kersploosh

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Yep, looks like the user deleted their own post and then also deleted their account. Users deleting their own content is not recorded in the modlog.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 days ago (3 children)
[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

Done. I also removed the absentee mod (ThatFunnyGuyver), and rearranged the mod order of your accounts so @[email protected] is the "top" mod.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago (3 children)

This looks like an issue that has come and gone over time. A comment in #4865 says remote mods could make changes in 0.19.3 but there were problems in 0.19.4 and 0.19.5. Maybe it really was fixed in 0.19.6, but broke again in a later version? LW is now on version 0.19.9.

In the meantime, if you need help making changes to your community then let me know. I'm happy to help until the bug is truly fixed.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (6 children)

This is a long-standing Lemmy bug related to the moderator not being on the same instance as the community. I added you as a moderator.

You will encounter other similar bugs due to you being on a remote instance:

  • Changes you make to the community sidebar will only be visible from your home instance, and will be undone whenever your instance syncs with lemmy.world.
  • You will not see reports from your community.
[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

It's all yours. Have fun!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

You got it. You are now the community mod.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I will add the caveat that I would be very hesitant to try it without some careful research, and testing it on a dummy account. You never know what might break.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (5 children)

You are now the moderator for all three communities. Have fun!

[–] [email protected] 20 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I wouldn't expect jets from other countries to be any different. Aircraft in general get a lot of inspection and maintenance. Military jets planes push the limits of what their materials and systems can handle, and it takes a toll.

Idk how credible the site below is, but they claim the F-16 averages 15 hours of inspections ad maintenance for every hour of flight time. Also that military jets are generally only mission-ready about 50%-75% of the time, which means they spend an awful lot of their useful lives in the inspection and maintenance queues:
https://simpleflying.com/military-aircraft-maintenance/

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 week ago (1 children)

The community is all yours now. Have fun!

You may already know, but some moderation features do work for mods on remote instances. You will not see reports for the community. You also may have trouble changing the community settings and sidebar. Creating a lemmy.world account and adding it as a community moderator will allow you to work around the bugs.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

The community is now yours. Have fun!

 

This community appears to be abandoned by its moderator. It has been locked by request. See https://lemmy.world/post/19152144 for relevant background.

If you have questions about Lemmy instances you might try visting [email protected] instead.

@[email protected] I'm mentioning you here for transparency. If you ever come back to Lemmy and want to unlock this community, feel free to do so.

 

This community has been locked by request. The mod is unresponsive and assumed to have left Lemmy.

Please enjoy [email protected] instead!

@[email protected] I'm mentioning you here for transparency. Feel free to unlock this community if you come back to Lemmy.

 

A user suggested closing this community and directing people to [email protected]: https://lemmy.world/comment/11064376

The mod's account (@[email protected]) doesn't show any activity for 10 months, and traffic is low here. !football gets many more posts and has active mods.

Do other users have any objections to locking this community? I will wait at least a week so people have a chance to comment.

 

By request, this community has been locked. Please head over to [email protected] instead!

For background, the request was made in this post: https://lemmy.world/post/15883053

@[email protected], if you come back to Lemmy and want to reopen your community then feel free to unlock it.

15
submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

We have moved! Please join us at [email protected].

 

Hello everyone. I apologize for the rollercoaster ride in this community over the past week and a half. I have one more change to announce: @[email protected] has been removed as the community moderator. This is in response to multiple private complaints from community members, as well as behaviors inside and outside this community that were brought to the admin team’s attention.

I made the mistake of shortcutting the usual lemmy.world processes when I appointed the user as the new mod. If anyone would like to volunteer to become the new community moderator, you can email [email protected] and make a request. The lemmy.world community team will follow their process from there.

Again, I apologize for all the rapid changes.

 
 

The oldest lakes on earth, ranging in age from 130,000 years to many millions of years.

