00:00 - 23:0023:00 - 00:00
12:21 AM
Will there be any future consideration for PHP? Very unlikely, that requires backend processing — CertainPerformance 27 secs ago
Does this answer your question? I've been told to create a "runnable" example with "Stack Snippets", how do I do that? — CertainPerformance 46 secs ago
@CertainPerformance that helps a lot! When asking about PHP I didn't mean any MYSQL functions. I've looked online for PHP testers for live code there are a couple and they're abysmal. Thanks for your answer. — SJacks 13 secs ago
1:19 AM
1:35 AM
Judging by what I have seen in several questions recently, the correct way to format code is using a block quote, because if you post it as code, the system tells you to trim down your code and add some explanatory text, whereas if you post it as a quote, it's not code and thus evades the quality checker and let's you post your code dump with no effort and no explanation! Hooray! — Jörg W Mittag 1 min ago
2:33 AM
@Nick makes sense. That's what I figured and addressed it in my final point in the post - we need some more honesty on what that number means... if they repost the same job - it's still posted on the original date - it can say something like "Featured 6 days ago"... — WELZ 55 secs ago
2:59 AM
The cited example doesn't belong in answers, either. Please do not advise people to repost it there. Just flag the comments for a moderator to delete. Stack Overflow is a moderated site. I can't see why that would scare people away. Most of our users are attracted to this site precisely because it is heavily moderated to keep down the noise. @SJacks — Cody Gray ♦ 51 secs ago
I don't see any grounds why you believe "posted date" is not a date when job was posted and hence how using UTC or adding explanation of "data when job was posted" would be useful. (indeed you may have a point that reposting may be questionable but it is not what post talks about) — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
@DaveNewton The comment filter is still alive and well, but it is quite feeble, being based merely on a regular expression pattern. It certainly wouldn't have caught this. The regex pattern also isn't really extensible anymore, so we have no way of improving it to catch things like this in the future. Your best course of action is simply to let a moderator know using a flag. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@Nick I've added example from my -9 duplicate - indeed it has "Delete question" button. You probably looking at 3k+ version of the message on someone else post, not your own. — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
Also surprisingly my version does not even have "Edit" button (unlike this) ... not sure if it is gone for good, not showing due to question age or due to author closed as duplicate themselves. — Alexei Levenkov 13 secs ago
3:33 AM
While I agree submitting an entire workbook is overkill. Being able to provide a table would be helpful for those questions where it’s appropriate. Certainly would make a question that contains a table easier to read. — Security Hound 42 secs ago
4:03 AM
There are really two questions here. First, which sites would consider this question on topic. Second, which would be most likely to provide a useful answer. — Mark Ransom 1 min ago
1 hour later…
5:33 AM
@BenLeggiero From my point of view, the most useful interaction would be to upvote the "better" solution, downvote the other one and add a comment explaining problems with the code. Why? Because it is useful for learning what one shouldn't do and how code looks that does the job, but isn't as performant as it could be. In the past, I learned from bad answers as well. — Modus Tollens 8 secs ago
6:19 AM
@πάνταῥεῖ, Thanks for your clarification, but I don't really think there's anything wrong with the code. Just some new behavior of Firefox. I just wanted to make sure. I decoded the first level in an edit, but don't wish to decode any further and publish the decoded version. It's security through obscurity. I don't mind someone decoding on their own for study, though. The original URL in itself demonstrates the problem when loaded in Firefox vs Edge. I can't believe a programmer doesn't know how to URLDecode on their own. — MehBMe 18 secs ago
6:45 AM
At the time the question was closed, it looked like this. We expect questions to be completely self-contained and answerable without visiting any links. For more information see Something in my web site or project doesn't work. Can I just paste a link to it? — Ivar 47 secs ago
6:57 AM
@Ivar, thanks for the info and clarification. I understand now. I just wish people had the grace to write a little comment and explain, like you just did. Otherwise, how's the community and it's members to grow? — MehBMe 56 secs ago
Does this answer your question? What should I do about a clone service scraping Stack Exchange sites for content? — Jeanne Dark 58 secs ago
Does this answer your question? How to create a table in a Stack Overflow question — Brian Tompsett - 汤莱恩 20 secs ago
