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| ▲ | toyg 5 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | Your guy has armed goons with "absolute immunity" literally executing people in the streets, after threatening to invade neighbours and allies, appointing shockingly-unqualified loyalists at the very top of national institutions, and generally gutting the rule of law. It's a bit past "tolerating political disagreement", man. | | |
| ▲ | giardini 5 hours ago | parent [-] | | Well, that went south quickly! Glad to hear a British viewpoint now and then, but of course any problems stateside will be handled and voted on by Americans rather than Brits. Unless possibly you have dual citizenship (Brit & USA) perhaps? FWIW Britain has plenty of history of what you term "armed goons with "absolute immunity" literally executing people in the streets, after threatening to invade neighbours and allies, appointing shockingly-unqualified loyalists at the very top of national institutions, and generally gutting the rule of law." You Brits almost have a monopoly on tyranny of various forms, having gone through most of them in bloody civil wars yourself. Hardly a model to follow, n'est-ce pa? | | |
| ▲ | toyg an hour ago | parent [-] | | > but of course any problems stateside will be handled and voted on by Americans rather than Brits Sure. That doesn't mean that an external viewpoint is any less valid. It's like saying "of course any problems in Teheran will be handled by Iranians" or "any problems in Venezuela will be handled by Venezuelans", when someone points out the issues in those regimes. You also assume you will get another meaningful vote, something that does not seem so assured when the supposed head of internal law enforcement starts asking for lists of voters. The world is watching you, and it sees something really sinister happening. I would suggest to be humble and take stock - when innocent lives are lost to political fevers, you are in a very dark place, and whoever led you there should be suspected. For the record, although I do live in England, I'm actually Italian; my great-grandfather lived under fascism, and I grew up in places deeply scarred by those times - as well as from the Cold War. That doesn't mean I'm innocent, just that I know a thing or two about what a regime looks like. |
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| ▲ | BigTTYGothGF 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | I'm a phd who used to be in civil service. What you write here is certainly the goal, and I had a lot of colleagues who agreed with you. I thought it was bogus then, and I think it's bogus now. Also people quit jobs all the time because of the boss. Usually it's the direct one, but not always, and as above, so below. > reasonable scrutiny and auditing It's been well over a decade since I left, and I'm sure it's gotten worse for those who stayed, but: lol. lmao. | |
| ▲ | notahacker 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Yes, I'm sure it's "infantile" for people at the NIH to resign because they believe their work is being censored for conflict with the administration's preferred pseudoscience. Could you sound any more like a Lysenko propagandist in the USSR if you tried? | |
| ▲ | _DeadFred_ 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | This position is idiotic, more detrimental to the United States than the government over employing people, and frankly un-American according to how we understood what serves America best pre-Trump. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_service_reform_in_the_Un... |
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