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Oyster Sauce
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Post by Oyster Sauce »

They're not even trying anymore

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-67411189

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A man accused of a hammer attack on ex-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's husband has testified how he hatched a plan to end US corruption after becoming absorbed in conspiracy theories.

David DePape, 43, has pleaded not guilty to two charges including attempted kidnap of a federal official.

He cried as he testified how he hatched a bizarre plot that included wearing a unicorn costume while interrogating Ms Pelosi and posting the video online.

If convicted, he faces life in prison.

Closing arguments in the trial are expected on Wednesday.

On Tuesday, in sometimes tearful testimony, Mr DePape told the court he used to have left-wing political beliefs before a political transformation that started when he was living in a garage without a toilet or shower, playing video games for hours at a time.

Giving evidence for more than an hour, he said that in the course of looking up information about video games he became interested in Gamergate, an anti-feminist campaign that targeted prominent women in the gaming world and became a huge online trend starting in 2014.


He began listening to right-wing podcasters and watching political YouTube videos.

"At that time, I was biased against Trump," Mr DePape said, "but there's, like, truth there. So if there's truth out there that I don't know, I want to know it."

He said he formulated a "grand plan" that involved luring "targets" to the Pelosi home.

Inflatable unicorn costume

The names on his list included University of Michigan academic Gayle Rubin, California Governor Gavin Newsom, Tom Hanks, congressman Adam Schiff, former Vice-President Mike Pence, former Attorney General Bill Barr, Senator Bernie Sanders and liberal mega-donor George Soros.

Ultimately, Mr DePape said, he wanted to confront President Joe Biden's son Hunter, and after he got his targets to admit to corruption, he planned to ask the president to pardon everyone he considered a "criminal".

"It's just easier giving them a pardon so we can move forward as a country," he said, crying on the stand.

Mr DePape said he went to the Pelosi home in the early hours of 28 October last year, hoping to talk to Mrs Pelosi about what he thought were false theories of Russian involvement in the 2016 presidential election.

He said he planned to wear an inflatable unicorn costume and upload his interrogation of her online. He was arrested with zip ties and duct tape in his possession.

When asked why he hit Mr Pelosi, he responded: "I reacted because my plan was basically ruined."

"He was never my target and I'm sorry that he got hurt," he said.

Mr Pelosi, 83, testified on Monday of his alarm upon waking up to find Mr DePape "standing in the doorway".

Mr Pelosi spent six days in hospital with a fractured skull and injuries to his arm and hand.

Defence lawyers are not denying that Mr DePape struck Mr Pelosi, but they are arguing he was motivated by his belief in conspiracy theories rather than Mrs Pelosi's status as Speaker of the House.

Because the charges involve assault on a federal official, prosecutors must prove that Mr DePape's actions were motivated by Mrs Pelosi's elected position.
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Post by Ranselknulf »

US Nuke Lab Hacked By "Gay Furry Hackers"

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/us-nu ... ry-hackers

A US nuclear lab working on next-generation nuclear power plants, light water reactors, and robotics was hacked by a group of self-proclaimed "gay furry hackers."

On Monday, the hacktivist group SiegedSec posted on social media platform X that it "breached the INL (Idaho National Laboratory) divulging thousands of data points such as - full name, date of birth, email address, phone number, social security number, address, employment info and more :3."

On Telegram, SiegedSec posted what appears to be proof of the data breach at INL.
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Post by Ranselknulf »

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/23/why-tri ... ation.html

Here's why economists don't expect trillions of dollars in economic stimulus to create inflation

Published Thu, Jul 23 20207:03 AM EDT

Image

Key Points

Record fiscal and monetary stimulus has renewed concerns that inflation could surge.
Weak demand could continue to put downward pressure on prices despite some supply shocks.
Many economists say the link between money creation and consumer prices has weakened in recent years.



Central banks and governments have funneled record amounts of money into their economies to fight the global recession triggered by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Federal Reserve's balance sheet has ballooned from $4 trillion in mid-March to roughly $7 trillion. Congress has passed trillions of dollars in stimulus funding, with more likely on the way.

The infusion of cash into the financial system has renewed concerns that inflation could surge.

"People who espouse that view of, as Milton Friedman said, inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon, if you believe that you look at the central bank balance sheets exploding right now and you say there's going to be inflation," Citi global chief economist Catherine Mann told CNBC.