@MehBMe Many users are reluctant to comment on their downvotes and close-votes out of fear that the OP will retaliate with verbal abuse, revenge-downvotes, or some other form of attack. I'm not saying that you personally would do such things, but so many people would (and have done) that unexplained downvotes/close-votes are more or less the norm here. It's a catch-22, really, because then people get just as upset about the lack of feedback. — F1Krazy 1 min ago
7:29 AM
yeah, not ideal... especially when links opens from / to your default browser usually... — Gyum Fox 51 secs ago
This is really puzzling. I selected an animated GIF for upload in Teams and the preview displayed the animation. Only then when I finished the upload it was static. It took me quite a while to figure out what was wrong, and eventually locate this explanation (but only after I had spent enough time that I finally noticed that this was apparently what was happening). — tripleee 1 min ago
7:59 AM
I had indeed never seen the log out button on stack overflow! Now that would be great if there was such a link (to log out or to switch account) on the error page (cause this page doesn't have the top bar...). I will also try to play with extensions. Thanks @Zoe — Gyum Fox 17 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Should a question that is meaningless without viewing an external link be closed? — gnat 1 min ago
8:25 AM
I don't think I ever got any message or offer of swag for reaching 100k (in June 2019). I just assumed there were enough people at this reputation level that they no longer considered it worth rewarding that way. This is the first thing I've seen that suggests otherwise. — David Z 53 secs ago
8:49 AM
A locked post is like in a frozen state, nothing good or bad can happen to it while being locked. Not being able to delete it without consent of the moderators makes sense then. However, the post linked here is now unlocked and could be deleted right away. The withdrawal avenue is open again. — Trilarion 55 secs ago
@Sinatr, as I said in the question, some users do wacky things and got their answers. So, being in the same platform, maybe we should use the same "dictionary", the same writing style to be more understandable (this is the keyword😀) — Vinserello 23 secs ago
Deleted the answer. Just as a comment: I think the main problem here was missing data. People kind of decided that they trust more the reviewers in the tag than your feeling. If you would have presented examples, that might have changed. I actually cannot do it, because I lack the domain knowledge for regexes to credibly see the effect that you mentioned. Somebody else will have to do that, if that topic should be pursued further. — Trilarion 1 min ago
@Trilarion At this time, there is a message "Locked for 5 days." in the post. — Andrew Morton 1 min ago
9:11 AM
Sorry. My mistake. I haven't seen the locked message just now because the many duplicates box was too prominent. Maybe the locked message banner should be placed on top. — Trilarion 27 secs ago
We already do. First of all there is not so much you can do with formatting. I am totally fine if user put his error inside code block as well as quote block, or when he highlight something important
like this
or like this once or twice (too much - and it will become less readable). There are hidden features, but not many knows about them. So why bother? Why create rules and think where to put them if there is no problem? Or do you have some concrete "wacky" post for us to have a look? — Sinatr 7 secs ago@MehBMe because it was edited it will go into the reopen review queue, it will be decided there. — Gimby 10 secs ago
... props for being able to shove the word "context" into your meta post this many times. But it didn't help to really make clear what you are looking to discuss. — Gimby 33 secs ago
I would look at it this way: will the phrase "final solution" trigger negative reactions in some people? I suspect so... in which case it's worth avoiding where possible, and accepting the edit. It doesn't require a majority of people to read your post in a negative way to make it worth avoiding unintentional hurt, even of only a few people. — Jon Skeet 56 secs ago
@JonSkeet But why accidental wording is a bigger risk for hurt than explicitly attaching this context to it with edit? Your position opens up a big space for provocators, because who knows what words they'll want to mark as a reference to be edited and "explained" — astef 11 secs ago
@mixone "But isn't it perfectly possible for two truly different questions to have the same answer?" - in the grand scheme of things yes, but on Stack Overflow I don't expect to ever naturally run into such a situation. Technical Q&A which hammers on facts doesn't really lend itself to it. — Gimby 18 secs ago
Just for the record: SO doesn't support multiple accounts: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/260153/… — rene 55 secs ago
@astef: I suspect relatively few readers will go into the edit history - which is the only way they'd see the context that you don't want to be highlighted. How often do you bother to go into the edit history of an answer that you find? — Jon Skeet 57 secs ago
9:49 AM
We all come from different cultures/backgrounds. For some cultures/backgrounds seeing "final solution" won't trigger anything, but for some it will no matter which context. This edit is in no way an accusation - your choice of words wasn't deliberate, however knowing that many people will find it offending and trying to use the words anyway might not be the wisest thing to do. — ead 1 min ago
