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Joined 2 years ago
Cake day: November 15th, 2023
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Maroon@lemmy.worldto science@lemmy.world•France and EU to incentivise US-based scientists to come to EuropeEnglish13·3 months agodeleted by creator
Maroon@lemmy.worldto science@lemmy.world•France and EU to incentivise US-based scientists to come to EuropeEnglish65·3 months agodeleted by creator
Maroon@lemmy.worldOPto Linux@lemmy.world•Isn’t GPLv3 the ultimate solution to all broligarcy problems?English1·4 months agodeleted by creator
Maroon@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Apparently, 12% of Technology Workers Believe that MacOS is based on Linux6·5 months agodeleted by creator
deleted by creator
Maroon@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.world•Linux Mint surpasses MX Linux on Distrowatch to grab #1 spotEnglish1·8 months agodeleted by creator
Note that the largest Nazi groups today are in the “allied” nations that “won” WW2.
I read a piece (can’t find the source now, sorry) that blamed this squarely on the lack of education and remorse given to the colonial backdrop in which WW2 was fought.
Most parts of the world view WW2 as very much a European war that was imposed on unwilling global participants. The axis powers lost and Germany has since tried its best to reinvent itself while acknowledging its chequered past (check out: Vergangenheitsbewältigung), but the allied powers failed to recognise their colonial atrocities. For example, British history textbooks will loosely allude to the British empire saying that they were once a dominating global entity, but will make absolutely no mention of the numerous massacres and genocides for which they were responsible.
When wars are framed as competitions rather than tragedies, you will see the emergence of false victors instead of acknowledging lost generations. This directly results in a poor public understanding of how bad ideas can fester and hollow out any society.