Did you have something against the civilian populations in South America, central Africa, and India? What "good" would massive death and destruction in one of those regions do?
The story is also not saying that AI generates no value, just that it's not generating revolutionary change-the-world new-Industrial-Revolution levels of value.
What, you're suggesting an "extrajudicial" revoking of his citizenship, then? How would that work? Why is that remotely a good idea? A government that ignores laws and just does whatever comes to mind is exactly the problem here.
Btw I don't know anyone who refers to Canada as "down here". Pretty sure they mean the US.
Yes, obviously. I'm pointing out a significant difference between the two countries.
And Trump would likely claim that the immigrants whose birthright citizenship he wants to revoke are "invading" the US.
I'm not saying that Elon Musk isn't awful. I'm saying that revoking his citizenship isn't the right way to deal with that. It's not even legal to do so it's a moot question to begin with.
We can't simply disavow Canadian citizens like that. If a Canadian citizen does something awful then we should do something about it. Put out a warrant for whatever it is he's up to. If you think he's a traitor, check the laws on treason and see if he qualifies for an actual charge.
There is no legal precedent for revoking citizenship like this. Why is this any better than Trump's push to revoke citizenship for immigrants that he doesn't like? There are better ways to handle this.
At this point I really don't know whether to believe that Trump is literally a Russian asset. Maybe he is, maybe he isn't, we need to wait for actual evidence to know for sure.
But I'm finding it more interesting right now watching how people are reacting to the possibility that Trump is a Russian asset. I'm thinking a lot of people would rather believe that it was true, because that way it would mean America didn't do this to themselves. Much nicer to believe that some Machiavellian spy plot had been pulled and America had been hoodwinked than to believe that America had simply elected this ridiculous parody of a human being because they wanted to.
It's a common misconception that a "cold wallet" is offline. It's still on the blockchain like any other wallet, it's just the keys that aren't on any network-connected computer.
It appears that in this case hackers managed to trick Bybit employees into entering the keys into a fake UI that gave the hackers access to them.
What's happening here is that Trump thinks he's being a tough negotiator by doing all these supposed "power moves" of offering ridiculous deals and trash-talking his negotiating partner. But the result is ending up being the opposite - the US is throwing away all of the power it thought it had, Ukraine is showing that they don't need the US. Each threat that Trump makes is a card he's playing and revealing to actually be useless.
Now that the US has burned through its hand, Zelensky can turn around and tell them "okay, here's my offer."
Not necessarily. There was a large pool of non-voters, if a lot of those were disillusioned leftists who didn't see anyone worth voting for then appealing to them might have been a winning strategy.
Did you have something against the civilian populations in South America, central Africa, and India? What "good" would massive death and destruction in one of those regions do?