Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | selfmodruntime's commentslogin

If you're German or French you're lucky if you'll get a pension at all, even though you pay 20% of your wage into them (government mandated)

I am so incredibly envious of American tax-advantaged retirement funds. Our government mandated retirement fund in Germany is a massive sham on the verge of collapse. There is no way for the average employee to retire before 65/67. Even if you have contributed a lot to the government pension scheme, they will comp you 0.5% of your lifetime pension for each month you go into early retirement.

We have nothing like the 401k/roth/IRA and it sucks.


No engineer will cost 20.000 bucks a month at this point in time. Offshoring is still happening aggressively.

There are little other options. `Ring` is not for production use. WolfSSL lags behind in features a bit. BoringSSL and AWS-LC are the best we have.

BoringSSL has an unstable API, and Google specifically recommends against using it[1].

AWS-LC is ok, but afaict there aren't really any pre-built binaries available, and you need to compile it yourself, and is a little difficult to use if you aren't using c/c++ or rust. (The same is largely true of boringssl).

[1]: https://github.com/google/boringssl?tab=readme-ov-file#borin...


Gulf states have no ability to go to war. As this war has shown, the states are entirely dependent on oil and desalination plants, both of which are easily attackable infrastructure.


For reference: This would almost triple their govts funds each year. One must also not forget that they're able to raise tolls in the future, both for monetary investment but also for negotiation purposes.


So we spent a ton of money and a bunch of people died to negotiate a much worse situation.

5D chess!


Making outrageous demands is normal in these negotiations. You can just look at what Hamas demanded during the ceasefires. What usually happens is no strong concessions from either side and hostilities just end. The regimes get to survive just in a badly degraded state.

Most importantly Iran can't afford to keep the strait closed to enforce this. If they block shipping their own will be blocked as well - which hasn't yet happened, they were still allowed to ship oil. Iran was already in terrible financial shape before the war and they aren't negotiating from a strong position of power to take those risks.


> Most importantly Iran can't afford to keep the strait closed to enforce this. If they block shipping their own will be blocked as well - which hasn't yet happened, they were still allowed to ship oil.

Why do you say this? During the war they set up a checkpoint system so their ships and ships they allowed to pass could still pass through.


Of course Iran wouldn't block its own ships at its own checkpoints, but the US is capable of easily interdicting Iranian shipping if it wants to.


this would be a worse crisis than we've just had; it'd put China (if not all of Asia) directly against the USA and would put Australia in a very peculiar spot.


Iran charging a massive toll would also cause a crisis with the gulf states and they aren't going to tolerate it. This is much bigger than Iran vs US, and the idea they hold the cards for such a claim is mostly propaganda.


Just pointing out that for the volume of these ships, it's not really a massive toll. It's honestly a bargain, paid for in a really easy to stomach way by the people who allowed this to happen: Everyone else.


Doesn't explain why UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrian, and Saudis would tolerate a fee transiting the strait. Let alone why America would agree to that in negotiations given they have little incentive to agree to any large demands.

If that is agreed upon it's going to come with some concessions by Iran which is even less likely.


They'd tolerate it because they all poked a giant in the eye and it didn't go down. It's by far the cheapest route to peace any of them have.

USA could agree to it because it's not particularly dependent on that fuel supply and therefore would only pay the costs indirectly via market forces, which as the thief-in-chief pointed out, does (the parts he cares about of) their economy no harm as a net petroleum-product exporter, and above all else, they are losing the war.


While the crisis would be worse, I am not that sure that China will confront US on this militarily. So far they have stayed out of other's fights.


Is that an argument for them not being to enforce the ayatollbooth or its price to remain reasonnable ?


good for them, hopfeully they will be able to better protect themseves from rogue nations that don't respect international laws.


We‘re still talking about the largest funding nation of terror cells mate


Who enforces "international laws" anyway?


Not quite, since they plan to share the revenue with Oman, or at least that’s what they’re currently claiming.


Congratulations, Iran has won the ability to fund its politics many times over in this way and they've lost little else.


Their entire leadership, navy, airforce, petrochemical and steel industries as well as the entire supply chain for the ballistic and drones industries which is also a lucrative export to Russia.

I am not sure they "lost a little else". When looking at what the US lost, it's pretty small in comparison


Russia and China would likely disagree as they count their gains: - yet another massive blow to their trust and reputation among allies - again massively undermining NATO thereby fostering global instability - weakened credibility vis a vis defending Taiwan


It's not a complete US success, but what the OP said was a huge understatement. Iran situation had gotten much worse during this war.

Regarding NATO, this is a European effort of undermining the alliance no more than it is the US.

Europe is rightfully saying that Ukraine is our, the entire western world, war.

However, when the US bombs the very factories that manufacture these drones used in Ukraine, and the nation that quite frequently kidnaps european citizens as political chips, the europeans say "this is not our war".


> Regarding NATO, this is a European effort of undermining the alliance no more than it is the US.

> [...]

> when the US bombs the very factories that manufacture these drones used in Ukraine, and the nation that quite frequently kidnaps european citizens as political chips

That's a US decision. The United States never invoked Article 4 over Iran, and neither did Europe. NATO has nothing to do with it.


I must be missing where there was any hate in this discussion whatsoever.


Compared to the absolute baffling amount of money spent for military purposes, knowing more about the moon is well worth it.


No no no no, I can't let that go. Sending astronauts around the moon has nothing to do with "knowing more about the moon". We don't need people up there to observe the moon. In fact, it's a lot easier and better to have sensors go there and automatically make measurements (e.g. pictures).

Now thinking about Mars, sending astronauts there is actually a net negative for science because it risks contaminating Mars.

We send astronauts there because it's cool, period. Science has nothing to do with it.


This FAQ from the NASA website seemed particularly intellectually dishonest:

>Why do we need astronauts to view the Moon when we have robotic observers? Human eyes and brains are highly sensitive to subtle changes in color, texture, and other surface characteristics. Having astronaut eyes observe the lunar surface directly, in combination with the context of all the advances that scientists have made about the Moon over the last several decades, may uncover new discoveries and a more nuanced appreciation for the features on the surface of the Moon.

https://www.nasa.gov/missions/nasa-answers-your-most-pressin...


The word "may" does a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence.


I agree 100%. Seeing the picture of the backside of the moon with the earth in view really drove home that the moon really is just a large rock.


> backside of the moon

I think perhaps you mean the far side of the moon. The "backside" of the moon implies a large graben stretching almost from pole to pole, and I have seen no evidence of such a geological formation in any photos.


thanks, I audibly laughed


> the moon really is just a large rock

It really is surprising being able to see the Moon isn't spherical. (Are those abberations?) It makes sene, given the moon isn't in hydrostatic equilibrium.


Consider applying for YC's Summer 2026 batch! Applications are open till May 4

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: