What is Hackers' Pub?

Hackers' Pub is a place for software engineers to share their knowledge and experience with each other. It's also an ActivityPub-enabled social network, so you can follow your favorite hackers in the fediverse and get their latest posts in your feed.

この種の「勉強ができる/できない」、大学受験くらいまでの勉強のことを指してると思うけど、そのレベルの勉強ができる/できないと思考力みたいな意味合いでの頭の良さは確かに別の話

それはそれとして生涯勉強はし続ける必要がある
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1

time for the **femme-folx** of Fedi!

What are your **least** favorite terms that guys have called you?

Select all that apply.

Inspired by this song: song.link/s/4WlhzerIL5guAHW64g

(this is a non-exhaustive list of things I've been called in the past couple years, feel free to reply with more if your least favorite isn't an option)

0
30
0
0
0
0
0
0

The Limit of What a Soul Can Bear: Remembering Aaron Bushnell

It has been two years since Aaron Bushnell, a 25-year-old active-duty US Air Force member, stood in front of the Israeli Embassy in Washington DC, doused himself in accelerant, and ignited a flame that he intended to be “an extreme act of protest.” As he burned, Aaron did not scream for help; he shouted “Free Palestine” until his breath failed him.

On the morning of February 25, 2024, Bushnell posted a final question on his Facebook: “Many of us like to ask ourselves, ‘What would I do if I was alive during slavery? Or the Jim Crow South? Or apartheid? What would I do if my country was committing genocide?’ The answer is, you’re doing it. Right now.”

Unlike the self-immolations of the Vietnam era, such as Thich Quang Duc in 1963, Bushnell’s protest was built for the era of instant, unedited transmission. He livestreamed the entire event on Twitch. The footage was raw, visceral, and, to many, deeply traumatizing. Besides his resolve, the video captured the surreal reaction of the state: while a police officer scrambled for a fire extinguisher, a Secret Service agent kept a gun trained on Bushnell’s burning, collapsing body, repeatedly ordering the dying man to “get on the ground.”

Immediate media coverage was the epitome of institutional hesitation. Major outlets like the New York Times initially ran headlines that stripped the act of its political intent, describing it simply as a “man setting himself on fire” without mentioning Gaza or his military status in the lead.

As the days turned into weeks, a predictable split emerged. Conservative commentators labeled him an extremist or mentally ill, while progressive and “anti-war” voices hailed him as a martyr who had reached the “limit of what a soul can bear.” This tension highlighted a deeper discomfort in the US psyche: the refusal to acknowledge that a stable, high-performing member of the military (Bushnell was a cybersecurity specialist and DevOps engineer) could be driven to such an end by a purely political and moral conviction.

In the two years since, what we can call the “Bushnell Effect” has manifested in tangible ways within the Department of Defense. His death sparked a quiet but significant surge in conscientious objector applications. Active-duty members, inspired by his refusal to be “complicit,” have stepped forward to seek discharges, citing moral injury.

Bushnell’s act forced a conversation about “legal pluralism”, the idea that an individual might answer to a higher moral law that contradicts state policy. While the US government maintains its strategic alliances, the internal pressure from the rank-and-file has become a persistent thorn in the side of the Pentagon.

Aeron Bushnell’s name is now part of the geography of the conflict. In the West Bank, the town of Jericho named a street after him, a gesture that underscored the global perception of his act: a rare instance of an American “insider” sacrificing everything to bridge the gap between Western privilege and Palestinian suffering. Hamas issued a statement, expressing their “heartfelt condolences,” to Bushnell’s family and commemorating his sacrifice as one that “immortalized his name as a defender of human values and the oppression of the suffering Palestinian people.”

For those who gather at vigils today, Aaron Bushnell is a reminder that the cost of complicity is sometimes paid in the most public and painful way imaginable. His ashes, per his will, are to be scattered in a “Free Palestine”, a final journey toward the liberation he called for with his last breath.

Source: Al Akhbar

Combine with the above article: In the Haret Hreik neighborhood of Dayihe, Beirut, a banner is raised to honor Aaron Bushnell, who self-immolated in front of the zionist embassy in Washington in solidarity with Palestine and in rejection of his country’s position supporting the genocide war waged against.

“Aaron Bushnell, from the people of loyalty and sincerity, to your pure soul. Your devotion and loyalty to the Palestinian people will remain a trust in our necks for eternity.”

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=
0
1
0
0
0
2
1
1
1
0

기존에 연합우주에서 명계공규타 text works를 써오시던 이용자분들께

현재, 서버장 한정으로 명계공규타 text works 토탈 패키지가 배포 중입니다. 다만 명계공규타는 현재 연합우주에 있지 않으니, 디스코드 동일 아이디로 연락주셔야 합니다.

아울러, 수입과 라이선스 정책에 대해서도 다시 한 번 안내를 드립니다.
1 라이선스 표기가 가능한 서버(미스키/체리픽)의 경우, 다음 문구를 라이선스란에 반드시 표기해 주십시오:

©명계공규타 All right reserved.
2 서버 내 타 커모지와 이름이 겹치는 경우, 이름(파일명) 맨 앞에 접두어 09_ 를 삽입해 주십시오.
3
임의로 이미지를 수정하지 말아주십시오.
4 상기 규칙을 준수해 주신다면, 연합우주 내에서
커스텀 이모지 목적으로써의 사용은 별도 허가 없이 자유롭게 가능합니다.

기타, 태그와 관련된 문의사항은
현재 이 노트가 올라온 계정으로 직접 문의해주시면, 늦더라도 확인하는 대로 처리 해 보겠습니다.

오늘도 여러분의 하루가 무탈하시기를 세계의 바깥에서도 늘 기도하겠습니다. 부디
명계공규타의 유산을, 잘 부탁드립니다.

260228 명계공규타
:g0n9yu:

0
1
0
1
2