Supply shocks have driven up prices for some goods in recent months. Yet many economists expect consumer prices will stay low despite trillions of dollars in government stimulus.

"While there certainly is quite a lot of disruption to the supply side of the economy, that's likely to be dominated by the huge hit to aggregate demand," said Evercore ISI Vice Chairman Krishna Guha.

Weak demand

So far, weak demand has muted prices across advanced economies. U.S. consumer prices dropped for three consecutive months before rebounding in June.

The latest projections from Federal Reserve policymakers show inflation will stay below the central bank's 2% target over the next two years.

"At this stage, even with the Fed doing as much as it can, it's still not leading to an enormous increase in demand," Olivier Blanchard, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told CNBC.

He added the $1,200 stimulus checks from the federal government were not big enough to stoke inflation.

"The checks, while they helped, they didn't lead to a boom in demand," Blanchard said.

Balance sheet expansion

Economists say another reason inflation might stay low is that the link between money creation and consumer prices has weakened in recent years. When the Fed bought trillions of dollars in assets after the 2008 financial crisis, inflation never surged.

Banks have kept much of the cash created by the Fed's recent purchases "on account" in the form of excess reserves, instead of lending it out into the economy.

"The experience of the last decade is that central bank balance-sheet expansion certainly need not generate a period of excess inflation, and, in fact, even with a big balance sheet, it might still be hard to get the inflation that you want," Guha said.

While recent stimulus measures might not directly boost prices for consumers, some say it is causing inflation in other places like the stock market or housing market.

"I think we're looking at very significant increases in asset price inflation," Citi's Mann said.
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Post by rusty_shackleford »

Ranselknulf wrote: November 22nd, 2023, 23:24
US Nuke Lab Hacked By "Gay Furry Hackers"

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/us-nu ... ry-hackers

A US nuclear lab working on next-generation nuclear power plants, light water reactors, and robotics was hacked by a group of self-proclaimed "gay furry hackers."

On Monday, the hacktivist group SiegedSec posted on social media platform X that it "breached the INL (Idaho National Laboratory) divulging thousands of data points such as - full name, date of birth, email address, phone number, social security number, address, employment info and more :3."

On Telegram, SiegedSec posted what appears to be proof of the data breach at INL.
I'd say they gained nothing useful because everything was airgapped, but I wouldn't be surprised if this was false given current standards.
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Post by Ranselknulf »

rusty_shackleford wrote: November 29th, 2023, 11:36
Ranselknulf wrote: November 22nd, 2023, 23:24
US Nuke Lab Hacked By "Gay Furry Hackers"

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/us-nu ... ry-hackers

A US nuclear lab working on next-generation nuclear power plants, light water reactors, and robotics was hacked by a group of self-proclaimed "gay furry hackers."

On Monday, the hacktivist group SiegedSec posted on social media platform X that it "breached the INL (Idaho National Laboratory) divulging thousands of data points such as - full name, date of birth, email address, phone number, social security number, address, employment info and more :3."

On Telegram, SiegedSec posted what appears to be proof of the data breach at INL.
I'd say they gained nothing useful because everything was airgapped, but I wouldn't be surprised if this was false given current standards.
There is a high probability that this was a cover for the theft of some information by glowies who intend to resell it to the highest bidder.
Last edited by Ranselknulf on November 29th, 2023, 11:39, edited 1 time in total.
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Breathe
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Post by Breathe »

Remember the Buffalo shooting last year. Here's a good breakdown (part at the end comparing real killings is pretty brutal and graphic, so just letting you know).

Also, someone mentioned "Around 10:00, when he shoots the first girl, there is a black guy behind the black car that falls when the shooter never aimed his gun at him. IMO that’s far more sus than anything else mentioned."

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Post by rusty_shackleford »

Breathe wrote: November 29th, 2023, 15:16
Also, someone mentioned "Around 10:00, when he shoots the first girl, there is a black guy behind the black car that falls when the shooter never aimed his gun at him. IMO that’s far more sus than anything else mentioned."
If you hear a shot, you hit the dirt.
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Post by Breathe »

rusty_shackleford wrote: November 29th, 2023, 15:25
Breathe wrote: November 29th, 2023, 15:16
Also, someone mentioned "Around 10:00, when he shoots the first girl, there is a black guy behind the black car that falls when the shooter never aimed his gun at him. IMO that’s far more sus than anything else mentioned."
If you hear a shot, you hit the dirt.
Watch the video... He falls back like he got shot.
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Post by Red7 »

transalted;
every idiot watching/going to that ufc trash is deep stater cock sucking faggot
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Post by Red7 »

