To the point of replacing Visa/Mastercard: it would be great if the EU could continue in line of SEPA and create an EU payment processor. Now, I want to be very clear, it should be owned by the member states' governments, and profit (if any) should go into the EU budget. No neoliberal bullshit of "oh we're going to put out a contract/give out loans for anyone to set up a payment processor and the market will decide". It should be a state owned payment processor, to finally stop the likes of Mastercard, Visa, etc. from leeching off every single consumer transaction in the economy.
stormeuh
That's a great saying about wisdom, I'm going to use that some time.
Even though I haven't run anything Debian based as a daily driver in about a decade, I still recommend Debian based distro's to beginners. With Ubuntu being so widespread it just makes sense, because whenever you search for "how do I install xyz on linux" it's going to be a guide for Ubuntu 99% of the time, which should work on other Debian based distro's most times.
Perfect company for Trump.
Yeah if there's one thing that wouldn't be easily explainable to people from the 70's, it's the lack of technological optimism in the current zeitgeist.
I think that should be expected given the governing structure of almost all large companies, because they're dictatorships. Employees have no say over who's in leadership, and can be fired more or less without recourse. You wouldn't expect a town hall in Russia or North Korea to allow dissent, would you?
With the exception that trains do not run roughly at the same schedule through the night, which is a big plus
Divide et impera
Sanewashing, everything, all the time.
I think many countries won't though, out of fear of retaliation from the aforementioned orange hitler. That's a stupid reason for the EU/UK not to take advantage though, because he's already made clear he will antagonize US allies whenever he pleases and invent an excuse to do it.
I think that's just the comfortable position for humans. Questioning what you know to be true is hard, and the more fundamental the fact the more uncomfortable it is to doubt. Which is also why religion is so attractive.