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AnonymousActuary


				

				

				
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joined 2023 February 07 18:51:10 UTC

				

User ID: 2163

AnonymousActuary


				
				
				

				
0 followers   follows 0 users   joined 2023 February 07 18:51:10 UTC

					

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User ID: 2163

Is this maybe a good thing? I see no personal challenge to my gun rights living in a red state - I think large Federal gun restrictions died with the % of the electorate who owned a gun increasing during COVID/the summer of Floyd.

If blue states want to pass more restrictive laws: A. That's a plus for federalism, the only way I see to reduce the national partisan temperature B. That provides lots of fun little opportunities for research on differences in shooting and such that a unified national regulatory structure does not.

Divide and Conquer (LOTR) mod for Medieval II was tons of fun.

The story I heard was Milton Friedman came up with withholding...hated the idea of it as a more small government person, but thought it was the best way to get enough money to win WWII.

No idea how true that is.

It’s absolutely wild how much sortition is involved in the U.S. For a New York resident to visit, I dunno, Dallas—that’s further than Paris-to-Warsaw. The trains are embarrassing, too. We’re firmly in road-trip territory. And the issue is much worse for those who don’t have the disposable income or time to cross the continent for a few days.

Or they could just take a 4 hour flight for less than $300 round trip?

I guess people really love that LSU-Iowa rivalry?

Yes pretty much haha. Caitlin Clark drives huge ratings, and with LSU and Iowa meeting in the championship last year and driving a ton of interest, it was not shocking at all for it to have a seismic rating.

First off, this would be the same methodology and population sampled as in previous years, so whether the total magnitude is correct the change should be relatively close.

I think there are a few contributing factors.

  1. The men's game is still quite popular, but the increase in NIL and one-and-done (or even none-and-done with the now-going-to-fold G League ignite or foreign teams) has meant that there are a lot fewer familiar faces year to year - in the women's game everyone plays for 4 years (or with COVID, 5 now) so people get to know them a lot better.
  2. Caitlin Clark is something of a singular force - people like deep 3s and guard play (Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, Steph Curry are maybe the 3 most popular basketball players of all time) and she provides both in spades.
  3. There's a bit of a culture war anger with the LSU vs. Iowa, Angel Reese vs. Caitlin Clark, (or as in the previous game), America's sweethearts versus the basketball villains: https://www.latimes.com/sports/ucla/story/2024-03-29/ucla-lsu-america-sweethearts-versus-basketball-villains LSU's coach being an accused homophobic trump supporter just makes it even more culture warry.

If you are going to have kids and have parents who would be interested in being involved grandparents or have siblings who have kids who would be cousins (or are likely to do so), then I'd put living as close as possible (really, as possible, being 5 minutes away >>> being 25 minutes away >>> being a half-day drive >>> being a flight/full day drive) pretty highly on the list of things to prioritize.

Obviously depends on where people live as to how desirable those cities are, but something to strongly consider.

If you figure this out please let me know - similar situation with a file that has sentimental value and I have some idea of what the passphrase might be

Fair point - it's more just a "man Russia had a ton of people" then a "their sacrifice was not massive" obviously the casualties (both military and civilian) in Russia were insanely large.

he population of Russia dipped during WWII by about 10%

I don't have much substantial to add but just wanted to note that I hadn't seen Russian casualties during WWII laid out in percentage terms and I was honestly shocked it is this low. If WWII is somewhat a story of the US's vast industrial capacity and Russia vast population capacity combining together it was fascinating to see it laid out in such stark terms.

I think it is more likely a happy accident then a deliberate targeting, but it is hard to say for sure. There is much about what went on in March 2020 that is still very unclear to me. I think it is definitely possible it was more a general egregore that drove the shutdowns than any one specific thing (China is sometimes mentioned, though if so they were clearly drinking their own kool-aid rather than trying to sabotage anyone).

EDIT: I should say I'm referring to an "egregore" being responsible rather than directly the "state", as in my mind much of 2020 is better explained by some sort of social media/traditional media/political expediency/current thing/good 'ol fashioned hysterias then more concrete concepts such as "the state"

would you prefer authoritarian?

Forgot about the whole "yeah the 1st amendment doesn't apply anymore, no religious services or protests (except the state-sanctioned ones)"

Lockdowns are fascism because using a trumped-up emergency (whether or not it killed people it was obviously trumped up - particularily the threat to children, young, healthy, and "long COVID") as pretext to confine your population to their homes only to be let out when your approved political causes are up for support is bad, well working with the media and technology companies to censor any opposition to your views is like, basically the dictionary definition. Like what political system would it be if not?

