The Lamb of God had, in fact, returned on September 23, 2025. Unfortunately, he had chosen to appear to His faithful in rural Mississippi, who, after millennia of material suggesting otherwise, did not recognize a Middle Eastern man with shabby clothing as the Prince of Peace. He was quickly picked up for vagrancy, and after it was established he had no legal entry documentation, was bundled up into an ICE holding facility for deportation to El Salvador.
Mali’s leadership tried to sell the French exit as an anti-colonial victory, but it was anything but. As one empire left, another quickly moved in. Russian mercenaries replaced French soldiers, announcing to the world Mali’s intention to move into Russia’s orbit.
Americans watched with worry, and eventually started to use the “counterterrorism” angle to try and befriend a regime they loudly condemned and sanctioned just a few years ago.
For the Malian people, the country’s transfer to team Russia brought no real positives. Sure, the humiliation of France at the heart of Francophone Africa was rejoiced over by some, but the Russians brought with them nothing but more aggression, corruption and chaos.
As the Russians enjoy their newfound influence, Americans appear to be looking for a way back in. They are now courting the regime under the guise of addressing “terror” but clearly with the sole intent of weakening the Russian hand.
Europe and America’s support for many “friendly” dictators across Africa, such as Uganda’s Museveni, and Washington’s ongoing attempts to befriend Mali’s junta despite its insults to democracy, clearly show Africans have no true ally in this proxy war being waged on their lands.
Well, dude, if Africans are going to permit themselves to be led by dictators, I doubt that you're going to find that there's going to be an absolute wall built against dealing with them. The US most-likely isn't going to come in, forcibly eject your leadership, and impose elections, and I suspect that there are people in Mali who wouldn't like it if they did.
You'll probably get more support for a democratic government, but there's going to be a limit as to how much by way of national interest that will be sacrificed for that, true enough.
As to wanting agency --- Africans have agency. If the population of Mali collectively told the leadership of Mali that they weren't going to be running Mali, said leadership wouldn't be running Mali.
No problem. And just to make it clear, if you haven't done so before, if you find a community you like on lemmyverse.net, you'll want to copy the text with the leading exclamation mark, which you can do by clicking on that text on lemmyverse.net --- say, for example, !foodporn@lemmy.world --- and then paste it into the community search on whatever client or Web UI you use. That'll make your home instance connect to the instance where the community lives and learn about it, if it hasn't already. Your home instance is sh.itjust.works, which is decently-sized, so it's not as much an issue for you --- for many communities, some user on sh.itjust.works will have already done this and subscribed to the community --- but for users on smaller instances, it's more important.
Eh. It sounds like the thing is likely going out of business, and people are just batting around ideas to try to bring it back. Probably good odds that it won't happen.
Craigslea community kindergarten, a local childcare centre in Chermside West in Brisbane’s north, made national headlines this week after a series of emails to parents. The centre has been in turmoil for weeks and was closed after a mass exodus of staff before the school holidays.
On Sunday, the management committee sent parents a 1,000-word email claiming the centre was “insolvent”, owing more than $40,314 to the tax office and employees. It proposed to “wind up” the centre, which has been placed into voluntary administration.
The next day, in a second email the management committee proposed to charge $2,200 for a scrapbook of artwork produced by their children and photographs of them to help pay off the debt.
I think that if I were Google, Meta, and Vodafone, I'd go build an app to measure a phone's lifetime playing video and then promote that as a benchmark. Things that are the path of least resistance to measure tend to get measured more than those that are a pain to measure.
I mean, there are more options to spend money on. But it's not like you're obligated to exercise those options.
If you live out on a farm in North Dakota, and there isn't much by way of eateries near by, you probably don't eat out much. You don't have to eat out in a city, either. Just more options for it.
EDIT: Honestly, a lot of people known for being in a meme probably do a pretty good job of fitting into this camp, outside of maybe where viral marketing campaigns have managed to intentionally create successful memes themselves.
Looks tasty! I'm a sucker for buttered and toasted sourdough or rye.
This culture isn’t nearly as sharp as a San Francisco germ
Apologies if this is obvious to you, but IIRC from past reading, commercial sourdough achieves a higher acidity without needing to use the specific yeast via just adding acid directly. If you aren't dead-set on authentic, "the yeast do everything" sourdough, you could probably tweak sourdough to taste that way.
kagis
Okay, this isn't talking about what commercial producers do, but it is directly talking about increasing tang in homemade sourdough via the "directly-add-acid-to-the-dough" route:
Well, if tickets for a given band are being scalped, then it's a good sign that they're probably initially selling below market rate.