But why accidental wording is a bigger risk for hurt... @astef Because without the edit, the original wording would still be in your post where anyone who comes across your post will see it. With the edit, you have to go into the edit history to see it and it's prefaced with an edit description saying, "I'm sure this was unintentional". — BSMP 9 secs ago
10:17 AM
I don't think the editor (or anyone else) assumed bad faith from the poster. Some expressions can be hurtful even if that's not the intention of the one making them. — yivi 50 secs ago
"I'm afraid that such edits just draw more attention to the negative interpretation of those words" - only if someone looks at the edit history, which I suspect is vanishingly rare. It does draw more attention to it for the author, which hopefully means they'll remember and avoid using those words in the future. Sounds like a win-win to me! — Jon Skeet 24 secs ago
My point is that anything can be offensive or "hurtful" if you completely take a select few words out of context. If you have to add a message saying "I'm this interpretation of those words isn't what you meant" to your edit, then don't waste time editing... — Cerbrus 12 secs ago
Many to show, many I edited for these reasons (and then the posts were deleted). Some users used citation blocks, others italics, others bold. it is true that perhaps putting too many rules is wrong, but I think even more that it is necessary to discourage the use of blocks randomly. If it quack as a duck, then it's a duck ergo, why use a quote block if it's a code?😂 — Vinserello 32 secs ago
FWIW, wikipedia lists not just the unfortunate connotation but also a breadth of other legitimate meanings (many of which are negative, though). This includes "Term used in information technology to mean the expected end result of a software development effort." which seems to fit your usage nicely. — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
Adding that edit message was simply a way for the editor to show how they were assuming good faith, nothing more. If one is aware a particular expression can be hurtful for others, there is no harm if fixing it. For example, despite your claim that "anything can be offensive or hurtful", you'll be hard-pressed to find an interpretation of the alternative chosen bye editor that has similar overtones. — yivi 15 secs ago
"The Ultimate Solution is a 1973 alternate history novel by journalist and former Playboy interviewer Eric Norden, set in a world where the Axis forces won World War II and partitioned the world between them, and is noted for its particularly grim tone." First google search result. — Cerbrus 36 secs ago
@MisterMiyagi: But it's not about what wikipedia says - it's about how human beings react, potentially involuntarily. There are all kinds of things we might say that we could justify intellectually, but which can cause unnecessary hurt. Why not just avoid that hurt? — Jon Skeet 2 mins ago
@JonSkeet So far I am only seeing people react to how other hypothetical people might react. — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
@MisterMiyagi I mean, I'm not generally offended by the term (it's much less used in Spanish, and it resonates different here), but I don't need to be particularly hypothetical about how references to nazism offend me, because of how it affected my family. But nevertheless, that's not the point, really. I think that the point here is that if one believes a term or expression might be offensive or hurtful, it's fine to edit to try to make the site better for everyone, nothing more. — yivi 53 secs ago
@yivi I'm honestly still failing to see how it was a reference to nazism in the first place. The context makes it very, very clear that it was not. — MisterMiyagi 1 min ago
@MisterMiyagi As you wish. I don't think it is a matter of confusion. Simply that certain expressions have a particular weight and tone which was imbued by history; and can resonate in certain way for a lot of people. I just believe there is no harm in trying to remove those, and that defending adamantly that those expressions should remain just for the sake of it... is weird. — yivi 36 secs ago
@Cerbrus: "Removing them implies the author of the words did intend those words to be interpreted harmfully." How does it imply that? That inference suggests that it's impossible for someone to use harmful words accidentally. — Jon Skeet 41 secs ago
@rbrundritt I'll just add that it's completely unacceptable for people to harass you over this post. People should be able to have different opinions and thoughts on what's best for the site without resorting to that. I think the discussion here on the site might have taken a more constructive turn with some (anonymised) examples but it is what it is. — ivarni 1 min ago
@Cerbrus: That assumes that harm can only take place when it's intended, and I don't accept that assumption. — Jon Skeet 49 secs ago
