fubo

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[–] fubo@lemmy.world 5 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

Feudalism, where economic power comes from control of the land and familial connection to the conquerors of the land, was broadly supplanted by capitalism, where economic power comes from control of commercial and industrial capital, which are traded openly in capital markets.

Capitalism has several features that feudalism does not:

  • The most productive property in capitalism is industrial and commercial capital: the means of industrial production and trade. While land remains profitable, it is no longer the center of economic productivity; and ownership of the land does not convey the sort of dominion over its use that it did in feudalism. (Nobody thinks it's weird to build a factory on leased land, for instance: the ownership of the industrial capital does not follow the ownership of the underlying land.)
  • Shares of productive property (capital) can be freely bought and sold in capital markets. In feudalism, productive property (land) changes hands through warfare, political processes such as the elevation of new lords by a king, and familial processes such as marriage and inheritance.
  • Contract law becomes supremely important in capitalism, as capitalist firms are largely creatures of contract law rather than traditional rights.
  • The capitalist managerial class by and large does not arise out of the families of the feudal aristocracy, and does not conduct itself according to the social rituals of the feudal aristocracy. For instance, corporate mergers are not arranged through marriage of the heirs of CEOs.
  • Although this is not fully true of early capitalism, in modern capitalism workers are typically free to leave their jobs, and employers are broadly free to fire them if they are not productive. In most forms of feudalism, serfs are bound to the land and may not lawfully leave their lord's service.

On that last point — Capitalism emerged out of colonialism. Many of the first firms traded on capital markets were colonial enterprises such as the Dutch East India Company (VOC). These firms employed slave labor and enjoyed legal monopolies on trade. This puts the lie to the libertarian claim that capitalism requires free labor and free trade. Capitalism is perfectly compatible with slavery and monopoly. For later examples see the United Fruit Company and other American colonial ventures.

[–] fubo@lemmy.world 19 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Your body is not a life-support system for your mind. Rather, your mind is a guidance system for your body. Bodies were first; and developed minds to be better at doing body stuff.

[–] fubo@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I once worked in an office where the IT people would go around and zip-tie the cables to the furniture in the conference rooms, in ways that invariably led to the cables coming under tension and eventually fraying and breaking. (Especially some of the pricier laptop charging cables.)

I'd snip the offending zip-ties (selectively) when I noticed, but they went through a lot of expensive charging cables because someone thought slack cables looked messy.

[–] fubo@lemmy.world 43 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (6 children)

few outside of Germany knew that concentration camps existed

The creation of concentration camps was widely advertised in Nazi propaganda, as a show of force to intimidate dissidents. It was the later death camps that were secret: the ones that were designed for no purpose but to do murder at industrial scale.

[–] fubo@lemmy.world 35 points 1 week ago

On the other hand, there are plenty of humans who like just about any dog more than they like other humans.

[–] fubo@lemmy.world 11 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

It's about Trump, dude. Not Trump as politician, but Trump as model for what a "successful" white dude looks like: a sleazebag who cheats on his wives, cheats at business, commits crime on top of crime, uses violence and threats to get his way, etc.

Young white boys need better role-models than Trump and Musk to look up to.

(It's also a parody of the racist shit people used to say about Black Americans and "bad role-models" like gangsta rappers.)

[–] fubo@lemmy.world 4 points 3 weeks ago

Also, "amendment" is spelled like that.

[–] fubo@lemmy.world 8 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

"Hallelujah" is a song about sex — but it's not dirty sex, it's holy sex.

[–] fubo@lemmy.world 9 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

Ward Cunningham, creator of Calvin & Hobbes?

 

Track listing:

  • Unalive the Grapists
  • Scunthorpe Blues
  • Ballad of the Ta-Ta Cancer Survivors Forum (Can't Say Br**st)
  • Seggs Edgeucation
  • Just Buttbuttinate Me Already
  • Flip You, Ash Haul
[–] fubo@lemmy.world 7 points 1 month ago

Marathon's Security Officer already had the green armor and shiny mask.

[–] fubo@lemmy.world 83 points 1 month ago (6 children)

It has been obvious for many years that the Trump movement aims at the downfall of America, through the promotion and exaggeration of America's flaws and the increasingly violent suppression of its virtues.

[–] fubo@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

But if someone creates a file called HEAD, should it overwrite a file called head?

That shouldn't matter to the "nontechnical" end-user at all. To the nontechnical user, even the abstraction of "creating a file" has largely gone away. You create a document, and changes you make to it are automatically persisted to storage, either local or cloud.

Only the technical command-line user cares about whether /usr/bin/HEAD and /usr/bin/head are the same path. And only in a specific circumstance — such as the early days of Mac OS X, where the Macintosh and Unix cultures collided — could the bug that I described emerge.

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