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  • The Death Note doesn't control the actions of anybody except the people named in the note, and if the condition cannot be fulfilled then they simply die of a heart attack.

    So you'd have to be a truly terrible person to make that one happen.

  • I remember when Musk bought Twitter and then immediately started trying to save money by literally just turning off services to see what breaks.

    That actually wouldn't have been the stupidest idea if he had done it in a test environment rather than production, or even if Twitter was a small website that didn't mind downtime. But he did it in production on a huge site that people relied on being up, so it actually was the stupidest idea.

    And now he's bringing the same stupidest energy to government. No investigation. No calculation. Just a toddler who has been put in front of a lot of switches.

  • It's not just sports. It can also be intellectual pursuits.

    Look at the kids who are in the top tier spelling bee competitions, and then look at their parents, and tell me whose dreams are coming true.

    Same thing for a lot of child prodigies. A lot of child prodigies suddenly become less "prodigious" the moment they move away from their parents.

    Same goes for so many different things. Child beauty pageants are another famous example.

    Obviously this doesn't mean all of the kids who do these activities are being pushed by their parents. Some of them are self motivated. Some are not.

  • I personally suspect that the belief that money is real is problematic, psychologically.

    There are all sorts of experiments that show we treat money in our minds differently from most other things.

    A famous example is that many people would think nothing of taking a ten cent pen from work, but would be abhorred at the idea of taking money, even ten cents, from petty cash and just keeping it.

    An experiment has shown that, if you give people the chance to cheat for money, or to cheat for tokens that can be immediately exchanged for money after the experiment, they will cheat more for tokens, despite the fact that at that point, the tokens are technically a type of money.

    So, this sort of thing makes me suspect that beliefs about money also influence our ethics and our mental proclivities. So maybe people who believe money is more real are more likely to hoard it or to have gambling problems.

  • The hero of the song bets his soul against a golden fiddle that he can beat the devil in a fiddling contest because of his pride. People wouldn't agree that this is a good thing. For example, most people wouldn't teach their children this story as if Johnny was a hero, but that's how he's portrayed in the song.

    This is the best I can explain it. If you keep asking the same questions past this point, I'm going to assume you're just trolling me.

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  • If you read into the article, it states

    The annual CPJ report, which represents a snapshot of journalists jailed for their work as of Dec. 1, 2024, found 361 journalists behind bars around the world. That’s the second-highest number that CPJ has documented since it started keeping track in 1992.

    So, in case anybody was wondering, yes, this is referring to journalists who were "jailed for their work," and not just journalists who are in jail for whatever reason. I know you might have thought that was obvious, but I think it's important to point these things out for other cases where the reporting might be more misleading.

  • I think the underlying realization for The Devil Went Down to Georgia is more that Americans will listen to good music even if they don't agree with the lyrics.

    The same goes for Imagine by John Lennon, for example.

  • Even if you're careful when writing your comment, it makes no difference if the admin reading your comment is not careful or has poor reading comprehension.

    This is what happens when you have no rights and another person is given power over you. Even if they think they're not being abusive, any small misunderstanding always ends in you being abused.

  • Plan B

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  • Some monks train their bodies either as part of their prayer or meditation, or train in order to be able to pray or meditate longer. They don't usually end up with arms that look like that, though.

  • This is what happens when politicians pander instead of listening to science.

    I didn't read the full article, but here are a couple of points from the part I read.

    There is a movement called "harm reduction" that has been effective at fighting drug related deaths. (Last Week Tonight did a good piece on it.) The idea is that first, you try to make sure drug users aren't harmed. So, drug testing strips and clean needles are provided. There may be safe injection locations where people can go to inject themselves. And obviously, they don't get in trouble with police for doing this.

    Only once you do your best to ensure their safety do you need to start helping them to kick the habit.

    Texas has basically done the opposite and even fentanyl testing strips are classified as drug paraphernalia. And if you give someone fentanyl and they die, you can be charged with murder. So people in Texas are even afraid to call an ambulance when someone is overdosing.

    The article asserts that these harmful policies are why Texas has a drug related death rate that remains high when the same statistic has been falling elsewhere in America.

  • I used to live in Japan, and let me tell you, a lot of typical Japanese cooking is unexpectedly quite lightly seasoned. I don't mean all food, but especially common things like rice and fish dishes.

    It lets you taste the food itself more than the seasoning. If you start with good ingredients, you don't need to dress it up as much.

  • I pronounce it the same as you, and by the way, that's also the pronunciation listed on Wikipedia.

    But I can't remember how other people that I've worked with pronounce it. I'm sure it's come up, but I just don't recall.

    I think the fact that its configuration file is called sudoers is fairly decisive that other pronunciations are wrong.

  • You didn't actually explain what the October Surprise Theory was. According to your link:

    The 1980 October Surprise theory refers to an allegation that representatives of Ronald Reagan's presidential campaign made a secret deal with Iranian leaders to delay the release of American hostages until after the election between Reagan and President Jimmy Carter, the incumbent.