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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)F
Posts
35
Comments
197
Joined
3 yr. ago

Usually, my own thoughts are the only ones that matter to me. The exception is the rare occasion when I actually create a post or comment asking a question. That's when I want to know about what you think. Otherwise, buzz off.

  • You got terms of service, now. Looks sketchy. The yee old code of conduct was a good way to go. This here is a terms of service. The kind you click on to agree to most of the time. So sketchy it makes me think oh yeah, I haven’t agreed to them yet. Never going to. At least for noe I can say no and continue onward. You really want to enslave me but I’m not going to be your slave. Your terms of service can suck my balls.

  • Yes. With VPN. And so many lessons learned after about how you didn’t have to do it, but you did it.

  • This is funny.

  • So, Roman people are old people. They’ll just bring their folding chairs.

  • You didnt’t think of engaging with the weekly post. Why? I want to know because why did I bother?

  • Reminds me of fiction.

  • It isn't an insult.

  • Yeah, I'd actually read the book, but the review, which isn't very good, sort of tells me reading the book wouldn't be exactly a good use of my time. It's funny how second-hand info sort of reaches you in this way. If you cared to ask me personally about it, I'd answer your question. Since you didn't ask, I'll just tell you: Read the book and tell us about the book.

  • It isn't there in the books you didn't read. And I am absolutely not defending the USA's Jim Crow laws. I'm saying the argument of the book, according to this review, is weak because it does not tell me much about the author's research. That's all. Read the book yourself, show me where it has solid evidence, then I'll engage with you more.

  • Yeah, that doesn't convince me. Sorry. Plenty of racists in the USA. Absolutely. What this review says is that the Nazis were looking to the USA as a fine racist example. Still not convinced. Racists on this level are not looking at themselves as racists. They're looking at something else using their racism as an unrecognized motivator to achieve another end. I suppose you don't want to read the books I recommended because you're too busy. The review article sucks, in my opinion. And that's just the way it goes. Nothing you're saying convinces me that this is actually good content. It's mediocre content. You'd get my point if you were well read.

  • It's just a review that isn't very good, in my opinion.

  • Well, he must taste like a cheeseburger. He eats one every day doesn't he? Imagine eating a person and every bite tastes like a cheeseburger. If people tasted delicious like a cheeseburger, I'd totally hop on board the Hannibal train. I could put up with bringing my jar of pickles, my chopped onions, and other condiments to the love fest.

  • My only question about this is: Why did the Nazis specifically look to Jim Crow laws? Ease of use and accessibility in a time before the internet or something? They could have looked at any other laws as a model in the world that were similar in scope and effect. Plenty of European neighbors, quite recently (in the 19th century) had established similar racist laws in their colonies. I can't seem to find an answer to my question. Any colonial law code from a European power invested in colonizing and subjugating people would have sufficed, actually, because the Nazis were trying to achieve world domination through the subjugation of "others" who were not of what they called the "Aryan" race (hence the outbreak of two World Wars). It's an interesting essay, but it doesn't answer this question. It would have been much better and more convincing if it had taken colonial and post-colonial theories into question, for the simple fact that the Nazi agenda was an empire building enterprise. If the essay had asked this question and addressed it, perhaps it would have discovered and communicated to us why the Nazi enterprise ultimately failed. The Jim Crow laws were disgusting. So were all the others similar to Jim Crow laws invented by colonizing European powers in the 19th century. I would recommend further reading. Authors that come to mind are Ann Laura Stoler, Rolena Adorno, Homi Bhahba, and Gayatri Spivak (but there are more to consider). I'm just throwing out what I like to call the "Golden Oldies." There are certainly more. To me, this essay is interesting for a high school project, but needs help if it should be considered actually worthy of attention, specifically because of my question. Why did the Nazis look to American law? It seems inefficient to me. They could have looked at their own laws, or even laws adjacent to them, such as Prussian laws. There are lots of questions to consider here inside my initial question.

  • History @lemmy.world

    WEEKLY DISCUSSION OCT 9-15 Industrial Revolution

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    Vote for something to discuss for Oct 9-15

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    WEEKLY DISCUSSION OCT 2-8 History of Medicine

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    VOTE FOR A TOPIC FOR WEEK OF OCT 2-8

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    WEEKLY DISCUSSION SEPT 25 - OCT 1 History of Food

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    The history of Madrid: From the moors to modernity

    www.historyextra.com /period/general-history/madrid-history/
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    New Moderator Needed, preferably from North, Central, or South America

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    Pick a topic for week of Sep 25 to Oct 1

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    In replacement of a deleted URL

    edition.cnn.com /style/article/india-photography-19th-century/index.html
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    WEEKLY DISCUSSION SEPT 18-24 PUERTO RICO

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    WEEKLY DISCUSSION SEPT 11-17 ANCIENT NEAR EAST

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    WEEKLY DISCUSSION SEP 4-10 ANCIENT CIV

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    A Journey Through Spain’s Islamic History

    www.smithsonianmag.com /travel/fabled-palaces-ancient-medina-journey-through-spain-islamic-history-180982699/
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    What can historical clothing reveal that other sources cannot?

    www.historytoday.com /archive/head-head/what-can-historical-clothing-reveal-other-sources-cannot
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    The world's oldest nightmares

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    WEEKLY DISCUSSION AUG 28-SEP 3 Documentaries

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    ‘Overrun with rats’: Charles Dickens Museum illuminates author’s factory stint

    www.theguardian.com /books/2023/aug/25/overrun-with-rats-charles-dickens-museum-illuminates-authors-factory-stint