Press Release

Rule targets bait-and-switch pricing for live-event tickets and short-term lodging

  • anon6789@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    They had messaging and lots of it, but for the majority of the people that don’t follow politics (or don’t follow them very well!) the message was either not in line with the base’s perception of that reality or some found it downright insulting. I’m doing ok for myself, but even I had to remind myself constantly that things were getting better, even though I could feel real squeezing in price of goods.

    I feel everyone has dragged their feet with Ukraine. I think since it seems Russia’s might has been exposed as a paper tiger, that we have been sleeping on an opportunity to make life better for millions of people in the former Soviet republics and in Russia proper. I’m not one for forced regime change, but Putin brought this one on himself, and I’d like to see Russia and the former Soviet lands have a real chance to modernize and open more doors to the rest of the world.

    Biden seemed much more willing to aid Isreal than Ukraine, in part because the right supports Israel for cuckoo reasons, but in the opportunities I heard him speak on Israel, they seemed to have his personal support, not just diplomatically. I dislike many of our Middle East alliances, but I don’t really want to get too deep into my takes on WWI and WWII treaties. Stirring up more conflict is not the way I wish to see things continue though. People need to address past and present wrongs. How we achieve it, much like everyone else, I have no clue, but the present situation is absolutely not it.

    • HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com
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      6 days ago

      I mean I feel its best to concentrate on present and then past by proximity. Technically israel existence is due to peoples perception about the past. I hate the us being the policeman of the world thing, but im not sure I would not have wanted the sorta peace it had. I really really wish though that we had limited ourselves to the atlantic and pacific ocean but just insisted that other countries deal with things passed there. Basically stay out of the middle east. including the saudis.

      • anon6789@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        In a way I agree, but the Allies promised things in the exchange for cooperation against the Ottomans, and that isn’t the kind of thing people forget, and is the start of a lot of the problems ever since. Plus creating the state of Israel was not an altruistic thing, it was spearheaded by many antisemites who were just as willing to dump them off in Madagascar until the Middle East fell into their laps.

        But I try to avoid wading into too controversial territory since I’m too lazy to use an alt, so I’m going to stop here and revert back to my original pro Lina Khan position! 😜

        • HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com
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          6 days ago

          yeah and I get that. People tend to look at history from a very simplistic lens and don’t see the way political decisions sorta limit later ones. Heck people see current political things like they are so easy and not impacted by history and alliances and treaties and such.

          • anon6789@lemmy.world
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            6 days ago

            It’s a real investment most people don’t find necessary to learn all this stuff. Even having the knowledge really doesn’t give you that much to actually accomplish doing anything with it.

            Like most things, it can be looked at in micro or macro levels. There are the specific current events, but we didn’t get here from nowhere, there is a rich history of previous events and decisions and the recollection of those events is different for every participant.

            • Infynis@midwest.social
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              5 days ago

              Our system of government is also designed so that most people aren’t supposed to have to know about the intricacies of politics

              • anon6789@lemmy.world
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                5 days ago

                That is both a pro and con that’s been debated as long as democracy has existed.

                The founders also debated if regular folk were wise enough to pick good representatives. Even since, we’ve changed how some positions are filled, by direct election or by appointments. We have representatives pass some laws by democratic vote, some by executive order, and some by ballot initiatives. We pick and choose what level of involvement we want the masses to have all the time.

                Many problems with democracy in its modern state have been debated since the Ancient Greeks. The great philosophers saw how democracy can be turned to tyranny by appealing to people’s emotions rather than things being driven by fact. Here’s a nice little article on that!

                We haven’t ironed out all the issues yet on how we should govern ourselves, and the more I watch my fellow humans, the more it puzzles me we can be so technically advanced as a society while still falling victim to residual primate instincts that appear totally irrational to anyone observing from the outside, while that same observer is likely falling victim to the same thing wherever they are living.

                I don’t hate the US system of government, but its creators knew it wasn’t perfect. They tried to design mechanisms to let it be corrected, but do a majority of us feel we’re currently in the right course? Ignorance of politics certainly didn’t help the Ancient Greeks stay on top of the world, and it isn’t doing the world any favors right now.