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BlameThePeacock, in Nauru cuts ties with Taiwan as China accused of bribery

Oh no, not Nauru with it’s population of 12,511 people…

Kwakigra, in Israeli prime minister says “no intention of permanently occupying Gaza” – as it happened

I was expecting Isreal to brush off the ICJ charges in contempt and ignore the process entirely like the US always has and would help them to do as well. It’s interesting to see how their PR has shifted recently from " It’s not a genocide when we do it" to “We’re not doing what we’ve been saying we’ve been doing for many decades.”

awwwyissss, in Coverage of Gaza War in the New York Times and Other Major Newspapers Heavily Favored Israel, Analysis Shows

I like NYT… and this isn’t surprising or acceptable.

Circling the wagons can be great for defense, and when that’s defense of genocide it’s deeply shameful.

tesseract, in 2023 confirmed as world's hottest year on record

Enough with the ‘it’s the worst and it will get even worse’ stories. Start publishing the names and actions of those who benefitted from these catastrophies. Start publishing their plans to ride out the crises when the rest of us struggle in a disaster they made. Start publishing the actions they took to sabotage the world’s search for energy independence and sustainability. Start publishing how much money they made/stole with this. Start publishing the number of lives lost per person who benefitted from this.

I don’t understand the f***ing pacifist strategy against a bunch of greedy sniveling mass murderers.

frog, in Alaska Airlines grounds 737 Max 9 planes after section blows out mid-air

I know, logically speaking, that air travel is statistically very safe. But it’s news like this that makes me anxious about flying later in the year (for the first time in 15 years!), especially as the last leg of my outward journey is on a 737 Max.

vanderbilt,
@vanderbilt@beehaw.org avatar

If it’s any consolation, the odds of your flight ending in an air incident, or even a hull loss is incredibly slim. You have greater odds of being attacked by a polar bear, and a regular bear on the same day. I understand your apprehension, though and it says a lot about the state of Boeing.

frog,

Yeah, it’s one of those things where I understand intellectually that the odds of an incident are incredibly low. I’m sure I read somewhere that air travel is statistically the safest form of travel. But anxiety is definitely not logical!

(Those two bears would have to be very determined to attack me - neither are native here!)

Hirom, in Alaska Airlines grounds 737 Max 9 planes after section blows out mid-air

That’s why cabin crew recommend always wearing the seat-belt during the flight.

Radiant_sir_radiant, in Alaska Airlines grounds 737 Max 9 planes after section blows out mid-air

Wow. My stepdaughter and her boyfriend flew with one of these just yesterday.

I hope this is resolved soon. The top brass at Boeing probably won’t be getting a lot of leisure time until then.

reddwarf,
@reddwarf@feddit.nl avatar

The top brass at Boeing probably won’t be getting a lot of leisure time until then

Why do you say this? What gives you the idea that they will face some form of workload pressure because of this?
The only people not getting leisure time will be the persons responsible fixing this. The consequences for the top brass will be Golden Parachuting to the next job, losing stock or face devaluation of said stock.

If you honestly think top brass is actually fixing this or face some form of heavy workload then you’d be wrong.

PS: This is not a manifesto on the inequalities of the current system 😊
It’s based on 40+ years of working where I have never seen top brass taking any form of responsibility or workload. They ‘connect’, ‘network’ and god knows what. All fair play if hired for that but please, do not confuse top management and actual work on products or being involved in fixing products. Also, never seen them ‘empower’ or ‘facilitate’ so others can work more efficiently or something like that.

Ok, small personal manifesto after all 😇

pearsaltchocolatebar,

Part of the reason the top brass get paid so much is that they’re on the chopping block if something goes wrong like this. It’s so the company can fire ask someone to step down and point to them and say, “See, we did something. Now everyone forgot our gross negligence.”

GreyEyedGhost,

I used to believe this, then the 2008 banking crisis came along, banks were looking at going bankrupt, the government had to step in, and the CEOs got 7- and 8-figure bonuses.

jarfil, (edited )

Right, and just to make sure, where do I apply to get on the chopping block with the golden parachute? I want to be chopped parachuted so hard, I’ll cheat and swindle all you want (wait… hope that saying this publicly didn’t disqualify me?).

pearsaltchocolatebar,

Were you born rich? You have to be born rich.

