Weβve looked to the platforms themselves for answers. Companies are aware of the problems and are making efforts to fix them β with each change they make affecting millions of people. The responsibility β and sometimes burden β of making these decisions falls on companies that have been built to maximise profit more than to maximise social good. A legal or regulatory framework that accounts for social objectives may help ease those tensions.He's being a useful idiot for the "web license" censorship statists. He wants to 'bring more voices' into the web, but regulation will do precisely the opposite.
Hence and for the foreseeable future, the Russians will have to continue on their current, admittedly frustrating and even painful course, and maintain a relatively passive and evasive posture which the Empire and its sycophants will predictably interpret as a sign of weakness. Let them. As long as in the real world the actual power (soft or hard) of the Empire continues to decline, as long as the US MIC continues to churn out fantastically expensive but militarily useless weapon systems, as long as US politicians are busy blaming everything on βRussian interferenceβ while doing nothing to reform their own, collapsing economy and infrastructure, as long as the USA continues to use the printing press as a substitute for actual wealth and as long as the internal socio-political tensions in the USA continue to heat up β then Putinβs plan is working.Hey, the plan worked for OBL. Just bait the idiots into quagmire after quagmire since they love losing wars so much (they're so much more profitable!)
βOver the last decade, the solar wind has exhibited low densities and magnetic ο¬eld strengths, representing anomalous states that have never been observed during the Space Age. As a result of this remarkably weak solar activity, we have also observed the highest fluxes of cosmic rays.βAnd people wonder why it's colder this winter.