@xonphused@enor_mal Then what you want is morality from God. Because that’s where ideas like that originate.
Do no harm? What if they have something you want? Why is it wrong to take it and unalive them?
@xonphused Except that it doesn’t. Morality originates from God. Everything else is just your opinion. “I am against murder” but you might not be. So we would have a disagreement on that.
Try becoming intelligent before posting next time.
@WWHeisenberg66@PerfectCha0s7@inurfr@MariaGraceVT Except that you didn’t. As proven by those that replied to you.
If you did. You would be able to acknowledge that a people, not Gods people, besieged a city so savagely that they resorted to cannibalism.
This isn’t a ‘because God’ moment, and also this doesn’t condone cannibalism
Cannibalism has been documented in over 1,500 species.
Anti-cannibalism laws are only found in one.
Do we now realize why using the appeal to nature fallacy is silly?
@Yeenie_Mcbeenie Yeah. We would study it to find out why we’re wrong.
You did say a monkey. We study monkeys to try and guess where we came from.
Dumb post.
Google Chrome 150 marks the end of full support for Manifest V2 extensions, effectively removing the remaining workarounds that allowed the original uBlock Origin to continue functioning in Chrome.
Starting with Chrome 150 (expected in late June 2026), Google will complete its transition from Manifest V2 to Manifest V3. This means the powerful webRequestBlocking API used by advanced extensions will no longer be available for normal Chrome extensions.
As a result, the original uBlock Origin will no longer work at full strength in Chrome. It relies on Manifest V2’s ability to inspect and block requests in real time.
Under Manifest V3, extensions must use declarativeNetRequest, which requires them to rely on predefined filtering rules instead of dynamic blocking. This improves security and performance according to Google, but it also limits what ad blockers can do, especially against complex ads and trackers on sites like YouTube.
The developer of uBlock Origin offers uBlock Origin Lite, a Manifest V3 version that still provides ad blocking but with the restrictions imposed by Chrome. Other ad blockers have also released Manifest V3 versions with similar limitations.
Users who want the full power of the original uBlock Origin can switch to Firefox, which continues to support Manifest V2 extensions, or use Brave, which includes built-in ad and tracker blocking.
Google has been gradually rolling out this change since 2024, and Chrome 150 marks the final step in that transition.