Ranselknulf wrote: November 29th, 2023, 11:34
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/23/why-tri ... ation.html

Here's why economists don't expect trillions of dollars in economic stimulus to create inflation

Published Thu, Jul 23 20207:03 AM EDT

Image

Key Points

Record fiscal and monetary stimulus has renewed concerns that inflation could surge.
Weak demand could continue to put downward pressure on prices despite some supply shocks.
Many economists say the link between money creation and consumer prices has weakened in recent years.



Central banks and governments have funneled record amounts of money into their economies to fight the global recession triggered by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Federal Reserve's balance sheet has ballooned from $4 trillion in mid-March to roughly $7 trillion. Congress has passed trillions of dollars in stimulus funding, with more likely on the way.

The infusion of cash into the financial system has renewed concerns that inflation could surge.

"People who espouse that view of, as Milton Friedman said, inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon, if you believe that you look at the central bank balance sheets exploding right now and you say there's going to be inflation," Citi global chief economist Catherine Mann told CNBC.

Supply shocks have driven up prices for some goods in recent months. Yet many economists expect consumer prices will stay low despite trillions of dollars in government stimulus.

"While there certainly is quite a lot of disruption to the supply side of the economy, that's likely to be dominated by the huge hit to aggregate demand," said Evercore ISI Vice Chairman Krishna Guha.

Weak demand

So far, weak demand has muted prices across advanced economies. U.S. consumer prices dropped for three consecutive months before rebounding in June.

The latest projections from Federal Reserve policymakers show inflation will stay below the central bank's 2% target over the next two years.

"At this stage, even with the Fed doing as much as it can, it's still not leading to an enormous increase in demand," Olivier Blanchard, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told CNBC.

He added the $1,200 stimulus checks from the federal government were not big enough to stoke inflation.

"The checks, while they helped, they didn't lead to a boom in demand," Blanchard said.

Balance sheet expansion

Economists say another reason inflation might stay low is that the link between money creation and consumer prices has weakened in recent years. When the Fed bought trillions of dollars in assets after the 2008 financial crisis, inflation never surged.

Banks have kept much of the cash created by the Fed's recent purchases "on account" in the form of excess reserves, instead of lending it out into the economy.

"The experience of the last decade is that central bank balance-sheet expansion certainly need not generate a period of excess inflation, and, in fact, even with a big balance sheet, it might still be hard to get the inflation that you want," Guha said.

While recent stimulus measures might not directly boost prices for consumers, some say it is causing inflation in other places like the stock market or housing market.

"I think we're looking at very significant increases in asset price inflation," Citi's Mann said.
economists are retards too stupid to make money in markets so they have to take babysitting fake jew academics job.

they will have to really gutt credit access for the working class to curb consumption and slow down impending hyperinflation
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Post by Red7 »

Ranselknulf wrote: August 31st, 2023, 00:11
Harvard is well known for its science.
u mean gay bath houses and orgies with goats
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Post by jcd »

If you're a patriot you should be drinking Coke, shopping at Walmart, and watching Disney movies and franchises. Real red-blooded American media, no commie shit. Certified.
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Red7
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Post by Red7 »

i think real patriot would upload snuff video with this dana fag getting gutted like fish then having starved rats thrown into his half empty ribcage.

no real patriots out there it seems
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Ranselknulf
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Post by Ranselknulf »

I should make a vaccine with microchips that stop your phone from tracking you.
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Post by Ranselknulf »

https://www.infoworld.com/article/37132 ... and-c.html

White House urges developers to dump C and C++


Biden administration calls for developers to embrace memory-safe programing languages and move away from those that cause buffer overflows and other memory access vulnerabilities.


By Grant Gross

InfoWorld |

Image

Magdalena Petrova

US President Joe Biden’s administration wants software developers to use memory-safe programming languages and ditch vulnerable ones like C and C++.

The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency also urged developers to use memory-safe programming languages in a September blog post. CISA, the FBI, the US National Security Agency, and agencies from allied countries also published the report, “The Case for Memory Safe Roadmaps,” in December.

About 22 percent of all software programmers used C++, and 19 percent used C as of 2023, according to Statista, making them less popular than JavaScript, Python, Java and a few others. But the TIOBE Programming Community index ranks only Python as more popular, followed by C, C++, and Java.

