are so uninterested in fighting them.

 

Amid a recent surge of federal immigration enforcement activity, educators across the country are reporting growing concerns that immigrant families fearing deportation have started keeping their kids home from school.

New Stanford research substantiates their suspicions, showing a sharp increase in student absences starting in January at schools in California’s Central Valley, a region with a high population of Latin American immigrants.

Analyzing three years of daily attendance data from five school districts in the Central Valley, the study found on average a 22% increase in student absences in January and February 2025, compared with the same months in previous years.

Considerable jumps were seen in all age groups but particularly for younger students, with the increase among K-5 students more than triple the effect among high schoolers.

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