@Gargron Do not do what what exactly, protest against the war?
19 comments
ruff, you aren't making any sense. Please answer this simple question: how exactly a piece of malware unleashed upon innocent people is an act of protest? ruff, it's a fun assumption that Russian military uses computers at all. > "shit happens" and learn the lesson (not to use npm) @grishka i'm not defending the nmp maintainer here... just pointing out that the rather manipulative game of looking for holes in one's logic you're playing here can be turned both ways. Something is really messed up in your head 🤦♂️ I hope that it's only a side-effect of emotions and not your everyday thinking process. Let's say your family was shot by some African American. Now you're going to set a bunch of African American houses on fire because some of them MAY be SOMEHOW related to that. Sounds like a solid plan, yeah? ruff, this isn't "my" president. I didn't elect him. I'm as ashamed of him as everyone else but there's nothing I personally can do to help this situation. @ruff @grishka I mean this would probably work on general public, but looks like we have people who are able to think critically in this thread. I hope that someday you'll understand that this is the way to fool yourself and not to "defeat" your "opponent". @ruff Protesting the war is fine, but protesting the war in the west is also completely performative. Putin won’t change his plans because somebody in the west went to a rally or a celebrity recorded a touching message. Turning your software package into malware that targets Russian civilians is pointless cruelty. They have no say over this war either, and it will hit the ones that are against it just as much. It already hit an NGO that documents Russian war crimes. |
ruff, this is pure vandalism, not a protest. Do protest. Don't vandalize stuff. That simple.