Fabrice Arfi démolit 6 politiques corrompus
Fabrice Arfi, journaliste d'investigation chez Mediapart, est auditionné par la commission d'enquête sénatoriale sur la délinquance financière. Il y expose nos dirigeants politiques avec beaucoup de calme et de pédagogie : Sarkozy, Chirac, Kohler, Macron, Juppé, Cahuzac. Quel plaisir. La corruption de nos "élites" politiques est aberrante, il est temps de changer de système. Garderons-nous la cour de justice de la République ? Pas sûr.
Pour rappel les tweets de Sarkozy
« Quand un individu revient pour la 17e fois devant le tribunal, il doit être puni pour l’ensemble de son œuvre »(2014)
« Le patron voyou doit être traité comme un voyou. C’est encore pire d’être un voyou d’en haut de l’échelle »(2012)
« il faut que les peines soit exécutées. La non exécution des peines, c'est l'impunité. »(2012)
« la république dit aux délinquants : tu n’as pas d’excuse »(2015)
« je souhaite qu'il n'y ai pas de mesures d'aménagement de peine pour les peines supérieur à six mois »(2015)
« nous devons tourner le dos à la culture du laxisme, de la déresponsabilisation, du désarmement pénal et moral »(2015)
(Merci renaudsechet69)
Réduire la qualité de la vidéo.
Pour changer le système :
Réclamer le RIC constituant : petitions.assemblee-nationale.… mouvement-constituant-populair…
Changer de banque: lanef.com/ change-de-banque.org/particuli…
Passer à l'action militante: extinctionrebellion.fr/ ripostealimentaire.fr/
Changer de travail : jobs.makesense.org/fr
Source
Arfi videos.senat.fr/video.5098041_…
Musique youtube.com/watch?v=J6jAOAbwb6…
Réponses au quiz de fin :
/!\ Description à ne pas lire avant d'avoir vu la vidéo entièrement
/!\
/!\
/!\
/!\
Quel a été l'augmentation des atteintes à la probité entre 2016 et 2021 ?
+28%.
Pourquoi va être jugé Alexis Kohler le secrétaire général de l'Élysée ?
Prise illégale d'intérêt.
Qu'est-ce que la cour de justice de la république ?
C'est un tribunal d'exception pour les membres de gouvernement en fonction, jugés par des parlementaires.
#arfi #politique #corruption #délinquance #commission #sénat #finance #extrait #ethiqueettac
(URL replace addon enabled for X, YouTube, Instagram and some news sites.)


Haquer
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •I used a linux desktop for a few years back in 08-09, started on ubuntu then got on the Gentooooooooooo bandwagon. (Went back to Windows after this due to college + games, naturally)
Ever since then, I just use stable LTS versions of either debian or ubuntu for server applications. Recently changed back to Linux on desktop and went with CachyOS, it's been super solid.
like this
potatoguy likes this.
Liketearsinrain
in reply to Haquer • • •𝔳𝔢𝔩𝔲𝔪𝔪𝔬𝔯𝔱𝔦𝔰
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •Xirup
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •Started on Ubuntu as anybody, then PopOS, and then Garuda, but then I realized that the Garuda community is a completely POS so I ditched the whole distro. And now I'm using vanilla Arch with my own settings.
Between those hopps can be like an average of 3 distrohopps per day, because 'this distro is better because have this and that', but when you start using WM and need to configure each config file with an different programming language and all that, you really stop caring about if that distro have blur or not.
mavu
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •sun_is_ra
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •I have started with Mandrake (later renamed to Mandriva) then went through few other distros before settling on Gentoo.
Gentoo installation is one of the most complicated because there is no installer, you do everything yourself.
This is like buying car parts and assembling them together into a car using a manufacturer's manual. its painful but once the car is assembled you almost never have to take it to a repair shop. Not because it doesn't breakdown but because you know well how it function and thus how to fix it yourself.
