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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/)D
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53
Joined
6 mo. ago

  • I don't disagree with you, but there's still a vast gulf between freedom of speech in the US and China

  • Some*

  • I didn't imply ALL of them thought the same way. My point was that Americans still have the freedom to speak up (for now)

  • Either way, that will be an important lesson

  • That will be an important lesson

  • So are non Americans

  • US citizens are pretty vocal about the failings of their nation. Good luck finding that in unimprisoned China nationals.

  • This reads like a schoolkid who just discovered semantics

  • Deleted

    I was instance-banned on Lemmy.ml for several weeks for sharing a video. Not harassment. Not threats. Not illegal content. A video.

    Jump
  • Doubtful it was because of the topic of your video, that's the sort of stuff .ml laps up. It looks like you've been on lemmy for 2 years, surely you're aware of the reputation .ml has for banning users on a whim?

  • It's one thing for the US to lose an offensive war, it's another thing entirely for anybody else to think of dicking with them on their home turf

  • Things don't get deleted from the database, they just get marked inaccessible to users.

  • TLDR:

    The agency’s latest World Energy Outlook, a comprehensive report on global energy trends, still includes its previous “stated policies” scenario, essentially projecting that countries will continue enacting policies that help tackle climate change and adopting solar panels, wind turbines and electric vehicles at a rapid clip, potentially leading to a decline or plateau in the use of oil, gas and coal by 2035.

    Unlike last year, however, the agency is also including a more conservative “current policies” scenario that assumes countries won’t enact any additional energy policies and will face obstacles in shifting to cleaner forms of power. The Trump administration had pressured the agency to include this scenario, which sees oil and gas demand rising steadily through 2050, leading to significantly more global warming.