• QuazarOmega@lemy.lol
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      3 months ago

      Agreed, I think the author’s feeling towards this is commendable in spirit, but to let a generic phrase be forever attached to a political movement in any setting is a bit much, even if it’s infamously memorable, it doesn’t belong to Nazis.
      Still, it’s just a name change, so, aside from a few lines of code to change, it doesn’t badly affect anyone. All power to the author

      • Drew@sopuli.xyz
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        3 months ago

        It’s not a big deal to change the name, and it masks actual Nazi use of the language.

  • Helix 🧬@feddit.org
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    3 months ago

    And this, people, is why we should extensively teach fascist and colonialist history. Bet >90% of Americans don’t know this. Many don’t seem to have an issue with Stephen Miller’s Nazi rhetoric, or Trump speeches often suspiciously sounding like the ones from a certain Austrian painter. They simply don’t recognise simple patterns like this.

    I don’t think the author is at fault at all. I would rather ask their educators about what the fuck they were doing that this person doesn’t know these words.

    • Oinks@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      3 months ago

      In defense of the author and their education… They’re Brazilian so English probably isn’t their native language, and their history education was almost certainly in Portuguese. I don’t think it’s necessarily an indictment of their education that they weren’t taught about the English translation of a German phrase, and I don’t think it’s reasonable to apply the same standards of subtext awareness to native and non-native speakers either.

      • ulterno@programming.dev
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        3 months ago

        I also don’t think it makes sense that people who haven’t even taken history as a major, need to be taught each and every phrase that was used by a fanatic group.

        A lot of these words, phrases and symbols tend to be taken from stuff that meant well in the past or even now. See swastika, svaha[1].

        Just knowing those terms, while might help prevent them from being used in accidental cases, is not as important as being able to recognise the pattern of peoples’ actual actions.
        Because a group that has copied stuff from other traditions, can always do that again with other sources, to replace that stuff.

        It’s important that out of history, we make sure to identify the part that we actually need to be against, which is the specific actions that cause grief back then, instead of just picking each and every unrelated thing, which any new group can simply replace, while also getting to keep the original grievous actions.
        This is also to prevent us from getting our willpower drained from always getting outraged by multiple instances of minor similarities that are much more probable to be a false +ive, to have the power to push back when we find the actual problem creators.


        1. which I am not sure of the Nazi reference, but it was being chanted by people being portrayed as Nazis in a game ↩︎

    • Marcela (she/her)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      3 months ago

      The first name of the project was “The Final Solution to your Wayland Wallpaper Worries”. The developer reports he was unaware of the connotation until the Ukraine war happened.

  • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    Stuff like swaybg, despite being very well built, only support setting a single wallpaper on startup. This means, if you want to change the wallpaper during runtime, you must pkill the daemon

    So this…this is the power of Wayland

    • Barry@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      No, it’s a limitation with swaybg so they created a tool that doesn’t have that limitation.

    • NotSteve_@piefed.ca
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      3 months ago

      …have you actually used Wayland? If you’re using Plasma or GNOME, its indistinguishable from X11 except it actually has a slightly more (inexplicable tbh) polished feel to it.

      This comment is incredibly misinformed