600k Australians protested against the Iraq war in 2003.The population was about 20m so 3.5% of that is 700k. So if another 100k had joined then the protest would have succeeded?
I am no fan of Eurovision but it is good value for national pride: Eurovision is funded by participating broadcasters and this contribution is a total of €6.2 million (£5.2 million), combined.https://www.dailystar.co.uk/tv/who-funds-eurovision-song-contest-24173525
Olympic gold medals don't make money. It is for national pride. Even hosting the games does not always make money.Actually I am Aussie. 12 years ago it was calculated that each gold medal costs us AU$12m (so about US$11m in today's money). It embarrasses me.https://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/they-kill-us-for-their-sport-williamson-laments-arts-funding-cuts-20121115-29ejt.html
Even if we were the only country researching...I have heard GOP politicians saying something like "why should we fund a cure for a disease and everyone else benefits without spending a cent?"Why doesn't their national pride on the world stage extend beyond sport?
Why should the world benefit from our taxpayer funded research? I want my taxes spent on training Americans so as to let the world watch (for free) fast running and swimming. Am still waiting for a skipping event in the Olympics.
Depends on whether the AI is cheating by using data more recent than the trade date. Will take longer to run it in real time and get meaningful results (I presume).
Sure: for professionals.However when casually commenting in a forum it is fine because the reader can go check the citations (and perhaps come back and add to the thread).
Maybe let us know if you figured out how to make it more fair.https://patrioticmillionaires.uk/ have ideas. Gary Stevenson in particular.
600k Australians protested against the Iraq war in 2003.
The population was about 20m so 3.5% of that is 700k. So if another 100k had joined then the protest would have succeeded?