@Cerbrus: I reject that assumption too... because when humans read words, associations are made before we go through an interpretation process of deciding whether the intention was to cause harm. If the only reactions were purely intellectual ones after considering the whole context, I'd agree - but that's not the way people work. — Jon Skeet 1 min ago
(I won't reply any further as I believe we have fundamentally different viewpoints that are unlikely to be changed by further discussion.) — Jon Skeet 6 secs ago
@Scratte, I shamelessly copied your right sentence. But if you had edited, I wouldn't mind at all :) — Vega 40 secs ago
11:31 AM
I think the better question would be to ask if the community agrees that the expression is gratuitous, offensive and/or hurtful. This is the first time I have ever seen this censorship. — Mari-Lou A 37 secs ago
Under Linux Mint I'm seeing startup time with Cinnamon of about 10 seconds using pretty antiquated hardware (although with a new disk drive - which is why that machine runs Mint - old Windows laptop, drive died, replaced, didn't feel like paying MS $$$ for a license) — Bob Jarvis - Reinstate Monica 1 min ago
I can't edit, the verb form is advise, "I also wouldn't advice [noun] making edits" — Mari-Lou A 1 min ago
This is what happens when context is overapplied. old.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/h8w36t/… — Zoe 20 secs ago
@astef It still applies though, you can't assume consensus and claim it obvious within an hour and a half. That's not nearly enough time to decide the community is "mostly" against something. The post has only been seen by 125 people!, and that's after the additional time since this question was posted — Nick 42 secs ago
Also, literally any word can hurt someone if it's applied properly. This is why assuming good faith and not overreacting to stuff like this is important, especially since there's a whole bunch of cultures among users — Zoe 2 mins ago
I think Jon Skeet said it well in a comment thread on the original post: "Sure, up to a point - but for me, "editing a post" is definitely within that point. Suggesting a site-wide search and replace would be beyond that point, IMO - but I really think this edit is a positive contribution to the site." — Heretic Monkey 55 secs ago
It's actually invalid to nest anchors with hrefs in HTML... The second anchor, linking to the user's profile, should be outside the anchor to the revisions. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
What's not logical is the utter lack of a freehand circle in the image ;-) — Heretic Monkey 19 secs ago
12:35 PM
@Cerbrus Read that quote again. "Suggesting a site-wide search and replace would be beyond that point, IMO" The whole reason I posted it was to draw attention to Jon's statement that doing a site-wide search and replace would be a step too far. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
@CodyGray Citation Needed? I'm not sure most of the users are attracted directly because its heavily moderated. Most of the time I'm here because of search and then distracted into reading stuff I don't need. — Wes 21 secs ago
What makes that question interesting, apart from its premise (in that it's not at all obvious that there is a benefit to "early exit") is the accepted answer. — Robert Harvey 1 min ago
1:13 PM
This comment was very helpful to me because its so complete, thank you Robert! I try to aim for 50 points then. — fruitCoder 22 secs ago
@AkibAzmain I don't want to start a witch hunt. Also, they apparently got the message. — Federico klez Culloca 1 min ago
OK, I get it. So asking a question is not allowed. However my intent was to make the post complete in that sense that it can help future readers. Without the solution it is worthless and I asked the OP if she/he can share the solution. I see you guys pin-point me to the rules but you don elaborate on my intent - which is to improve the post. — fruitCoder 2 mins ago
I... wish you good luck setting up interviews with a large enough test group to get to the bottom of that then. — Gimby 8 secs ago
Does this answer your question? How much research effort is expected of Stack Overflow users? — gnat 1 min ago
@gnat: If you think it is related to this topic, it suits for me too, thanks. — minus one 53 secs ago
1:43 PM
There are two big buttons on top (you didn't show them in screenshot), one shows complete question with tags. — Sinatr 10 secs ago
I always open the original question, because I also want to see if the edit was done by the OP, if any comment indicates that the OP disagrees with a duplicate and so on. Many reaons to see the original question for better judgement. — jps 54 secs ago
I've never noticed that it's not present on all reviews: it all depends on which of those tab buttons are actually available. The UI seems to favour to go to a revision view which hides the tags. Not the most friendly UI design to be honest. — Gimby 58 secs ago
Yeah. Saw a testcase in a document that said: "4. Return to your
Windows machine
" Just what — Asteroids With Wings 1 min agoIf such unwarranted censorship is enforced, someone will soon be running a bot to check all comment phrases against all Nazi speeches and books, and we will be unable to post anything. — Martin James 1 min ago
2:17 PM
Can you please be more specific: what part of the question shall rephrased to be focused enough? — minus one 57 secs ago
