[-] sinedpick@awful.systems 34 points 1 month ago

my man have you ever been in, like, another country?

[-] sinedpick@awful.systems 10 points 3 months ago

I guess good on you for not having the will to analyze anything beyond the surface level?

[-] sinedpick@awful.systems -3 points 3 months ago

LLMs help with coding? In any meaningful way? That's a great giveaway that you've never actually produced and released any real software.

[-] sinedpick@awful.systems 6 points 4 months ago

serious question, are you a bit slow?

1

https://archive.ph/RSQ9T

TL;DR: new regime in honduras is hostile to our dearest libertarian crypto bros, asserts sovereignty and tells them where to stick it.

A group of prominent international economists is applauding the recent move by Honduran President Xiomara Castro to push back against American crypto investors attempting to seize billions in public money from the Central American nation.

Background:

A group of libertarian investors teamed up with a former Honduran government — which was tied at the hip with narco-traffickers and came to power after a U.S.-backed military coup — in order to implement the world’s most radical libertarian policy, which turned over significant portions of the country to those investors through so-called special economic zones. The Honduran public, in a backlash, ousted the narco-backed regime, and the new government repealed the libertarian legislation. The crypto investors are now using the World Bank to force Honduras to honor the narco-government’s policies.

[ image of cryptobros making the face Wil E Coyote makes after running off a cliff ]

The crypto investors are now using the World Bank to force Honduras to honor the narco-government’s policies.

[Castro] has hit upon an elegant solution: She has taken steps to withdraw Honduras from ICSID. The crypto crowd is crying foul.

Among the dozens of signatories to the Progressive International praising Castro’s decision to exit the arbitration court are prominent South Korean economist Ha-Joon Chang; Chilean Gabriel Palma, of the “Palma Ratio of inequality”; American economist Jeffrey Sachs; former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis; British economist Ann Pettifor; and Indian development economist Jayati Ghosh.

Predictably, the international community is going "LOL"

You may be asking, who's winning in all of this?

In its case before the ICSID, Próspera retained a top lobbying firm, employing former Democratic lawmaker Kendrick Meek, to pressure Honduras to pay up.

[-] sinedpick@awful.systems 5 points 6 months ago

You have zero understanding of cause and effect or you are looking at this conflict through a pinhole. Stop supporting and lapping up the propaganda of genocidal settler-colonialists like an useful idiot. Learn history and have some morals.

[-] sinedpick@awful.systems 22 points 6 months ago

It must be so exhausting to carry water for a settler-colonial ethnostate whose very foundations are genocidal violence.

[-] sinedpick@awful.systems 16 points 10 months ago

It would do you a lot of good to actually read about communism and political theory in general instead of acting as a conduit of brain rot.

[-] sinedpick@awful.systems 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

The problem is far worse than what any single billionaire can fix. Billions of dollars are being poured into renewable energy infrastructure. It's just that while this is happening, we're also emitting the same amount of CO2 as always. The only long-term resolution of this is de-growth.

[-] sinedpick@awful.systems 1 points 1 year ago

Can't use that to explain Cs in math and physics.

sinedpick

joined 1 year ago