Liketearsinrain
in reply to sun_is_ra • • •I have Gentoo on a server (well, a ARM SBC). I enjoy it, especially since they added binary packages as needed.
How is it for day to day to use?
nymnympseudonym
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •15+ years on Fedora
Solid
Captain Baka
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •Started with Lubuntu in 2011, then I used Bodhi for many years. 3 or 4 years ago I switched to Linux Lite. Now I use Debian and Lite for myself and my wife's laptop is set up with Mint XFCE. Right now I'm testing out what works best with a detachable laptop that has limited hardware capabilities.
(Please recommend me a lightweight Distro with good touch integration that's not KDE Plasma, Debian with Gnome (Debian-based Distro is okay) or PostmarketOS)
mesa
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •An old pop os system for everyday use.
An old debian server for most self hosting.
Onion os for my miyoo mini plus retro game console.
And a mess of things all over the house.
like this
Endymion_Mallorn likes this.
Endymion_Mallorn
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •mlfh
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •Linux hobbyist for 20+ years, pro for 6+. Fedora for workstations, proxmox for hypervisors, and rocky for servers is my usual personal recommendation. Beyond that, secureblue (a hardened downstream of fedora atomic) with heads firmware is a fantastic daily driver if you're into that kind of thing.
Started with debian sarge way back in the day, currently using secureblue and qubes with fedora vms for most work, with a debian htpc on the side.
For servers, I'm mostly debian-based on hardware (a bunch of proxmox machines at various sites and debian-based raspberry pis everywhere), with mostly redhat-based vms. Some alpine and freebsd baremetal and virtual machines sprinkled in here and there for flavor where they fit right.
secureblue: A security-focused desktop and server linux operating system.
secureblueLiketearsinrain
in reply to mlfh • • •Skyline969
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •queerlilhayseed
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •MrsDoyle
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •I started tinkering thirteen years ago, good grief. I would install Linux on my old machine when I got a new one, and play around with it. I can't remember all the distros, but most recently Mint for a while, then Bodhi, then Zorin - which I've also now installed on my PC.
I love how much choice there is - and how passionate people can be about their choices. It seems there's a flavour for everyone.
morto
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •Suddenly realizing I use linux for more than 10 years
[despair noises]
agentTeiko
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •skooma_king
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •SavvyWolf
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •rhythmisaprancer
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •I am about 20 years in, started with Ubuntu and have been with Debian stuff since. I'm not a power user, so when I do any CLI work it's familiar, but more recently have wanted to get a laptop to experiment with something different. I did appreciate Lubuntu on a cheap used laptop I bought about 15 years ago, currently using something provided thru Mint.
I've had very few problems. Not with software at any rate!
INeedANewUserName
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •JakoJakoJako13
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •ivn
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •NixOS so I can keep my config in git. I have a single nix config for all my machines (desktop, laptop and server) so I can share configuration between them. I use it to configure both my system and my user config, my dotfiles, with home-manager. Even my neovim config is in nix thanks to nixvim.
I don't think I could go back now. It can be a bit of a pain from time to time and the learning curve is steep but it has so many advantages. Being able to rollback between config versions (called generations), having a consistent config between my machines, having it all in version control… The repo have so many packages and when there is a module it's really easy to add a service. Writing new packages (derivations) and modules is also not that hard. It can be as simple as calling nix-init.
Had my main ssd fail on me a few month back and it was very simple to just replay the config and just get everything working as before. I only had to do the partitioning by hand (it can be done by nix but I've not gotten around to it yet). That's why I only backup data and home partitions, not system partitions.
curbstickle
in reply to Liketearsinrain • • •Debian. For decades.
My first installation was slack and from then until now has been a mix of more things than I care to list, but includes things like freebsd on a DEC multia, a sparcstation pizza box with a 2.6ish kernel maybe?, along with things like Ubuntu, suse, fedora, centos, gentoo, ive built from scratch, I ever remember the days of configuring x with fvwm95 because I thought it would be easier for my parents.
I always go back to Debian. Though I'm happy with arch when I want something 'current'.