Time to change

At the same time, changes are needed because of “the sophistication of threats from adversaries that exploit memory safety violations,” he said.

Discussions about memory safety involving the government, industry, and academic can lead to meaningful change, he added. “Naturally, many branches of the federal government are key creators and vendors for software and they can use this perspective in deciding their priority for upcoming changes to systems or new systems.”

However, a move away from C and C++ won’t happen overnight, especially in embedded systems, Grossman said. “But the use of other languages for systems software, notably Rust, has already grown significantly, and I think many people anticipate that sort of evolution accelerating rather than C and C++ development simply stopping, which still seems unimaginable in its entirety.”
Last edited by Ranselknulf on March 1st, 2024, 12:22, edited 2 times in total.
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Post by Irenaeus »

Ranselknulf wrote: March 1st, 2024, 12:22
https://www.infoworld.com/article/37132 ... and-c.html

White House urges developers to dump C and C++


Biden administration calls for developers to embrace memory-safe programing languages and move away from those that cause buffer overflows and other memory access vulnerabilities.


By Grant Gross

InfoWorld |

Image

Magdalena Petrova

US President Joe Biden’s administration wants software developers to use memory-safe programming languages and ditch vulnerable ones like C and C++.

The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency also urged developers to use memory-safe programming languages in a September blog post. CISA, the FBI, the US National Security Agency, and agencies from allied countries also published the report, “The Case for Memory Safe Roadmaps,” in December.

About 22 percent of all software programmers used C++, and 19 percent used C as of 2023, according to Statista, making them less popular than JavaScript, Python, Java and a few others. But the TIOBE Programming Community index ranks only Python as more popular, followed by C, C++, and Java.

Time to change

At the same time, changes are needed because of “the sophistication of threats from adversaries that exploit memory safety violations,” he said.

Discussions about memory safety involving the government, industry, and academic can lead to meaningful change, he added. “Naturally, many branches of the federal government are key creators and vendors for software and they can use this perspective in deciding their priority for upcoming changes to systems or new systems.”

However, a move away from C and C++ won’t happen overnight, especially in embedded systems, Grossman said. “But the use of other languages for systems software, notably Rust, has already grown significantly, and I think many people anticipate that sort of evolution accelerating rather than C and C++ development simply stopping, which still seems unimaginable in its entirety.”
Read somewhere that this is trannies pushing for Rust.
Retarded of course, as every 6 months there's a new update that breaks everything.
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Post by Goldsnivy1 »

Irenaeus wrote: March 3rd, 2024, 10:48
Ranselknulf wrote: March 1st, 2024, 12:22
https://www.infoworld.com/article/37132 ... and-c.html

White House urges developers to dump C and C++


Biden administration calls for developers to embrace memory-safe programing languages and move away from those that cause buffer overflows and other memory access vulnerabilities.


By Grant Gross

InfoWorld |

Image

Magdalena Petrova

US President Joe Biden’s administration wants software developers to use memory-safe programming languages and ditch vulnerable ones like C and C++.

The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency also urged developers to use memory-safe programming languages in a September blog post. CISA, the FBI, the US National Security Agency, and agencies from allied countries also published the report, “The Case for Memory Safe Roadmaps,” in December.

About 22 percent of all software programmers used C++, and 19 percent used C as of 2023, according to Statista, making them less popular than JavaScript, Python, Java and a few others. But the TIOBE Programming Community index ranks only Python as more popular, followed by C, C++, and Java.

Time to change

At the same time, changes are needed because of “the sophistication of threats from adversaries that exploit memory safety violations,” he said.

Discussions about memory safety involving the government, industry, and academic can lead to meaningful change, he added. “Naturally, many branches of the federal government are key creators and vendors for software and they can use this perspective in deciding their priority for upcoming changes to systems or new systems.”

However, a move away from C and C++ won’t happen overnight, especially in embedded systems, Grossman said. “But the use of other languages for systems software, notably Rust, has already grown significantly, and I think many people anticipate that sort of evolution accelerating rather than C and C++ development simply stopping, which still seems unimaginable in its entirety.”
Read somewhere that this is trannies pushing for Rust.
Retarded of course, as every 6 months there's a new update that breaks everything.
Anyone who unironically advocates for programming in Rust, especially for memory safety, would be better off killing themselves, tranny or otherwise
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Post by BobT »

Goldsnivy1 wrote: March 8th, 2024, 04:59
Irenaeus wrote: March 3rd, 2024, 10:48
Ranselknulf wrote: March 1st, 2024, 12:22
https://www.infoworld.com/article/37132 ... and-c.html

White House urges developers to dump C and C++


Biden administration calls for developers to embrace memory-safe programing languages and move away from those that cause buffer overflows and other memory access vulnerabilities.


