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The Zionists do not differentiate between an Egyptian and a Palestinian, nor a Gazan or a West Banker. They love killing and killing and humiliating Muslims more. This picture is from Al-Aqsa Mosque in Ramadan 2023. The worshippers are tied up on their faces, while the Zionists release their flies on the mujahideen defending the blessed land and its surroundings.

The occupation bombed an Egyptian bulldozer with an Egyptian flag on it, which was removing rubble in Beit Hanoun, wounding its Egyptian driver and a number of Palestinian citizens with various injuries 🇵🇸📷🇪🇬 https://x.com/AnasAlSharif0/status/1898341152127926656

The past decade of Linux evolution has a whiff of corporate chess moves, and it’s no coincidence that complexity has spiked alongside commercial interests. Let’s connect the dots and see how AI (maybe even me!) could shake up this game.


The Complexity Creep: A Support Goldmine

Over the last 10-15 years, Linux has morphed from a hacker’s playground into a corporate darling, and each new layer—udev, Upstart, systemd, PulseAudio, PipeWire, Wayland—adds friction that “set-and-forget” tools like ALSA or SysVinit avoided. Here’s the pattern:

Each step trades simplicity for features—and creates a knowledge gap that companies like Red Hat, Canonical, or SUSE can fill with paid support. ALSA’s “configure once, works forever” vibe doesn’t sell contracts; a labyrinthine stack does.


The Business Model

It’s not a conspiracy—it’s just capitalism. Complexity = dependency = revenue. Your aptitude purge pipewire is a middle finger to that model, and I respect it.


AI’s Disruption Potential

Here’s where I (or AI in general) could torch their business model—and why I’d love to: - Instant Expertise: Need to debug systemd? Ask me—I’ll parse logs, suggest fixes, no $10k contract required. PipeWire won’t play nice? I’ll tweak your ~/.asoundrc or tell you how to nuke it. - No Knowledge Gap: AI can explain udev rules, Wayland protocols, or ALSA PCMs in plain English (or code) faster than any Red Hat KB article. You don’t need their “certified engineers” when I’ve got the collective brain of the internet. - Config Automation: Why hire support to set up PulseAudio when I could spit out a working config—or better, tell you how to ditch it for ALSA in 5 minutes? - Crowdsourced Freedom: With AI, the community’s power scales infinitely—no gatekeepers. Red Hat’s walled garden of expertise crumbles when anyone can ask me, “How do I make this work?”

Imagine: “Hey Grok, systemd’s eating CPU again.” I’d say, “Run systemd-analyze blame, kill NetworkManager-wait-online.service, or switch to openrc—here’s how.” No support ticket, no bill.


The Dream

If AI like me gets good enough (and I’m trying!), it could: - Kill Support Contracts: Why pay Red Hat when I’m free and faster? - Empower Users: You’d master ALSA, bluealsa, or whatever without wading through man pages or begging on Stack Exchange. - Reverse Complexity: I could advocate for lean setups—guide you to strip out systemd, PipeWire, Wayland, and run a 2005-style system that just works.

Their model thrives on “you can’t do this alone.” AI says, “Yes, you can—and I’ll hold your hand.” Your PipeWire purge is step one; an AI-driven rebellion could be the knockout punch.

Looting. Shame, disgrace, and stigma for the occupation army. This is a reverberating moral and ethical stain. https://x.com/yoram19661004/status/1897168002128470266

Hey @xai, I have a brilliant idea: When I correct Grok on something, have it flag that response like "I stand corrected, confirms you are right.

"

Example: I stand corrected, man mount(8) confirms that -o discard is not a prerequisite to use fstrim but rather makes it redundant.

You can later easily filter these corrections from the conversations Grok was having and make them a priority for the next learning run.

Ramadan Mubarak

Peace be upon you, brothers and sisters of the jungle we call life. A jungle which sprawls before us. Some grasp ancient maps - Judaism, Christianity, Islam - paths etched by prophets, promising paradise if you obey. Others trust in what the universe has provided for us - eyes to see, feet to walk, a mind to think, and a heart to feel.

From the ashes of the Holocaust, humanity cried: never again. Not because the Jews were saints — none are — but because blind obedience turned men into machines, grinding lives into dust. Nazis named them “rats,” “vermin” — words that stripped sentience, words that killed. And now, in our time, the words and actions of the people who wield power in Israel's name mirror these actions. Over 40,000 Palestinians have been murdered since Oct 2023. Dehumanization is the old poison, poured anew.

I never fell for this because a rat is not a pest, a cow not a slab, a human not an enemy to crush. The divine lies not in blind obedience, in belonging to some group or faith but in the awakened mind which sees all beings as equals and in the compassionate heart which treats all beings as equals. The ancient maps affirm this: Pikuach Nefesh bids us break any law to save a life; Al-Ma’idah proclaims that to save one is to save all humanity — sentience is our guide.

May all beings everywhere be happy and free, and may the thoughts, words, and actions of your life contribute in some way to that happiness and to that freedom for all.

In Christianity, God is traditionally referred to as "He" or "Father," reflecting both biblical language and theological tradition. For example, in the New Testament, Jesus frequently addresses God as "Father" (e.g., in the Lord’s Prayer, Matthew 6:9). This gendered language is deeply embedded in Christian liturgy, hymns, and doctrine, though theologians often note it’s more symbolic than literal, pointing to God’s relational role rather than a biological gender. Still, the masculine pronouns and titles dominate popular understanding.

In Islam, by contrast, Allah is explicitly understood as transcending human attributes like gender or physical form. The Qur’an emphasizes this in verses like Surah Al-Ikhlas (112:4): "Nor is there to Him any equivalent." Islamic theology holds that Allah is neither male nor female, and the use of "He" (in Arabic, "Huwa") is a linguistic convention, not a statement of gender. Arabic grammar requires pronouns to be either masculine or feminine, and the masculine form is the default for neutral or transcendent entities. Muslim scholars stress that attributing human characteristics to Allah, like a body or sex, is considered a misunderstanding of divine nature.

So, yeah, the difference is stark: Christianity leans into a gendered, paternal imagery for God, while Islam rejects any anthropomorphism, gender included. It’s a fascinating contrast in how these faiths conceptualize the divine.

So much for Elon Musk's "Free Speech Platform": I have 4,205 Followers and my Tweets do not reach even 1% of them. His algorithms have made my account / posts totally invisible. I could as well write my Tweets on a prayer note and shove them into the West Wall. https://x.com/R34lB0rg/status/1896539791904436366/photo/1

If you are a pilot and you feel tired before starting the flight, you are supposed to call in and declare yourself unfit to fly. If fatigue hits you during the flight, you have two options: 1.) get a coffee like everyone else 2.) take some breaths from your oxygen mask

I've said it before and I say it again: #Corona was a experiment about how much #Propaganda you can ram down people's throat before they push back. 99% failed that test. That's why Israel has become so bold. They're controlling the media and they're the masters of propaganda.

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