We live in a world that exists exclusively in a simulation cast directly into the mind of James Comey by the Ghost of Labor Days Yet To Come.
Posts by Bender
When you're out on the lash and you've had a few and one of the lads is like, "Salve, apud Nandos cenare debemus" and you're like "great idea, classic Caesar".
It feels like the tendency towards increasing levels of deference to 'locals' in local & national government over the last fifty years tracks perfectly with the increasing complexity and length of constituency names.
A fairly key part of anti-Semitic discourse - as with almost all racist discourses - is the unrelenting focus of misdeeds by Jews and proxies for Jews. It's not even subtle in this case since Epstein very clearly sold secrets and kompromat to so many intel agencies, the focus on Mossad is clear.
The moral authority given to farmers is insane. It's one of the most environmentally destructive industries, subsidised up to the hilt. I've never understood the deference given to 'they make your food' since that deference is never given to any other industry.
The public are wishing on a monkey's paw. When people say this, they're thinking, "the average MP, if independent, would agree with me, because I am correct about things".
They want MPs to agree more with them. In reality, the median MP is further from the median voter than the median party is.
"What about blind people using the bus?" is a weirdly common canard right now.
There's variations on, 'this bike lane is pointless because it doesn't enable some obscure local journey', on a proposal that is protected and connected for almost anyone heading into work.
"It's actually going to make cycling more dangerous by encouraging Lime bikesβ "
β Dockless rentals; the implication is that they're inexperienced cyclists.
"Women should know their place"
"...and what place is that?"
"Oh we're still working on the details. Key thing: know their place."
The ability of car drivers to devise hypothetical scenarios to justify traffic violence is simply unmatched.
If you send every single person who drives drunk to prison, you may well end up imprisoning fewer drunk drivers than a country that sends 10% of drunk drivers to prison.
Stringent, and consistently enforced.
If you send every single person who drives drunk to prison, you will send very few drunk drivers to prison.
It's always worth parsing these posts through an understanding that 'capitalism' often just means 'bad people making bad decisions', rather than a specific political economy. If you do that, these posts are perfectly cogent.
This is half true.
The USA does have a very long formal campaign season where candidates are out doing events and canvassing voters.
But, very few candidates are deciding on their positions and image that close to an election. Those sorts of decisions are normally made a year out.
Old timey euphemisms for gay sex
"I am personally annoyed by how people talk to me on social media" is rarely a good explanation for voting trends.
I think Nate would be a lot more persuasive if he just said the actual problem, because I can easily empathise that being spoken to like this is annoying.
Could you point me to something I can read - or perhaps write something yourself - expanding on this? This is a new idea to me and not Jewish so I'm interested to learn more but no idea how to go about it.
I can't articulate this well at the moment, but it feels like a lot of our problems stem from the concept of organization becoming female coded and therefore considered kinda gay by society at large.
I'm seeing a series of these articles where ex-NIMBYs simply reinvent some variant of YIMBYism that's been around for a decade or more.
"Yes! We can focus YIMBY reforms on public sector housing, which faces mostly the same barriers as the private sector. Google 'left YIMBY': this isn't new.".
In a city that has literal building sized murals glorifying the actions of terrorist organisations.
This would be great in London
Montrealβs Bixi which designed the bikeshare technology Torontoβs Bikeshare is based on, now has rentable bike trailers.
#topoli
I totally agree that local authorities are to blame. They have Section 106 for a reason and they choose to use it to build places like that.
I live in Brixton. We have plenty of benches, bus stops, and indoor third spaces.
I do spend my time reading up, talking to people, and visiting places, and learn about how are things the rest of the country.
In their homes. The causes of young people's loneliness is very similar to the causes of old age people's loneliness.
I think it's both: there's a warm and comfortable space you can go, you'll choose that. But also, the third spaces you're pointing to (benches, bus stops) are going away. We grew up before ubiquitous car-first estates sprung up. Lots of teens live in places with no benches or bus stops.
Range voting provides good results for voters, but provides parties with a strong incentive to play up their differences with their nearest competitors. This isn't great for political culture. Systems like AV encourage parties to play up 'we're the second choice for X voters'.
This system allows all of the nice mathematical proprieties of each system without any of the perverse strategic downsides.
But, more importantly, it'll give the talking heads something to discuss on election night between 10 and 2 that isn't endlessly relitigating the election campaign.
5/5
Once determined, ballot counters convert the ballots to the defined system, and count according to the defined system, and declare a winner.
4/π§΅