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The former, unfortunately.
The former, unfortunately.
“you’ve seen our war crimes, now you’re no longer welcome here”
As if you’d go be a tourist in a country, just after you’ve seen solders of said country commit, or politicians and citizens actively defend war crimes. Plenty of pretty cool other things to see.
Stop! Sync for Lemmy and/or markdown can only go so far…
Nah, I’m voting next week to ensure the Dutch left keeps a voice in the EU parliament.
Not all of us are able to use superior tools like LaTeX for our documents, unfortunately
The EU is could very much send them right back where they came from, but they don’t
That’s only for the war refugees. Sending people back to, say, Eritrea, would mean they’d be executed for leaving the country (which is illegal there).
Those only represent a tiny fraction of the immigrants though, and they’re not the ones “taking all the jobs”, that’s the worker immigrants.
For DNS and DDoS protection that wouldn’t directly be an issue.
For caching it would be breaking. You cannot cache what you cannot read (encrypted traffic can only be cached by the decrypting party).
Yes, I’m done with all those near-identical motion flicks
not really to there being less physical obstacles
Depends on availability. Plenty of eateries don’t have vegan options and this is especially true for locations accommodating larger groups. Furthermore, a lot of vegans need supplements (as I’ve been told), which is also subject to availability.
Lastly, it’s easier to convince a thousand people to eat less meat – especially since they usually already have the ingredients required for vegetarian food at home – than to skip meat alltogether.
Two thousand meals a week that turned vegetarian is a lot more impact than 70 meals turned vegan.
You don’t have to be PCI compliant for stuff like bank transfers or other forms of payment. Credit cards aren’t the default payment method everywhere.
Maybe it’s pay on pickup, or just a simple mail with sepa wire transfer instructions.
Also, the PSP can still use JS but your site still doesn’t need to have it. Services like Mollie and Stripe offer checkout environments they host, meaning you still don’t have to use JS on your site.
You can’t get around JavaScript, it’s impossible to build a functioning online store without some kind of JS.
Well, sure you can. It will just be a pain to use for your users, especially when validation comes into play.
But a simple list with an “add to chart” button really won’t need any javascript.
The posts aren’t constraining the information though. They’re effectively advertisements linking to the information (advertising they have info for you to read).
The information itself is public and freely accessible.
You don’t. They’re usually posting awareness campaigns that link to government sites.
I’ve opted the example to elsewhere, but they’d be like “bought a house? Find out how the taxes work on (link)”
It is, they’re usually posts like “bought your first house? Find out how housing taxes work on rijksoverheid.nl”.
The Dutch government seems to be pretty stringent on their single source of truth policy on the web.
Nah, more like deleting explorer.exe.
There’s isn’t really a Windows equivalent for this, as Windows doesn’t give you control on this level.
It’d be as if you could delete services.msc but also the runner behind it.
Kelvin: Zero is the freezing point.
Scientists: Of what?
Kelvin: Yes.
Hey, don’t embereress them for bad spellling! That’s not naice