Since the protests began, one of the subreddits I used to frequent now has an abnormally high number of comments; this might explain why.
but it is really best shown that the communities are rebuilding here
(As others have said, though...tread lightly.)
Only got two points because you made their heads hurt. ;)
In North America, Consumer Reports magazine.
They're independent and don't accept advertising, but are subscription-based. You can usually find them at your local library (i.e., hard copies or sometimes in their online database).
For what it's worth, Cornel West just turned 70, has views similar to Bernie Sanders, and is running for the Green Party nomination.
However, the media tends to marginalize third-party candidates.
Everybody seemed to crash while searching for images on Google.
I'm experiencing this with Q4OS 3 (Centaurus), which under the hood is Debian 10 (Buster) -- and with the supposedly more stable Firefox ESR.
(Now using DuckDuckGo as an image search workaround.)
Kind of like an MG, but reliable.
This comment says it all:
I don't know what quite a lot of those words mean, and I don't wish to learn.
Why would we want people like that over here?
Probably the best article to date about what is truly going on -- very comprehensive and well documented.
but 4 out of 5 times people can’t
...or don't want to
Edit: For what it's worth, posted this comment a few days ago.
Sometimes it's a matter of necessity:
For tech-weary Midwest farmers, 40-year-old tractors now a hot commodity
TDE aka Trinity Desktop Environment, a fork of KDE 3.