@ZSchreiner57335@NousResearch potentials issues it may collade with and adapt to Hermes before it deploy it and it said it might have conflict in certain things, (something along skill optimization etc.), so one of these could be culpit. Formulate the quality question in you head then ask Hermes to find it.
@ZSchreiner57335@NousResearch What do you compare Hermes with? To itself before you have had obsidian, the first x-number of tasks it managed to do? Melaybe you installed too much extra things it fisgthts constantly against? For example I wanted to ad MS SkilsOp to Hermes, I am glad I asked Hermes to look for
@YossiBenYakar Why don't you say the whole sentence like: "All of this is funded by hard-working British taxpayers, until the asylum case is reviewed." Otherwise, you are portraying Britain like an unlimited milking cow and sparking unnecessary hate!
@ZssBecker@ChristianHauer6 People used to code in machine code, your code today is being converted to it as well and makes millions of lines which I am sure "no one" understands. Who said understanding everything is the key?
Post on X, get 5 GB free? Say less. Using a VPN in 2026 like: “New IP, who dis?” Thanks for the extra data @WindscribeCom 😂 #VPN#Windscribe https://t.co/J8UEs5meyW
@LsMc459856@GeneralRedbull@BasilTheGreat 5/ group for everything and punishes anyone who asks for nuance. Instead of asking “who can we hate?”, ask “what systems and decisions created this, who benefits and what outcome would work for most people?”. Zooming out from tribes to structures is how we stop being used—and
@LsMc459856@GeneralRedbull@BasilTheGreat 4/ reclaim what we've lost.
The “us vs them” frame is a trap. It turns complex problems into tribal wars, hides real causes behind scapegoats and makes cooperation feel like betrayal. You can spot it whenever language divides people into pure “us” and evil “them”, blames a whole
@LsMc459856@GeneralRedbull@BasilTheGreat 3/ societal divisions by framing out-groups as obstacles to reclaiming an idealized past. Whether explicitly stated or implied, the message is: "them" (immigrants, woke elites, the establishment) are responsible for Britain's decline, and "us" (ordinary British people) must
@LsMc459856@GeneralRedbull@BasilTheGreat 2/ respectively). This nostalgia is not confined to older voters; even among 16-24-year-olds, the share saying they wish the country were "the way it used to be" has nearly doubled.
Research on populist rhetoric reveals that nostalgic narratives are powerful tools for deepening
@LsMc459856@GeneralRedbull@BasilTheGreat 1/ The escalation of "us vs them" rhetoric coincides with perceived rapid cultural change. Half the UK public (50%) now say UK culture is changing too fast, and 48% would prefer the country to be "the way it used to be"—both dramatic increases from 2020 (35% and 28%