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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 1st, 2023

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  • A little unrelated context that sort of lends a bit of background to this will make things equal claim.

    I was at one time an international non-white student at a US institution. After joining, during orientation I find out that the test scores and metrics required for international students is insanely high compared to US citizens. Like in a subject based international test, I had to score above 95th percentile while most of the students from the US did not even write the test or if they had, scored on average around 75th.

    To add more context, I come from a country with far weaker education system and it cost me around half an year of savings to pay for this test.

    So, I find it hilarious ridiculous when people think that any of these institutions are remotely fair. I understand how for these institutions citizens > aliens. Now try transplanting this context on to different race groups within the country.

    I’m not a huge fan of affirmative action or its local equivalent, but I understand why it is needed and it is the responsibility of the government and judiciary to assess it’s impact before deciding to do away with it.

    I also wish they would focus more on things like, nutrition, good school environment, truancy, access to healthcare and so on for disadvantaged groups instead of trying to act at a level where most of the disadvantaged people cannot reach. Still something is better than nothing.



  • Firstly it’s basically skinned debian so you get a pre-set nice xfce environment with some tweaks and some usability stuff without having to swallow the Ubuntu pill. It also has a devaun based iso which means you can run it without systemd on really old hardware.

    This is a direct sibling to something like LMDE or MX Linux.

    Practical advantage is that you get the debian base which is completely community driven and don’t have to worry about snaps or whatever else canonical decides to do tomorrow.