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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/)VO
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2 yr. ago

  • So this was a left wing plot and for the first several hours, as Republicans begged Trump to do literally anything and he refused, he was actually doing what in your mind? Fighting a hidden battle against the deep state? All evidence suggests that Trump was more than OK with what was happening as it furthered his goals and supported his many other schemes of fraud, deception, and intimidation in order to remain in power.

  • You could try some alt-history paths (though they're usually locked behind DLC). You can do some wacky things like restoring monarchies or the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, or in the new expansion restore Norse paganism in Iceland. There may be some RP opportunities there for you to get into.

    Ultimately, though, HOI is a wargame that doesn't pretend to be anything else. If spending most of your time planning, preparing, and engaging in world war doesn't sound like something you want to do, then it may not be for you. You won't find any deep economy, diplomacy, or political systems that make it all that fun to stay out of the war.

  • Which one is important is going to depend on the context for sure.

    If it's an open source library, they probably won't care about 1.

    If you're working on internal software used by other developers within the company, management probably really does care about 1 because it's going to impact their timelines.

    If you're working on a proprietary user-facing API, then even if it doesn't cost your company anything management might still care because it could piss off valuable customers.

    I think that, for what ever decision OP is trying to make, looking at that context is more important than quibbling over what exactly constitutes a "breaking change."

  • We're getting off on a little bit of a tangent about proper memo reading but usually the point of supporting information is that you don't know if the reader is going to need it. You don't have a full picture of what the president knows already and you have no way of knowing how the president's thought process is going to go. They might need more information about something that happened or a decision being made to help inform their decisions or they might not, because it's not really relevant to the direction they want to go. Sure, 50% of it might go unread but you never know what info will fall into that 50%, exclude it and the document is incomplete.

    Ultimately, though, the point remains that the memo sizes haven't really been a problem for others. Typically you don't make it that high up without being an extremely effective reader. It's just that this time we wound up with someone unfit and in way over his head.

  • I mean, other Presidents and high level defense officials seem to be handling it just fine. I'd also bet that there are pictures, charts, and supporting information in that 50 pages, and that the actual meat of the document is going to be smaller. I've read plenty of 50 page documents like that. It doesn't take that long and Trump definitely had the time. He spent many mornings live tweeting Fox News