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rich_sasha

10189

Karma

2019-07-14

Created

Recent Activity

  • Doesn't really answer you question but IME this is sort of unavoidable unless you're massive and you can afford to have people who just document this kind of stuff as their job.

    Reason being, a lot of this stuff happens for no good reason, or by accident, or for reasons that no longer apply. Someone liked the tech so used it - then left. Something looked better in a benchmark, but then the requirements drifted and now it's actually worse but no one has the time to rewrite. Something was inefficient but implemented as a stop gap, then stayed and is now too hard to replace.

    So you can't explain the reasons when much of the time there aren't any.

    The non-solutions are:

    - document the high level principles and stick to them. Maybe you value speed of deployment, or stability, or control over codebase. Individual software choices often make sense in light of such principles.

    - keep people around and be patient when explaining what happened

    - write wiki pages, without that much effort at being systematic and up to date. Yes, they will drift out of sync, but they will provide breadcrumbs to follow.

  • Yes, you would have to extend some poetic license.

    This was a bit of ad lib, the US branch of Christianity follows it's own logic and sadly I cannot answer the serious question.

    I'm pretty sure there were some bits in the Bible about loving thy enemy and turning the other cheek. But maybe I misremember.

  • I'm not sure you can blame this on deities. Nazis and Stalinists (especially the latter) were very atheistic. Both at some level thought they're building a better world, literally by murdering millions of people and enslaving orders of magnitude more.

  • My favourite bit of Biblical trivia. Consider this passage from the Revelation of St John: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Revelation%208%... describing, perhaps, events leading to the end of the world:

    > The third angel blew his trumpet, and a great star fell from heaven, blazing like a torch, and it fell on a third of the rivers and on the springs of water. The name of the star is Wormwood. A third of the waters became wormwood, and many people died from the water, because it had been made bitter.

    "Wormwood", a type of bitter plant, translates to Russian as "Chernobyl", and Ukrainian "Chornobyl": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl > Etymology

  • > pretty much anti-russian propaganda

    Russia bit of the prophecies:

    > [...] If my requests are [not] heeded, Russia [...] will spread her errors throughout the world, causing wars and persecutions of the Church. The good will be martyred; the Holy Father will have much to suffer; various nations will be annihilated.

    I'm not sure it is fair to call it propaganda when it is bang on the money. Even the Holy Father bit checks out, seeing how John Paul II narrowly survived a KGB-sponsored assassination attempt.

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