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Posts
2
Comments
185
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • There's been roughly 1 million Covid deaths in the US since the pandemic started. Given a very gracious split of 70-30% between R-D voters, it means that there was a net loss of 400k Republican voters. (I hate to be talking about 1M lives lost in such a dry way)

    During the 2020 presidential elections, Biden won the popular vote by 7 million votes. Even with ignoring the fact that the deadliest part of the pandemic was before the election, it's not enough to have a big enough impact on the popular vote.

    In swing states where the difference is 10k votes, that's a whole different story. But then I would say that voter turnout is a much bigger thing to focus on.

  • Final reply, because I feel this not going anywhere.

    I, or the person I was defending, was not talking about this specific situation. Of course they have the right to self defense. I explicitly mentioned that before two comments ago.

    I'm also not trying to defend the killer or feel sad at all he got killed by the police.

    All my replies were aimed at the comment from CoffeeJunkie who apparently was advocating for the police to be judge, jury and executioner because that's cheaper. That's a major simplification and I'm sure that's not what they meant, but that's how I, and probably others, interpreted it and why I chose to go against it.

    Again, I'm done arguing with you. You're resorting to ad hominem attacks because you're misunderstanding what I'm saying.

  • The moral authority to tell someone that their stance that police can shoot anyone they want without due process because it's cheaper that way is morally wrong?

    Yeah, everyone has that.

    I'm not trying to make light of the tragedy that happened to the original victim, nor am I saying it's sad that the killer got killed himself. But if someone is arguing to eliminate due process because of this case, I'll argue against that. And so should anyone else.

  • Covid has been devastating and has likely affected more R voters, but I don't think it will be enough to cause an electoral shift.

    Red states have had a lower life is expectancy for years. Covid just added to that effect, but I don't think it's that much worse than any of the other confounding effects (like lower access to affordable health care or healthy food). On the contrary, it's probably much less than that.

  • The idea that the right to vote is tied to your tax contributions is very flawed.

    Paying taxes without the right to vote is absolutely ridiculous (so either link the right to vote to the age you're allowed to work, or tax exempt any work done under the voting age), but the inverse is ridiculous as well. People, above the voting age, that don't pay any taxes for whatever reason, should not have their voting rights stripped. This reasoning gets dangerously close to a plural voting system, where you get multiple votes if you're rich enough.

    If you want to disenfranchise retired people, use some other reasoning (like decline in cognitive abilities), not because they are no longer actively paying taxes.

    Note that I am not in favour of disenfranchising anyone. Keep the lower limit for voting age, or even reduce it, and no upper limit. Also make voting as accessible as possible.

  • They're replying to the comment celebrating the fact the suspect was given a quick and cheap death by the police.

    Maybe the police actions in this case were warranted because of self defense, but that's not what the comment was saying at all.

  • My house is very wel insulated. It doesn't take much energy to keep it at a nice temperature in winter.

    In summer though, it can get very hot inside. The reason is that I have some fairly large, south facing windows. And once it's hot inside, it's very hard to cool it down again.

    I should really invest in some blinds, preferably outside, to keep the sun out during hot days.

    But the point is that insulation and keep heat in/out is not perfectly symmetrical.

  • What if you read it as

    Undervoting is a problem that, due to socio-economic issues, disproportionately affects people of color

    So they're actively trying to prevent black people from being disenfranchised (if undervoting counts as such).

    However, using this as an argument to oppose ranked choice voting, instead of informing the voters better, is definitely wrong.

  • It's definitely not artificial general intelligence, but it's for sure AI.

    None of the criteria you mentioned are needed for it be labeled as AI. Definition from Oxford Libraries:

    the theory and development of computer systems able to perform tasks normally requiring human intelligence, such as visual perception, speech recognition, decision-making, and translation between languages.

    It definitely fits in this category. It is being used in ways that previously, customer support or a domain expert was needed to talk to. Yes, it makes mistakes, but so do humans. And even if talking to a human would still be better, it's still a useful AI tool, even if it's not flawless yet.