@CodyGray that's a valid point. A clean well presented site is easier to navigate and we all want this. What I meant is the addition of automated comment filters will no doubt put off new users so manual moderation seems a better way of handling things. — SJacks 32 secs ago
2:41 PM
Question asking is posing a useful problem, one that other people might also face, and hoping for solutions. If you know the answer then add a solution as a self-answer. SO is not about requesting free service to solve a problem. It's about maintaining a repository of useful problems and answers to these problems. — Dharman 1 min ago
I'm flagging this as R/A because it appears to be trolling, not a legitimate question. — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 2 mins ago
3:07 PM
It has already begun though... bugs.python.org/issue34605 , github.com/ContributorCovenant/contributor_covenant/issues/569 — Gimby 42 secs ago
I'd add that not using code formatting for quotes/etc isn't just an aesthetic thing. Tools like screen readers change how they read content if it's marked as code and the experience is said to be awful. — Dan Is Fiddling By Firelight 27 secs ago
@Makoto I'm not asking for an exact replica, or even something very close. Some time in 2010 KDE had a version, I think before Plasma that I really liked. But I think it's reasonable to expect commonly used applications, even the menu bar to not be crunched together--without spending days learning how to do your own theme. — Woodsman 1 min ago
How about switching users in the OS? That would also help keep work and not-work separate. — Andrew Morton 1 min ago
I don't think a term has to be offensive to avoid it, in this case I personally avoid the term simply because I don't want to create the association to the Holocaust, even at best this can be simply distracting. Maybe the association is stronger for me as I'm German, and the German equivalent is more obscure and would essentially always be an intentional reference to the Holocaust. — Mad Scientist 56 secs ago
@MartinJames For what it's worth, comments containing the text "Nazi" are usually already deleted, albeit for other reasons. — E_net4 the account reporter 36 secs ago
If I happened to use a header, and was pointing out and providing a final bluff statement using "final solution", and somebody happened to propose an edit indicating that I was making a reference to a offensive political party. I would reject the proposal, revert the change if it was approved, and immediately flag the behavior for a moderator to handle. I would find it more offensive that, an edit was being made, and the implication I have anything to do with that offensive political statement but I value and choose my words very carefully in everything I submit to a Stack Exchange community — Security Hound 1 min ago
3:37 PM
User Bob Stein asked someone here to not use the word "animal" because that's what Hitler would have done. — Nicolas Gervais 1 min ago
4:15 PM
I see a bunch of links of people saying "Yes" (including some CMs) but I remember other questions where the top answer was "No" due to license concerns — CertainPerformance 25 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Edits that add OP's code from 3rd party site where the license is unavailable — Nick 55 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Should code from pastebin be edited into a question? — CertainPerformance 1 min ago
I guess my take away so far is, "You can but don't be angry if another editor rolls it back"? Heh. — Taplar 6 secs ago
The even worse thing I've seen is, that some people take the code from an image the OP posted and edit into the question. — πάντα ῥεῖ 2 mins ago
5:05 PM
5:17 PM
I don't see this as a real problem. I see it as a gentle reminder to the OP that they should mark a one of the answers as accepted -- a reminder some OP's need. That said, I agree the prompt is a little useless and redundant, and therefore distracting clutter, if it's given within seconds of posting an answer, in which case it just sounds greedy. — Preacher 1 min ago
Logically, they are not synonyms, but practically, they are. I am not sure what the best course if action is. — J Fabian Meier 23 secs ago
I added additional information that may (or may not) set my question as different from previous questions. — Nora McDougall-Collins 53 secs ago
5:49 PM
Well it's your answer, even if you didn't originally author it, you can make it a community answer by clicking the "Community Wiki" checkbox when editing it if you so choose — Nick 53 secs ago
Looking at the revision history of your other answer it looks like you removed the edit somebody made to your first answer and turned it into a separate one. Maybe you meant to make it CW at the time but forgot? — John Montgomery 1 min ago
6:15 PM
As a non subject matter expert, could you explain me a little more about "and it is unlikely that there will be one in the near future"? Why it is not likely that Maven get updated by a new version? This is important for your request. — RobertS supports Monica Cellio 27 secs ago
6:27 PM
