US police training?
Fleppensteyn
Floris Jan van Fleppensteyn
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Fleppensteyn@sh.itjust.worksto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•What would the next pres of USA have to do to gain back trust for America? Hold a televised event saying the last person was just a fuck up?
3·1 month agoUS has always acted like a villain. CIA overthrowing governments, NSA spying on EU companies/politicians with US admitting they did for “US interests” (maximizing US companies’ profits by cheating the rest of us); arming terrorist groups and just causing chaos around the world or if self-interest while we have to pretend we’re OK with it or they will cut of trade. They are the only western country that uses torture as official policy, doesn’t think food and shelter are you human rights etc etc.
And people mostly don’t care or forget very quickly. Next time elect someone who can speak full sentences and is not so blatantly corrupt, show some goodwill, and people will forget within months.
Fleppensteyn@sh.itjust.worksto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•[Discussion:] How does *physical* surveillance affect you?
2·1 month agoIn Prague the line between private and public space seems blurred. Like, a footpath ends and the only way to continue is to walk over what appears to belong to a private business, of course full of cameras all over. I’m a bit further from the center, with a lot of rich people in big homes. They all have huge fences and walls around their gardens, often with cameras on top, so they can still spy on what happens outside their walls. Sometimes they’re so high up, you could think they want to know what happens in the entire street. Prague is one of the safest cities ever, so I really wonder how much of this is security and how much is curiosity. I mean, if you want to catch a burglar, you hang the camera down low so you can see their face.
Of course the city has traffic cameras and there’s police surveillance cameras in the center too, but at least you know what they’re for. The fact that any random person or business can film you is more worrying imo.
In NL, I’m staying in the North. I walk a lot. Instead of cameras, there are many curious people staring out of their windows :)
Fleppensteyn@sh.itjust.worksto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•[Discussion:] How does *physical* surveillance affect you?
3·1 month agoI’m in the Netherlands right now. You may have a different perspective if you’re a car owner, but I really noticed I’m not being spied on as much. I believe it’s not really allowed for a private person to film a public street neither, and I simply don’t see any cameras.
I live in Prague. When I go for a walk there, there’s hundreds of cameras following me. It’s like every home has at least one camera and they’re not just filming their own property. It feels uncomfortable: you never know who’s watching or what’s done with the footage.
Fleppensteyn@sh.itjust.worksto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why do some people with college degrees and an education, still act so fucking stupid?English
3·2 months agoStaring at teacher’s boring Powerpoint presentations and reading through a chapter an hour before a test only to forget it after doesn’t magically make you a smart person. In fact, I felt more like it numbs the brain.
Fleppensteyn@sh.itjust.worksto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Does anyone else feel like websites nowadays feels very broken compared to apps? Like you try to do transactions on the mobile site (eg: ordering food), and payments mysteriously declines...
4·2 months agoThe amount of sites claiming there’s suspicious traffic coming from my IP is getting ridiculous
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Am I the only one who thinks they’re too expensive? Even my favorite pear juice went up 105% in price in a short time


For nostalgic reasons mostly. Recently, I decided to watch C.O.P.S. again. Cool music but not as entertaining as I remembered.