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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)SH
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2 yr. ago

  • While I agree your photo is better quality in all photographic aspects, I think the content of mine is much better suited for the task. There are better versions out there. I just grabbed the first one found in a search that was easy to copy (from reddit).

  • This is the dude who replaced NAFTA with our current trade agreement with Canada and Mexico and can't stop talking about how terrible the trade agreement with Canada and Mexico is. I don't think he understands a lot outside of manipulation.

  • The concept as applied in Rome and modern Europe doesn't really matter in this context because we're talking about US law. It was used here 150 years ago against bandits in the west but still doesn't apply to this situation at least according to the definition written by Cornell Law:

    Historically, the term “outlaw” was used to refer to a person who was outside of the protection of the law. An accused criminal who refused to submit to legal process was declared to be an outlaw through a process called “outlawry.”

    The catch here is "accused criminal" and "refused to submit to legal process." Both these term first require that you're subject to the laws in question, which an "old west bandit" would have been. If you remove legal jurisdiction over these people, you can't then say they're breaking your laws and refusing to submit to the legal process because you've already defined them as being outside of the bounds of your laws and legal process by stating that they're not under your jurisdiction.

    https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/outlaw

  • Whether the victim was subject to our laws or not, the perpetrator is still committing a crime in this scenario. It isn't legal to murder tourists for example. Animals aren't US citizens but it's still illegal to torture or molest them.

  • This whole situation stems from them trying to ride that line of pleasing their wealthy masters while also paying lip service to the working class even though these things are in direct conflict with one another. Time and time again they chose to protect the wealthy and now we're all paying the price.

  • This is a great question and quite funny as I'm at 100TB now (including parity drives and non-media storage) and needing to figure out a solution fairly soon. Tossing a bunch of working $100-$200 drives in 'the trash' in order to replace them with $300-$400 drives isn't much of a solution in my eyes.

    I suppose the proper solution is to build a server rack and load it with drives but that seems a bit daunting at my current skill level. Anybody have a time machine I can borrow real quick?

  • I'm curious why nobody in authority or the media has publicly questioned how he was single-handedly able to uncover so much fraud in $5+ trillion worth of transactions with zero prior experience or knowledge of these systems all in a week's worth of time. He's so obviously full of shit here.