Radiant_sir_radiant, (edited )

Why do you say this? What gives you the idea that they will face some form of workload pressure because of this?

Oh, I’d be very surprised if any actual personal responsibility found its way to them. But they’re gonna have to look super busy and worried for the press for a while, find somebody else to pin the blame on, call friends in government to ‘expedite’ any investigations and reassure their shareholders. That’s gonna cost them a lot of time they could have spent on nicer things such as working on their handicap, doing coke in the coutry club’s bathroom or firing a couple of hundred workers.

Other than that I totally agree with you.

bermuda, in Strong quake prompts tsunami warning for Japan's western coast

Lived in Japan in the Kanto plain area (out of Tokyo) between 2014 - 2017 and this was always my worst nightmare. Hope as many people got to safety / high ground as possible.

library_napper, in A year after China ended its harsh COVID policies, it’s struggling to rebound
@library_napper@monyet.cc avatar

"When I was coming in '82, people took pictures with cars and paid for the picture

What the hell does that mean?

nutlink,

Cars were so uncommon to people outside of Beijing that they would pay to have their picture taken with a car as a memento or proof to others that they saw a car and they do exist. Motor vehicle production didn’t really pick up until the early 90’s. Before that, manufacturers were only making a couple hundred thousand cars per year in the entire country.

At least that’s how I interpreted it after reading about the Chinese auto market history on Wikipedia and combining it with my own personal history with computers while growing up in a rural town in the US.

…m.wikipedia.org/…/Automotive_industry_in_China

CJOtheReal, in China's Xi says reunification with Taiwan is 'inevitable' in New Year's address

Yeah hope he gets some plutonium tea lol

Kwakigra, in Many hostages released by Hamas still being treated for trauma

Do people typically overcome severe trauma within two months?

bartolomeo, in China cracks down on negativity over economy in bid to boost confidence amid record high youth unemployment and struggling property sector
@bartolomeo@suppo.fi avatar

“China cracks down on negativity in bid to boost confidence” what a world we live in

Syldon, in China cracks down on negativity over economy in bid to boost confidence amid record high youth unemployment and struggling property sector
@Syldon@feddit.uk avatar
tardigrada, in China cracks down on negativity over economy in bid to boost confidence amid record high youth unemployment and struggling property sector

China’s December factory activity likely contracted for third month

The official purchasing managers’ index (PMI) likely was at 49.5 in December from last month’s 49.4, according to the median forecast of 24 economists in a poll conducted Dec 22-28. The 50-point mark separates growth from contraction.

BubsyFanboy, in Polish government puts public media into liquidation amid dispute with president
@BubsyFanboy@szmer.info avatar

Before you comment, this is the full announcement:

Announcement of the Minister of Culture and National Heritage

Due to the decision of the President of the Republic of Poland to suspend financing of public media, I decided to put into liquidation the companies Telewizja Polska S.A. and Polskie Radio S.A. and Polish Press Agency S.A.

In the current situation, such action will ensure the continued operation of these companies, carry out the necessary restructuring and prevent layoffs of employees in the above-mentioned companies. companies employees due to lack of financing.

The state of liquidation may be withdrawn at any time by the owner.

Bartłomiej Sienkiewicz Minister of Culture and National Heritage

And now some context from the article:

Today, Duda proposed his own alternative bill that would have maintained other government spending in the budget – such as the public sector pay rises – but did not include the funds for public media.

However, this morning, the speaker of parliament, Szymon Hołownia, who is one of the leaders of the new ruling coalition, said that he would not convene an early sitting of the house to discuss the president’s proposal, as Duda had requested.

This afternoon, before Sienkiewicz’s decision was published, Prime Minister Donald Tusk announced that the cabinet had decided that the 3 billion zloty previously earmarked for public media would instead be spent on cancer treatment and mental healthcare for children.

Tusk added that Duda’s veto had forced the culture minister to make certain decisions, which would be done “calmly and rationally”.

However, Sienkiewicz’s decision was condemned by figures linked to PiS and to the former management of public media. Samuel Pereira, a senior editor at TVP under PiS, said that the “usurpers are trying to bypass the National Court Register” – the body responsible for validating Sinkiewicz’s previous decision.

Shortly afterwards, President Duda’s chief of staff, Marcin Mastalerek, published a statement declaring the decision to put public media into liquidation as “an admission of defeat by the government”.

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