• 10 Posts
  • 33 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 22nd, 2023

help-circle


  • Do you think Native Americans would agree to define him as an explorer too, then?

    But this is accurate. Columbus was an explorer, that was his mission. I’ve read his letters to Spain and he wanted to find bounty for the Spanish crown to convince them to give him more money.

    And Adolf Hitler was a politician. That was his “mission”. We don’t define Hitler by his career though.

    He murdered, tortured, enslaved kidnapped, interrogated, and raped people to find even more bounty.

    I guess he went above and beyond on that mission, yeah? By your definition he seems more like a bounty-hunter/privateer and not an explorer, but worse in every way. (And how is rape supposed to tie into this narrative about his goal of securing more funding anyway?)

    But he was an explorer, not a conquistador or conqueror. Those were military positions.

    So by your logic, not having a military position pardons any atrocities he committed and waives the reason to call him anything other than “explorer”? He was a butcher and a rapist. That’s a fact.

    You don’t need a rank and a hat to become a sanctioned piece of shit. That can happen sans the hat.

    This post is ignorant.

    Is this your opinion, or an “accurate” fact too?



  • voodooattack@lemmy.worldOPto196@lemmy.blahaj.zoneUnbiased AI Rule
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    32
    ·
    edit-2
    5 months ago

    Yet they both committed atrocities (torture, murder, rape and god knows what else) and only one is being hailed as “explorer”.

    Edit: I’m not saying we should hail Genghis Khan as an explorer, I’m saying that Christopher Columbus should be deplored as a murderer and a marauder, not praised as an explorer.





















  • That is absolutely correct. It allows you to take a lot of the exposition the narrator normally has to do in order to explain things to the reader and integrate it in dialogue/narrative itself, and the protagonist doesn’t have to be a child/amnesiac/etc to ask obvious questions.



  • A walled garden doesn’t offer you the freedom to leave it. If you’re unhappy with Ubuntu, you can use a bajillion other distros and get the same software elsewhere. If you preserve your home directory and distro hop then nothing changes for you and your preferences/dot files carry over. I jumped between three distros at some point and my custom GNOME setup (extensions and all) survived through it with minor changes. Heck. Even Thunderbird kept my profile active and I never had to re-add all my email credentials from scratch.

    Can you do that with Windows or MacOS?