It's weird how, despite the feds being the ones who push security requirements onto the states, the states often have better security in place than the people making the rules...wtf
Locally owned stores would see the profits earned reinvested in the community, as the owners would also be local and buying goods in the same area.
These mega corps siphon the profit from the area to elsewhere. So none of the surrounding businesses get supported by Walmart doing well. Also they pay next to nothing, so even the employees aren't able to bring any wealth to the area.
So can we. It's also like to point out that seeing polarized light is different from being able to tell that it is polarized. Which we can still do, just not as well
Nft didn't fail, it was just the idiotic selling of jogs for obscene amounts that crashed (most of that was likely money laundering anyway). The tech still has a use.
Wouldn't exactly call crypto a failure, either, when we're in the midst of another bull run.
The debt limit was an invention in WW2 to allow the executive branch to change spending priorities for the war without needing to push a new budget through Congress each time. The intent was to give the executive branch more flexibility, within limits, NOT to hold the entire government hostage.
The limit literally prevents US paying its debts, not enforce paying them.
Sorry, but you're just wrong. Every industry is not currently spinning up their own LLM. They ARE looking to incorporate AI into their work flows, causing huge demand for data centers.
This is Bloomberg, a business centered media site. They're not dealing with what the plebs colloquially mean.
No one invented electricity, you dumbass.