As part of getting an FFL, you effectively waive that right; the ATFE can drop by the address on the license, unscheduled, for inspection, and if you don't let them in, your FFL we be immediately rescinded, and nearly any judge will approve a search warrant for that location over the phone in minutes.
We could do the same for individual owners, just like dealers, and there would be supporting precedent. (But, it would certainly be subject to judicial (including SCOTUS) review.)
If informed, consenting patients could receive the medications they want without gatekeepers, I might be convinced this is a good thing. I certainly don't think surgeons should be forced to perform acts they feel are immoral.
But, we've set up a system of gatekeepers (yes, for safety) and their collective morality should not prevent me from medicating myself. Until we figure out a (public and patient) safety system for medication that doesn't have gatekeepers AND that system is implemented, doctors should not be able to refuse someone medication without a medical justification.
I also feel that most doctors operate very close to a "public accommodation", so should be affected by the same non-discrimination laws that affect restaurants (even fancy ones where you have to book months in advance). That might not be every doctor, but it should cover enough. In that case treatments, including surgeries, can be avoided on moral grounds, but not denied based on the patient's protected class(es).
I haven't seen that used as a motto by a consistent group that might also have a longer explainer.
But, presumably, it would force all rental agreements to be replaced with mortgages. Presumably, hotel/motels could still provide long-term non-mortgage housing, but they have a good amount of regulation and generally provide services currently landlords do not.
Alternatively, it might be non-literal motto that doesn't want to abolish landlords, but rather to more severely regulate them.
A living wage in #Arkansas, one of the cheapest/poorest states is between $22 and $23 per hour.
Democrats won't, but they could campaign on 30$/hr (25$/hr tipped), and then be "reasonable" and "negotiate" down to passing a living federal wage based on the cheapest/poorest state, adjusted each year on labor day to ensure it is a living wage. (It would still exceed 15$/hr.)
I would love to flee to a blue-r area. Somewhere where sharing with my neighbors and participating in community doesn't feel like supporting racism and misogyny.
But, I have a disabled family member that needs care in their home, so ... for now my sense of familial duty keeps me in a very red area.
I didn't get an update today. That said, I believe you, but I can't speak to the stability guarantees of your software provider unless you name (and shame!) them.
I doubt this would be considered a release-critical bug in Debian, so it is certainly possible for breakage like this to occur between releases. If it was a security issue, then ... I hope you are assuaged that your old way was a vulnerability that needed to be disabled for your safety. While distributions and developers try to avoid such breakage, sometimes it is inevitable or just the result to trying to minimize the vulnerability window, chronologically speaking.
I do think that MS Windows users got surprised when their Notepad experience changed unexpectedly recently. Maybe you don't consider that equivalent, but it is instability.
Anyway, my experience is that Debian Stable is more stable than the MS Win 10 laptop issued by my previous employer. And, I don't know of any rigorous studies comparing the Linux stability with MS Win stability, so I'll tend to prefer to be guided by my experience. (And, I don't expect you to abandon your experience in favor of my anecdotes.)
(Honestly, I'd probably still be using Free Software even if it was less stable that Proprietary Software, but I am glad Debian Stable does focus on stability and I do support most of the policies they use to implement it.)
Do you get a window? If so, you can xkill (or the Wayland equivalent, if you compositor provides one).
Failing that, yeah, it can be quite difficult to identify the right proc to kill. Sometimes showing the process "tree" and the full "command line" can help.
My Linux desktop required about a reboot a week, but I think that's because I was using a kernel and syatemd from Debian Unstable. When I'm getting both of those from Debian Stable, I only reboot when there's a security fix in one of those.
I do have a couple of issues I work around on a daily basis, but they aren't even bad enough for me to open a Debian bug, so I don't expect them to change/get fixed.
Also, I refuse to blame Linux or Debian when I acquire and use software outside of the Debian repositories.
Stable means unchanging. Stable does not mean free of faults.
I don't know anything about MS Windows anymore, but I tend to doubt it's as stable as Debian Stable, since we are constantly getting accused of being "too old" because of our stability policies.
I am a programmer, and I can barely put together a latch in redstone. Anyone that programs redstone is a "tech guy" to me (whether they can build a PC or not).
Okay, this is just turning into the episode of TBBT where Sheldon is conditioning Penny and sprays Leonard with water and the whole gang looks up the difference between negative reinforcement and positive punishment.
"Since the data is incomplete, we decided to make shit up"