The map was sourced from this research paper:

Hampton, Stephanie & Mcgowan, Suzanne & Ozersky, Ted & Virdis, Salvatore & Vu, Tuong-Thuy & Spanbauer, Trisha & Kraemer, Benjamin & Swann, George & Mackay, Anson & Powers, Stephen & Meyer, Michael & Labou, Stephanie & Oreilly, Catherine & DiCarlo, Morgan & Galloway, Aaron & Fritz, Sherilyn. (2018). Recent ecological change in ancient lakes. Limnology and Oceanography. 63. 10.1002/lno.10938.

 

Source: https://www.vox.com/2014/5/8/5691954/colonialism-collapse-gif-imperialism

One of the things that bothers people so much about Russia's slow play to gobble up chunks of Ukraine is that countries, by and large, have stopped annexing each others' territory since World War II. This modern success is all the more remarkable by the fact that, for most of history, countries loved to conquer land and subjugate the people living there.

European colonialism has been far and away the worst offender in this regard in the last 500 years. Take a look at this GIF charting the rise and fall of (mostly) European empires from 1492, when the European discovery of the Americas kicked off their movement west and south, to 2008.

A lot of interesting things pop out in that GIF. Thailand never gets colonized by any power, European or Asian. Denmark had the earliest westward European colonies, in Greenland. The Japanese empire was pretty huge in 1938.

But the biggest, most remarkable thing in the map is the ebb and flow in the territory controlled by the big European powers. That reflects a few things. Wars between great powers themselves (say, World War I), colonial conquest (Britain in Australia), conflict between colonial powers (Britain and France in North America), and colonized people throwing out colonizers (the dramatic decline in African colonialism after World War II).

The rise and fall of colonial empires warrants particular attention. Each of these sometimes-century long occupations that transformed daily life for colonized people. These regimes varied in all sorts of ways: the degree to which they literally enslaved colonized subjects, to take a particularly grim example, or the amount to which they allowed local political autonomy.

Scholars are still arguing over the implications of these massive colonial shifts for modern politics, which are undoubtedly dramatic. Take the big-picture global economy: why some countries are rich, and others are poor. Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, and James A. Robinson have proposed that colonialism created a "reversal of fortunes" in economic terms. Previously rich peoples became poor when colonized, while previously poor peoples ended up comparatively wealthier. And both, by and large, remain so today.

Why? Well, the central purpose of European colonialism was to benefit and enrich Europeans. Acemoglu, Johnson, and Robinson propose that created different incentives for European powers in richer and poorer colonized lands. In richer places, they built governments whose task was to steal wealth and resources and send them to Europe, shattering the foundations of local prosperity. In poorer places, they actually built European settler communities, protecting economically useful institutions like private property rights in order to make these communities do well. In both previously poor and previously rich places, these colonial institutions altered the trajectory of their development down to the present day.

The Acemoglu/Johnson/Robinson theory is quite controversial. Other scholars contest the very idea that a reversal of fortunes even happened. That makes sense: given colonialism's immense influence on both colonized and colonizing societies, isolating variables for controlled studies is really hard. There's also a time-span problem: tracking the consistent influence of one variable across hundreds of years can be tricky.

That's, in a way, the point. Colonialism's influence was so immense that we're only just beginning to figure out how to properly measure it.

But there are some things we know, foremost among them that colonialism was brutally nasty business. One estimate suggests that, from 1885 to 1908, Belgian King Leopold II's occupation of the Congo killed 8 million people. R.J. Rummel, a University of Hawaii scholar who spent his life estimate state-perpetrated atrocities, put the 20th century death toll attributable to colonialism at 50 million (behind only the Soviet Union and communist China in total killed). And European colonialism was around for hundreds of years.

So when you see huge chunks of the globe colonized in 1914, and colonial powers shrunk to basically their homelands in 2008, you're seeing one of the greatest humanitarian accomplishments of the past 100 years in action.

 

Meet Sir Nils Olav III, the mascot for the Norwegian King’s Guard. Nils is regarded very highly among the Norwegian King’s Guardsman and has received his honours and medals due to his outstanding service and good conduct!

https://www.edinburghzoo.org.uk/animals-and-experiences/sir-nils-olav/

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