Hamas is a political party that electorally seized control of Gaza in in 2006 from Fatah, Yasser Arafat’s party. Fatah rebelled against Hamas in 2007 and lost. Yet Fatah is still has 45 seats to Hamas’ 72 on the PLC.
The Palestinian legislative election took place on 25 January 2006 and was judged to be free and fair by international observers.[18][19] It resulted in a Hamas victory, surprising Israel and the United States, which had expected their favoured partner, Fatah, to retain power.[20] On 27 January, US President George Bush said “the landslide victory of the militant Islamic group Hamas was a rejection of the “status quo” and a repudiation of the “old guard” that had failed to provide honest government and services”.[2]
That last line from Bush is surprisingly correct. Hamas is effectively the Palestinian branch of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood. Their primary tactic is actually charity work by feeding the abundant poor people of Gaza and radicalizing them from there.
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🎉 I just hit #200 followers! 🎉
Thank you everyone!
🩷 I love you all 🩷
And hope you all have a great day!
Please boost and forward this post so we can get me to 300.
🇨🇦🩷🇨🇦🩷🇨🇦🩷🇨🇦🩷🇨🇦
Going to record podcast episode #200 this saturday with a game. Thinking of randomizing between us 5 guests – @jamesthomson is there a possibility to set our names on a 5D-dice and let Dice by Pcalc speak them out loud, you think?
I’d say, after myself gaming since pacman on the atari, it’s a basic principle of taste in general:
Your palate is an exponential convergence. Ever only tried piss and puddlewater as drinks? Then you’d probably say “piss is #1”. After testing another 10 drinks, it’s probably down to #8. And another 190 drinks it’s maybe down to #200.
Saying, the more diverse items of a thing you’ll consume, the more refined your palate grows and so does your standard.
I mean, i once thought pacman or pong were graphically and gameplay-wise the absolute tits. After a felt gazillion games later, they wouldn’t exactly pass the same bar.
Starfield is totally mediocre. I didn’t expect much. Even less. I pirated it to test it, and after some hours i still wanted a refund. But it had great loading-screens!
Back on my PC, threaded posts, multiple windows, multi-tasking.. Time to play #Heardle with the #TeamHeardle gang, posting in the @teamheardle group too
Queen, Super70s, and ReHeardle were never heardled by me before 😴, UK charts?
I love the 1HW song, but not a Hope in Hell, remembering the name of the artist. Plus, it's not suitable for public play 😞 NSFW
I was close to picking it on the first note, but there were so many copied riffs and intros that I waited..
Heardle Pride #118
🔉⬛🟩⬜⬜⬜⬜ https://pride.heardledecades.xyz
My first experience with Lemmy was thinking that the UI was beautiful, and lemmy.ml (the first instance I looked at) was asking people not to join because they already had 1500 users and were struggling to scale....
Rust is not to blame, but that code that has been written in Rust might be to blame.
The algorithms used have more effect than the language used, and Rust might make using certain algorithms more painful and thus steer programmers towards less efficient algorithms. Using clone is often an example of this, it's a little easier and gets around some borrow checker difficulties. (This is true in general, but I don't know if this is what has happened with Lemmy.)
Look at salvo [diesel] coming it at #200+ on this benchmark1, lots of programming languages have at least one framework that is faster on the microbenchmark. This isn't especially meaningful, but it does show that, let's say, a feature rich framework in Rust might end up being slower than a Python framework that's laser focused on the specific use case.
"He was born in Brooklyn on Jan. 24, 1930, and worked at Timely Comics, which would later become Marvel Comics, in the 1940s and DC Comics in the ’50s and ’60s.
In 1966, he took over for artist Steve Ditko on “The Amazing Spider-Man” series, working alongside Marvel editor-in-chief Stan Lee on the series and shaping the current conception of the superhero."
Marvel Treasury Edition Vol 1 #1, Reprint of the 1st story from Amazing Spider-Man #14, featuring Spider-Man in the center of the cover. Art by John Romita Sr.
The Incredible Hulk #200 by Len Wein, Sal Buscema and Joe Staton, with a cover by Rich Buckler & John Romita Sr, showing Bruce Banner with his Hulk persona directly behind him, surrounded by several different Marvel Comics characters and the tagline "The Monster or the man?", on the left of the cover there are the words: "This is it! The Spectacular 200th anniversary issue!. Featuring the most sensational guest stars of all!"
Panel from Amazing Spider-Man #42, published in November 1966, showing Peter Parker first meeting Mary Jane Watson, and her speaking her classic line "Face it, tiger... you just hit the Jackpot!".
🎧🐍 Episode #200 of the Real Python Podcast is live: Avoiding Error Culture and Getting Help Inside Python
What is error culture, and how do you avoid it within your organization? How do you navigate alert and notification fatigue? Hey, it's episode #200! Real Python's editor-in-chief, Dan Bader, joins us this week to celebrate. Christopher Trudeau also returns to bring another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Unprovoked (lemmy.world)
Dev behind massive Skyrim multiplayer mod turns their hands to Starfield, gives up because "this game is f***ing trash," uploads everything for someone else to finish (www.gamesradar.com)
💯 AEW DYNAMITE 200 DISCUSSION THREAD 08/02/23 💯
IT'S WEDNESDAY, YOU KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS…...
Does Lemmy really benefit from Rust? Is code execution speed the bottleneck?
My first experience with Lemmy was thinking that the UI was beautiful, and lemmy.ml (the first instance I looked at) was asking people not to join because they already had 1500 users and were struggling to scale....