Are you sure this answers the question? I didn't read the question as the usual SO is awful, my posts gets down, close and delete voted. Instead it politely asks what other guidance there is for them to improve. You can keep the text of this answer. Just give it 6 to 8 hours so you can post it on a perfect fitting question. This one isn't it. IMO. — rene 7 secs ago
@RobertSsupportsMonicaCellio Maven 3 was introduced in 2010. Maven 2 lasted 9 years, and Maven lasted 12. There's usually overlap between versions before they're turned EOL, There's no announcement of Maven 4, so it'll at least be a couple years before Maven 4 starts being a thing, assuming a cycle of about 10-12 years per version. To be fair, 9 and 10 years include the phase-out period. We'll at least have a couple years, at which point we're probably gonna get [maven-4] and reiterate the same discussion in 15-20 years or so — Zoe 1 min ago
And indeed canonical When should I make edits to code says: "Don't... Copy code from a linked site into the question" — Alexei Levenkov 33 secs ago
I can see tags just fine - stackoverflow.com/review/reopen/27213984 (below the post, same as regular desktop site). I'm not exactly sure what you are proposing - add them to the top (or both), maybe fix it in some browser/views... anything else? So far I don't see need for this feature as it is already there... — Alexei Levenkov 26 secs ago
7:13 PM
Oh! Thanks. I don't know what I was thinking back then lol. Maybe I'll delete the answer that's not accepted & put it back into my original answer, then make it a community wiki. — Reed 15 secs ago
Ohhhhh I see now! Is this why Community Wiki answers exist? So there's less social stigma to editing them? — Ben Leggiero 22 secs ago
7:27 PM
7:41 PM
@AlexeiLevenkov If it's the date when the job was reposted, then it's not the date the job was posted. Words mean things. — StackOverthrow 1 min ago
I don't think the term is proscribed per se, but, as you can see, it bothers some people. I don't see a problem with using it when relevant and appropriate (as long as it's not being done deliberately, to bother people), nor do I see a problem with someone who was bothered by it editing it to something with the same denotation but a different connotation to make them feel better. — TigerhawkT3 1 min ago
8:23 PM
Are there any other "filesystem" related tags that have a certain format? (Eg.
*-fs
vs just fs
at the end) If there's a precedent already, we should try to follow it. — zcoop98 2 mins ago8:49 PM
Another issue is that you could, with all the good intention in the world, still introduce unrelated errors into the code you bring over, causing more harm than good. — zcoop98 58 secs ago
9:15 PM
@MisterMiyagi Every reference on that Wikipedia entry is either directly or indirectly related to the holocaust or another genocide. The sentence you mentioned was added recently by an anonymous user with only one other edit, and that edit was was related to the ethnic cleansing of Germans. That sentence had no links or citations so I removed it. For native English speakers, the phrase "final solution" will almost certainly make them think about the holocaust. Google those two words in English and you will not find any references to programming. — Jon Heller 7 secs ago
9:25 PM
@rene Yes - first, it explains that there is no way to avoid the first group, while there is a way to avoid the second (by not asking about their sensitive points). I've also suggested to use an alterego for his questions. — peterh - Reinstate Monica 1 min ago
9:53 PM
+1, but also: this does not feel like an intended change at all. At least to me, it was only clear that the underlying syntax highlight engine would change, not the color scheme too. To be honest, code right now is incomprehensible. For example, function names, numbers, constants, and variables all have the same color in C. It's just painful to look at. — Marco Bonelli 1 min ago
I can understand why someone would be offended by the phrase "final solution". I can understand someone using the phrase innocuously without realising the connotations. But I can't understand the people who seem to be offended by the removal of the phrase "final solution". Someone considerately edited out a phrase with unintended connotations. How is that objectionable? — khelwood 18 secs ago
"I don't want any part of my professional life to be connected with any political context." Everything is political or more precisely anyone can affix any supposed political views to any content, and they might be right or wrong, but it still depends on each one sensibility how to read words of others. If you feel the risk of offending anyone the only probable solution is stop saying anything (and even so...). On another view of that, and kind of the opposite, see wiki.lesswrong.com/wiki/Crocker%27s_rules But the world is clearly not going in that direction... — Patrick Mevzek 15 secs ago
10:17 PM
@PatrickMevzek My original phrase is "I don't want any part of my professional life to be connected with any political context as much as it is possible". Post was edited, it is no longer my words. — astef 31 secs ago
10:39 PM
The phrase "final solution" only suggests "Final Solution" to the functionally illiterate. This kind of shit is why SO is over. — StackOverthrow 44 secs ago
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