I think the difference is that you can specify independently verifiable criteria for the selection process and require participants to decide based on those criteria alone without forcing them to become political actors…
Physical Health, mental health, the economy, social disorder, family; we can influence these things that cause stress but often we can't "control" them.
I'm relieved to see another educated person doing this. It's gotten worse for me lately, where I keep mixing up train stations and locations with similar names or characteristics, so I can totally imagine hearing…
Meanwhile, they forced AI Copilot bloat into Notepad, whose singular use-case was supposed to be that it does one thing well without unnecessary features.
I appreciate your response, even if the other poster doesn't.
He was hilariously brazen in his attempt to sell a Senate seat. His attempt to claim it was all a conspiracy against him was even more hilarious.
But that leg must weigh more than a person because their total biomass of 12 megatons is "more than all the wild birds and mammals taken together".
Their answer to me is "but you called us", which is fair, but they could just rephrase the message to "WE WILL NEVER CONTACT YOU TO ASK FOR THIS CODE"
Assuming the drop in social program expenditure doesn't already compensate for the drop in tax revenue.
You cannot give away some thing that doesn't belong to you. If I accept stolen property which I know to be ill-gotten, then I am as responsible as the thief. A Jewish state could've been established peacefully somewhere…
- The British offered land that didn't belong to them because of colonialism - They offered land to Zionists to further their imperialist goals - The British enabled Jewish immigration to Palestine when it was clear…
No group would or should have to tolerate a foreign state being established on their soil at gunpoint by colonial powers. > the Arab countries decided to wage war in Israel after the UN proposed the two state solution -…
That isn't a very accurate characterization. At the time, there was no significant population of settlers in the area. Most people were either fully or at least partly Indigenous like the Metis. The goal was to protect…
Only if we could restrict the questions to the facts of the case, but my phone has a lot of unrelated personal stuff on it and so does my brain.
.... and once that problem starts injuring as many people as driverless cars, then we might start looking at it as a public policy issue.
"Okay, but couldn't we at least make the game fun anyway?" "No! It has to be just barely fun. If the game was TOO FUN then there would be no reason to MICROPAY in order to make it MORE FUN!"
> Practically everybody against the idea confused a hash false positive with the system’s false positive. Doesn't the system output the result of the hash? What is the difference?
The American and European auto, agriculture and aerospace sectors are all so dependent on subsidies that the same could be said for them as well, and yet those industries remain the bedrock of global capitalism.
2/3 of Canadians living in a home their family owns is still far from a situation where a critical mass of voters are demanding pro-renter housing policies. Even those living at home with parents will be benefiting from…
National Geographic's audience might not tend toward the lowest denominator. There's a good chance that people who read that magazine have a higher average reading level.
To add to my reply, it appears that - rather than "plummeting" since 2011 - homeownership went up even more recently and actually peaked in 2019: > About two in three Canadians lived in an owner-occupied home in 2022.…
Your chart shows home ownership recently peaked at 69% in 2011. The current 66% is (a) not that big a change and (b) still high compared to historical averages so it's not so much "plummeting" as it is "reverting to the…
> A courageous member of the British parliament named Samuel Plimsoll tried for years to get legislation passed to improve safety and maintenance on ships, and to regulate the overloading of cargo encouraged by greedy…
you are correct in that the Wikipedia page specifically states that legislative change came after about three decades of this (and suggests it was at the behest of insurers): > They were generally eliminated in the…
It says a new coat of paint over a rotting ship would suffice in those days.
I think the difference is that you can specify independently verifiable criteria for the selection process and require participants to decide based on those criteria alone without forcing them to become political actors…
Physical Health, mental health, the economy, social disorder, family; we can influence these things that cause stress but often we can't "control" them.
I'm relieved to see another educated person doing this. It's gotten worse for me lately, where I keep mixing up train stations and locations with similar names or characteristics, so I can totally imagine hearing…
Meanwhile, they forced AI Copilot bloat into Notepad, whose singular use-case was supposed to be that it does one thing well without unnecessary features.
I appreciate your response, even if the other poster doesn't.
He was hilariously brazen in his attempt to sell a Senate seat. His attempt to claim it was all a conspiracy against him was even more hilarious.
But that leg must weigh more than a person because their total biomass of 12 megatons is "more than all the wild birds and mammals taken together".
Their answer to me is "but you called us", which is fair, but they could just rephrase the message to "WE WILL NEVER CONTACT YOU TO ASK FOR THIS CODE"
Assuming the drop in social program expenditure doesn't already compensate for the drop in tax revenue.
You cannot give away some thing that doesn't belong to you. If I accept stolen property which I know to be ill-gotten, then I am as responsible as the thief. A Jewish state could've been established peacefully somewhere…
- The British offered land that didn't belong to them because of colonialism - They offered land to Zionists to further their imperialist goals - The British enabled Jewish immigration to Palestine when it was clear…
No group would or should have to tolerate a foreign state being established on their soil at gunpoint by colonial powers. > the Arab countries decided to wage war in Israel after the UN proposed the two state solution -…
That isn't a very accurate characterization. At the time, there was no significant population of settlers in the area. Most people were either fully or at least partly Indigenous like the Metis. The goal was to protect…
Only if we could restrict the questions to the facts of the case, but my phone has a lot of unrelated personal stuff on it and so does my brain.
.... and once that problem starts injuring as many people as driverless cars, then we might start looking at it as a public policy issue.
"Okay, but couldn't we at least make the game fun anyway?" "No! It has to be just barely fun. If the game was TOO FUN then there would be no reason to MICROPAY in order to make it MORE FUN!"
> Practically everybody against the idea confused a hash false positive with the system’s false positive. Doesn't the system output the result of the hash? What is the difference?
The American and European auto, agriculture and aerospace sectors are all so dependent on subsidies that the same could be said for them as well, and yet those industries remain the bedrock of global capitalism.
2/3 of Canadians living in a home their family owns is still far from a situation where a critical mass of voters are demanding pro-renter housing policies. Even those living at home with parents will be benefiting from…
National Geographic's audience might not tend toward the lowest denominator. There's a good chance that people who read that magazine have a higher average reading level.
To add to my reply, it appears that - rather than "plummeting" since 2011 - homeownership went up even more recently and actually peaked in 2019: > About two in three Canadians lived in an owner-occupied home in 2022.…
Your chart shows home ownership recently peaked at 69% in 2011. The current 66% is (a) not that big a change and (b) still high compared to historical averages so it's not so much "plummeting" as it is "reverting to the…
> A courageous member of the British parliament named Samuel Plimsoll tried for years to get legislation passed to improve safety and maintenance on ships, and to regulate the overloading of cargo encouraged by greedy…
you are correct in that the Wikipedia page specifically states that legislative change came after about three decades of this (and suggests it was at the behest of insurers): > They were generally eliminated in the…
It says a new coat of paint over a rotting ship would suffice in those days.