By Grant Gross

InfoWorld |

Image

Magdalena Petrova

US President Joe Biden’s administration wants software developers to use memory-safe programming languages and ditch vulnerable ones like C and C++.

The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency also urged developers to use memory-safe programming languages in a September blog post. CISA, the FBI, the US National Security Agency, and agencies from allied countries also published the report, “The Case for Memory Safe Roadmaps,” in December.

About 22 percent of all software programmers used C++, and 19 percent used C as of 2023, according to Statista, making them less popular than JavaScript, Python, Java and a few others. But the TIOBE Programming Community index ranks only Python as more popular, followed by C, C++, and Java.

Time to change

At the same time, changes are needed because of “the sophistication of threats from adversaries that exploit memory safety violations,” he said.

Discussions about memory safety involving the government, industry, and academic can lead to meaningful change, he added. “Naturally, many branches of the federal government are key creators and vendors for software and they can use this perspective in deciding their priority for upcoming changes to systems or new systems.”

However, a move away from C and C++ won’t happen overnight, especially in embedded systems, Grossman said. “But the use of other languages for systems software, notably Rust, has already grown significantly, and I think many people anticipate that sort of evolution accelerating rather than C and C++ development simply stopping, which still seems unimaginable in its entirety.”
Read somewhere that this is trannies pushing for Rust.
Retarded of course, as every 6 months there's a new update that breaks everything.
Anyone who unironically advocates for programming in Rust, especially for memory safety, would be better off killing themselves, tranny or otherwise
If it sounds like a hipster language, it probably is.
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Post by Xenich »

Irenaeus wrote: March 3rd, 2024, 10:48
Ranselknulf wrote: March 1st, 2024, 12:22
https://www.infoworld.com/article/37132 ... and-c.html

White House urges developers to dump C and C++


Biden administration calls for developers to embrace memory-safe programing languages and move away from those that cause buffer overflows and other memory access vulnerabilities.


By Grant Gross

InfoWorld |

Image

Magdalena Petrova

US President Joe Biden’s administration wants software developers to use memory-safe programming languages and ditch vulnerable ones like C and C++.

The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency also urged developers to use memory-safe programming languages in a September blog post. CISA, the FBI, the US National Security Agency, and agencies from allied countries also published the report, “The Case for Memory Safe Roadmaps,” in December.

About 22 percent of all software programmers used C++, and 19 percent used C as of 2023, according to Statista, making them less popular than JavaScript, Python, Java and a few others. But the TIOBE Programming Community index ranks only Python as more popular, followed by C, C++, and Java.

Time to change

At the same time, changes are needed because of “the sophistication of threats from adversaries that exploit memory safety violations,” he said.

Discussions about memory safety involving the government, industry, and academic can lead to meaningful change, he added. “Naturally, many branches of the federal government are key creators and vendors for software and they can use this perspective in deciding their priority for upcoming changes to systems or new systems.”

However, a move away from C and C++ won’t happen overnight, especially in embedded systems, Grossman said. “But the use of other languages for systems software, notably Rust, has already grown significantly, and I think many people anticipate that sort of evolution accelerating rather than C and C++ development simply stopping, which still seems unimaginable in its entirety.”
Read somewhere that this is trannies pushing for Rust.
Retarded of course, as every 6 months there's a new update that breaks everything.
It is like everything they suggest society move to is almost intentionally trying to break it down. Hmm...
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Post by Ranselknulf »

https://www.businessinsider.com/francis ... 024-3?op=1

Baltimore's biggest bridge collapses after being hit by a cargo ship, videos show. Mass casualty event declared.
Kwan Wei Kevin Tan and Mia Jankowicz

Image

Image shows what appears to be a ship colliding with a support bream of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore. The ship is circled in red.
A screengrab of a livestream at 1:28 a.m. local time showed what appeared to be a large ship colliding with the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, Maryland. Screengrab/Bay Area Mechanical

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