@FaheemMitha That's one of the goals of propaganda (in general). To sow uncertainty, to "let people make up their own minds" (preferably without them knowing the facts, or with filtered facts, or with made up facts).
@FaheemMitha You have (at least) two teams here, and they are going to be afraid of each other and try to make the other look bad. They will both say scary things about what will happen if the other team does <whatever>.
She was fired for "betraying" the DoJ. Now that's a word I don't like the sound of. We have neo-Nazis in Sweden using that on social media far too often.
"I’ll tell you the whole history of it: When he first announced it, he said ‘Muslim ban,'" Giuliani said on Fox News. "He called me up, he said, ‘Put a commission together, show me the right way to do it legally.’"
Remember, you need to start from the assumption that all Muslims are, by definition, bad, bad people who want to kill us in our sleep and destroy our way of life.
But I venture to think that the orange menace would not be happy to hear him say things like Muslim Ban publicly. That's kind of what I meant by - speak against.
I don't know why terrorist attacks are such a big thing to be worried about. You're much more likely to die from a car crash, and just as badly. In the US, you also run a much higher risk of being shot by a fellow American. The fun thing is that being shot by someone wielding a lawfully purchased gun is easily preventable, while car crashes can't as easily be prevented.
Terrorist attacks will happen for as long as a leader pisses people off (alienating, exploiting, etc.). That's preventable too, of course.
It's the general short-sightedness of that kind of politics that I don't like. You can't stop a disease by getting rid of the symptoms. You have to get rid of the cause of it. And the cause of it most likely isn't "he hit me first".
Trump doesn't seem to possess the personality to be able to say/see that though. To him, everything else is doing the wrong thing and he's doing the right thing.
For example, there seems to have been remarkably little terrorist activity against Imperial Britain, as far as I can tell. No Indian counterattacks or anything that I'm aware of.
Le brevet de technicien supérieur (BTS) est un diplôme national de l'enseignement supérieur français, créé en 1962 (décret du 26 février 1962). Il se prépare normalement en deux années après l'obtention du baccalauréat ou d'un diplôme de niveau IV dans une section de technicien supérieur (STS). Il s'agit d'un diplôme de niveau III. L'obtention du diplôme se fait sur examen. À la différence du baccalauréat, il n'y a pas d'épreuve de rattrapage pour ceux qui obtiennent une note légèrement inférieure à la moyenne requise (10/20), mais une simple commission permettant le rattrapage des étudiants proches...
A while back I encountered a developer who shared a story of a positive experience on Stack Overflow. He'd asked a question late one Sunday on Labor Day weekend, and been delighted that he'd quickly gotten multiple responses. He said he was impressed that someone else in San Francisco was also "burning the midnight oil," and noted it as a testament to the work ethic in Silicon Valley.
@StephenKitt Well, imo attacks on the British in India by Indians during the Occupation would have been resistance. But that mostly didn't happen. Outside India it would just have been violence, again imo. But as far as I know, that didn't happen at all.
There was the 1857 revolt, granted. Which was a nasty affair. But also very short-lived.
@user367890 cut -b 1-«N» | wc -l would be the obvious. Please ask a question, though, after considering the difference between bytes and characters. Some characters (like, say, œ) could be multiple bytes—and lines only really make sense with characters. (IOW: the command I gave does exactly what you asked for, but probably not what you want. Unless you can guarantee only single-byte characters—i.e., ASCII or legacy ISO-8859-x encoding)
@phk I guess it's for the same reason that ls ls will attempt to run ls on the file called ls instead of executing ls twice. First place is semantically important.
I still stand by my tag soup comparison, for such keywords the rule shouldn't be: "Huh, I have no other meaning for this keyword here, I will just try to execute this alias/function/executable."
Especially when the user has numerous ways of making explicitly clear if he/she would want to run something with such a name. Oh and good night to you too, terdon.