This is heavily misleading, but still very informative as the title sounds like it is a problem with the German government, but it is not.
America penalising money transfers to Cuba - which most likely causes the issue - is a problem banks encounter in the entire world not just Germany. France's BNP Paribas paid 9 billion penalty, Commerzbank "only" millions. Therefore, GLS and other banks act overcauciously.
This has nothing to do with the German government.
No worries. While the distro matters and some distros have more support than others, whether your software runs on Linux will often be a distro-unrelated question. While some applications don't run natively, many (not all) are executable through a compatibility layer like Wine (which sounds fancy, but comes with little additional effort for you).
Don't be afraid to test a boot usb with liveboot (testing the OS without installing it) and see if you can make your software work - just don't be discouraged if it lags a little as larger liveboots are not intended for larger software installations, I think.
Sorry, but if you managed to do that in 30 seconds, show me as a teaser in the first 60 seconds so I can see whether I am really interested or if the story turns out to be bs like so many these days. When clicking a random video, I care about the topic not the youtuber. I might care about the youtuber later, but get me hooked with content before talking about your channel or yourself.
That being said: Many here express that they liked the video so it looks like I am the odd one out.
Depends. Fediverse challenges advertisement. Adblockers challenge advertisement. People switching to piracy after amazon and netflix pushing for more adds challenges advertisements.
Is there a united movement? No. But that's partly because those that do care have an adblocker and rarely see ads.
That's fair. Context is of course always relative. In would say context is given if the starts at the first interaction of the person taken in custody with the police. Of course its difficult to find such high quality footage. Not sure if it is worth to point out but many police officers are in favor of bodycams. They cannot use them because they are against the law in Germany. If I find a video with more context, I will get back to you, but I am pretty bad at that.
That being said: There are definitely police officers out there that love going on demonstrations and smacking people. I personally know one who did this who lost his job as a police officer; not sure whether it was because of that or something else though.
That's what happens these days :) to be fair I think my opinion that this clip doesn't show context and could therefore be misleading and that I hate people uploading these short clips because of that, was enough for people to make up their mind and just down vote everything. That's fine. People have strong opinions and I totally get it why pro-Palestine people are mad at Germany and the police after seeing this video. Not getting emotional while Israel commits genocide and everyone watches or supports would be abnormal.
Yes, I watched the video. From a police standpoint the amount of force is relatively low. Again, the likely legal justification for the action is that protest made identification impossible which allows them to separate the person from the protest to id him. Him falling was not intended. Injuries caused by resisting are legally speaking no harm done by police. They did not hit him; they could be allowed to if he resisted.
Anyway, I am trying to explain the legal side, but I am no lawyer. Just interested in law. You can try r/polizei to get a more "official" answer. I don't think there's a community for German police on reddit yet.
Imho: I would have let the man be as long as he doesn't get closer. It looks like he's carrying a beer and the trouble is not worth it for "pig". Police usually has room for not engaging if it helps keep protests civil. I think, this didn't go well - especially because the officer tried it alone at first.
This is heavily misleading, but still very informative as the title sounds like it is a problem with the German government, but it is not.
America penalising money transfers to Cuba - which most likely causes the issue - is a problem banks encounter in the entire world not just Germany. France's BNP Paribas paid 9 billion penalty, Commerzbank "only" millions. Therefore, GLS and other banks act overcauciously.
This has nothing to do with the German government.