Closing down an airport or adding additional security is the same as mandating everyone stay in their homes, actually.

Securing your borders is very different then securing someone's home. This should be obvious.

If there's a black death like plague close your borders and tell your population what is going on - people will be more careful (as indeed they were in early March, even with popular figures telling them to "go hug a Chinese person" and that "they really should be worried about the flu".

EDIT: Also, saying "would these actions be justifiable with a plague that was 50x worse" is again, not really addressing the point at hand. Is fascism justifiable if things are bad enough (Do you support Korematsu v United States) is a separate question from "Was fascism justifiable in this instance" which is clearly false, especially because everyone abandoned their commitment to it as soon as a more politically favorable current thing popped up at the end of May 2020.

Lockdowns aren't on the pareto frontier of policy options for even diseases significantly deadlier than covid imo, just because rapid development and distribution of technological solutions is possible, but ... covid killed one million people in the united states. Yes, mostly old people, but we're talking about protecting old people here. No reason to pretend otherwise.

Whether the policies may or may not have protected any old people has nothing to do with whether they were fascist or not. I could deprive everyone of freedom of movements this holiday season and probably save several thousand people from the flu, but that does not mean it is not fascist.

Been playing the Divide and Conquer Medieval Total War II mod (https://www.moddb.com/mods/divide-and-conquer) and it is just spectacular. Full conversion mod that starts a few decades before the War of the Ring, has a ton of playable civs both lore accurate and a bit of a stretch, but it's just tremendous fun to charge your Dol Amroth Knights into Haradrim or mow down Goblins with your Elven archers.

And the first time Mumakil appeared on a battle map was legitimately a top 3 gaming moment of all time for me. Just complete shock and awe.

I did not run at a D1 University, but was fit in college, and got my Marathon done right before graduating to check off the box haha. Knew it was only going to get harder from there.

if you like a relaxing form of travel, stay at top tier all inclusive resorts for 4-5 days at a time.

Yes, if you know you are going to deliver you should get as premium a plan as you can pretty much. If you need help with the calculations shoot me a message, I work in health insurance.

And yes, it's antiselection, and yes, the ACA kinda allows it, something something risk adjustment makes people whole something something.

Both you and @Emptybee nailed it. Man, the internet is amazing sometimes

  1. I really enjoyed this article and happily followed the substack
  2. I have a vague memory of reading an article online a long time ago that discussed the logistical differences between Japan and the US in terms of how quickly the US was building destroyers/escort carriers/etc by 1944 even. If anyone remembers that can find me the link, I will be eternally* grateful

*grateful for a few hours plus every few years when I think about the article again

I mean if you want a lot to churn through Brandon Sanderson seems like the obvious choice? Start with Mistborn or The Way of Kings

"Actions taken by the Biden Admin during the Covid pandemic were generally justified." Not enough info to sway either way

Always down to talk COVID. Prefer text only for op-sec reasons

Reminds me of Kevin Williamson's support for hanging (though he opposes the death penalty). If we want the state to have the power of execution, we should have to confront the consequences. None of this pseudo medicalized stuff. Firing squad or hanging.

This should be mandatory reading anytime we discuss drug pricing (I think on PBMs on consolidation you are likely right):

https://slatestarcodex.com/2016/09/07/reverse-voxsplaining-brand-name-drugs/

What was the worst thing that ever happened? One strong contender is Mao’s Great Leap Forward, in which ineffective agricultural reforms and very effective purges killed 45 million people. Most of these people were probably already adults, and lifespan in Mao’s China wasn’t too high, so let’s say that each death from the Great Leap Forward cost what would otherwise be twenty healthy life years. In that case, the worst thing that has ever happened until now cost 45 million * 20 = 900 million life-years.

Once again, RAND’s calculations plus my own Fermi estimate suggest that prescription drug price regulation would cost one billion life-years, which would very slightly edge out Communist China for the title of Worst Thing Ever.

Prescription drugs are an area with real breakthoughs occurring - some of the new biologics, Harvoni/Solvadi/the Hep C drugs, a lot of the HIV/AIDS drugs, Ozempic, and so on. That is a golden goose I am very hesitant to mess with given the relatively low portion of total costs they make up. The Alzheimer's drugs may end up being an exception to this....