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I think you meant to say "infallible" (or remove the "not").

Yeah, my bad. Too late to edit it now

And Australian.


You can solve it by adding congestion tax depending on vehicle size and making public transit readily available so people are less likely to take their huge trucks everywhere.


You grossly underestimate the average American’s desire to thumb their nose at government regulations, even if it means spending far more money than they should to do so.

Look at the prices of new trucks, then at the median salary. People should not have car payments that rival a small mortgage, yet they do.


> Sometimes we still get it and i drink it watered down bc its just so dang tasty.

For me that's the actual danger of absinthe. It is indeed ridiculously easy to drink and does not impart any of the 'fire' typically associated with spirits. And I also got the same sensation of 'body upside down'. I relate it to just how quickly my blood alcohol shot up.


not to mention you often drink it with sugar! Sweet drinks goes down easier than sour drinks!


Apparently the ability to wake up at a certain time is "trainable". Does this imply an innate "clock" that is being tapped here?

https://youtu.be/P-a5sW7W36E?si=aGbuu3N3Km2d8NKT


Any reasonable defence lawyer would simply submit "evidence" showing that the judge or prosecutor actually committed the crime. The point being to make it obvious that photos and footage can no longer be trusted.


This encapsulates a misunderstanding of how vaccines work. They do not float around in our bodies for years. They work by (hopefully) training an immune response from our own bodies. The vaccines themselves rapidly breakdown. They do not last because there's no need for them to. As a result, vaccine testing - for all vaccines - pretty much only needs to cover that period. While side-effects (ranging from minor to serious and rare to common) from the vaccines themselves do occur, what's not clear to me is how well we understand/appreciate the second order effects of an altered immune system response e.g. "my body now knows to attack X, but in attacking X, it also impacts Y" - kind of thing. Where Y may be something that only becomes apparent much later.

Speaking for myself, having lived and worked in SE Asia for a while, I've had almost every vaccine known to man (the only one I'm sure I haven't had is the HPV). I've had 5 COVID shots (got COVID once in 2021) and get an annual flu-shot. The only side-effect I've ever had (that I'm aware of), is a sore arm at the injection site. I have no idea what that says about me. My mum reacts badly to most (not all) vaccines - especially the flu shots. People vary and I suspect our immune system (which I believe is poorly understood) has complex effects on the response to some vaccines.


> vaccines themselves rapidly breakdown. They do not last because there's no need for them to

The effects of the vaccines linger, by design. (Granted, in a generally productive way.)


I didn't say that the vaccine itself persists. But the effects of its interactions with the body, do persist by design.

I had 3 COVID shots; no issues with the first two. But 2 years later, my arm is still quite sore to the touch where I got my shot (and I can feel mild discomfort there even without touching it). So obviously a long-term change there.


Have you talked to your doctor about that?


> “there would be a significant risk that preserved video games would be used for recreational purposes.”

Hahahahaha. Yes, in the enshittified capitalist utopia, GAMES aren't for having FUN! They're for addicting large swathes of people and milking them financially for years and years! Stop interfering with my right to rip you off! And for god's sake stop having fun!


That's the definition of a clown world.


Members include... Chrome.

Literally the first thing anyone with knowledge above grandma* does is install Chrome (or for a few of us Firefox).

* sorry grandma!


Based on https://bsky.social/about/support/tos#user-content , I would answer yes. While it's not expressly called out (permitted or forbidden), my reading of the above would indicate that it's not forbidden per se, and probably permitted ("Modify or otherwise utilize User Content in any media. This includes reproducing, preparing derivative works, distributing, performing, and displaying your User Content."). I believe training an LLM falls under "utilize" and "preparing derivative works".


That's about your user content, not others'.


Lots of things that have a real effect in the world are a convenient fiction. The fact that most people on the planet believe that the small paper rectangles printed by the US government have some value, is a consensual belief simultaneously held but no less a fiction.

The rules based order of the world was once something people believed in, and therefore expected others to conform to. Until they didn’t (for lots of reasons all of which cumulatively perturbed the system such that it’s flipped from a stable state and into a meta-stable state).


There are a finite amount of the small paper rectangles available (yes the supply is increasing, but it is finite at any moment) AND these small paper rectangles are required in order for US residents/citizens that earn income in any currency in order to stay out of prison. So, in other words, not a fiction.


And yet not all pieces of paper are believed to be equal. Some pieces of paper will buy you a loaf of bread and others will buy you a tank full of gas. The difference lies in the magic squiggles printed on the pieces of paper. In other words, the belief that a certain number value equals a fair exchange for a physical good or service. This is a consensual belief. If an extra 0 appeared magically overnight on every piece of paper, what has changed? People will believe they have “more” than they did before. If instead of magic, the government announced a policy of reissuing recycled bits of paper that have had an extra zero printed on them, would people believe they had “more”?


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