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266
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Serious question:

    Would anything short of that lead to reform? I’m not eager for a second Great Depression, but considering we can’t even pretend to get climate change under control, I can’t see the 1% changing their policies until it hurts them, and bad.

  • Gotta love those distant goals that allow the current administration to say they've done something… and allowing the next to undo it.

  • I mean, everyone’s back from Thanksgiving with family. Next up is Christmas.

  • I believe the antivax movement was able to take root because the US has cultivated an intense distrust of the medical system.

    • You pay high medical insurance premiums only to get denied when it’s time to cash in.
    • You avoid calling for an ambulance because the ride alone will bankrupt you.
    • You go to the ER only to get hundreds of dollars in fine for over the counter Tylenol.

    The public was trained by the medical institutions to look for any excuse to reject them. The antivax movement was a way to express that distrust, even if unconsciously. Politicians simply lit that major oil spill and gave it a voice.

    Likewise, we live in a capitalistic hellscape where no one can afford homes and cars to take them to jobs where they’re underpaid and can be let go in an instant, not due to performance, but because an executive wanted another tax break on the dragon money hoard they refuse to put back into the economy.

    Like with the antivaxers, we have been conditioned to expect the worst and that impacts our gut reactions.

  • I’ve never heard of this guy, but the description sounds right up my ally. I feel like I have a hard time finding humorous fiction. It either ends up being humorous non-fiction or the author is under the misconception that a protagonist being inconvenienced by an in-law counts as humor.

    Is this guy’s series any good, and do you guys have any other authors I might want to look into with a preferred emphasis on humor and mystery.

  • Morgan Stanley sees two potential outcomes for housing prices next year.

    One, if mortgage rates slide from their peak this year, the housing market could see demand ramp up, pushing prices up another 5% in 2024.

    On the other hand, if mortgage rates remain high and the U.S. enters a recession, that will scare off homebuyers and home prices will recede more.

    So effectively, either way, they will remain out of reach.

  • While I’m personally not a fan of Khan, I’m glad this series is going to see the light of day. If this old Variety Article is to believed, it was originally going to be a full streaming series. And we’re almost on the cusp of Academy.

  • Inertial Dampeners failing means the ship can no longer remain at warp. (Ship would be fine, the meat bags of mostly water would not) Trek is usually pretty consistent about that part.

  • The threat of mutual annihilation has discouraged us from nuking each other.

    But I question the durability of that policy as the equator becomes less and less able to support life.

  • The handbook covers a lot of essential ground for new crewmembers ranging from the senior crew, the different divisions and shifts, tech, guide to other species, as well as different scenarios laid out by Badgey. What was your favorite part to tackle?

    Chris Farnell: So many candidates here. Shaxs’ "W.O.R.F." method, the poolside rules for Cetacean Ops, and the (not entirely reliable) history of ships to bear the name "Cerritos." Like any sensible person given access to a starship, my first question was "What can I get away with?" and the answer was "A frightening amount”

    I had already preordered this months ago. And I have less than no regrets.

  • I have half memories of patents for Mac Laptops with cellular modems from like… the late PowerPC early Intel era.

    I wonder what’s changed to make Apple give the green light? Certainly isn’t cellular prices.

  • I read the article, but it fails to elaborate on how it’s a worst case scenario for Trump.

    How does Colorado finding Trump guilty of insurrection, but not barring him from the ballot, hinder him in any meaningful way?

  • Firefox on iOS uses WebKit.

    I think you’ve inadvertently narrowed down that the issue is an extension you have enabled for Safari. Since it’s not the website itself.

  • Safari is a very thin wrapper around the WebKit rendering engine. Oversimplifying, but it basically only handles bookmarks and tabs. The actual webpage is handled with WebKit and all web browsers on iOS use WebKit.

    So if Safari is acting slow, then you can presume that all browsers on iOS would act slow in those same situations.

    In practice though, Safari/webkit slowdown tends to be one of two things:

    1. Poorly designed website: Think tons of trackers, ads, and analytics that bog down the website for no benefit to the user.
    2. Browser Extension issues:

    Some extensions can speed up websites, mostly in the form of blockers than prevent unnecessary resources from loading in the first place…

    On the other end of the spectrum, there are extensions that slow websites down that need to read and inject content into the source. It may be prudent to examine your extensions and see if there are conflicts.

  • It’s less that Twitter consumed forums and more that it was practically the final nail in the coffin for RSS feeds.

  • Half memories from 3rd grade science…

    Water droplets must form around impurities. The those microplastics aren’t just going to rain down on us, they’re the founding particles of that rain.

  • It’s hubris to make that assumption.

    We all take things at face value.

    We don’t read every article.

    We don’t always ask ourselves why a figure is saying something.

    We may not be as bad as conservatives, but it’s folly to presume we’re immune. If anything, we need to be all the more diligent.

  • Sounds like Namco is now technically a 2nd party developer now?