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2 yr. ago

  • You might be arguing against your own comments here when you hit 65 and realize you still maintain mental acuity and are thriving.

    I’m not running for office nor scotus. But if I were, I’d hope reason would dictate sensible policy, not magical thinking about whatever far-off technological theoretical you might imagine.

  • That’s not what I said. That’s just what you wanted to hear so your tantrum could be justified.

    Perhaps if you spent Less time making up lies and more time learning how to read, you wouldn’t be in this predicament.

  • Facing the consequences of your actions is not a state of victimhood.

  • Some moved their money. Then they got caught. Kinda silly how you’re ignoring that part.

  • He then went on every cable news show to both cry victim and then repeatedly confess to his criminal acts.

  • As brain dead as putting those words in my mouth

  • Facing the consequences of your actions is not a state of victimhood.

  • Facing the consequences of your actions is not a state of victimhood.

  • Not so easy with paper.

    I had suggested a metal plate, not paper.

  • Of course it’s not where I draw the line. Don’t be obtuse.

    When asked who deserves sympathy, I gave an answer— and a far more deserving one than this dope.

  • Starving children in Gaza, who will never see their families again because they’re dead

  • The benefits, basically, are that it can provide an architecture that is designed for modern computing needs that can scale well into the future. That means high performance with low power consumption and heat.

    The x86/64 model has been up against a wall for a while now, pumping out red-hot power hogs that don’t suit modern needs and don’t have much of a path forward wrt development compared to ARM.

  • Facing the consequences of your actions is not a state of victimhood.