ToaKraka
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User ID: 108
Okay, "liquid investment account(s) from which cash can be withdrawn on a few days' notice".
bank account
*investment account(s)
That's a very vague question, susceptible to a multitude of interpretations. ("Is your opinion of a woman reduced if you see that she has obtained a tattoo?" "Should women be frowned on by society for obtaining tattoos?" "Should women be forbidden by the government from obtaining tattoos?") (Inb4 the entire point of the vagueness is just to get a general idea of "the vibes".)
Also, no "I have no strong feelings one way or the other" option is offered. (Inb4 taking such an option would be a cop-out, as the original Political Compass poll's FAQ says.)
I wish there were a book called "Things That 90% of Economists Agree On".
Consensus Among Economists 2020
Flexible and floating exchange rates offer an effective international monetary arrangement. (90 percent)
Tariffs and import quotas usually reduce general economic welfare. (95 percent)
If the federal budget is to be balanced, it should be done over the course of the business cycle rather than yearly. (93 percent)
Fiscal policy (e .g., tax cut and/or expenditure increase) has a significant stimulative impact on a less than fully employed economy. (94 percent)
Appropriately designed fiscal policy can increase the long-run rate of capital formation and economic growth. (90 percent)
The Earned Income Tax Credit program should be expanded. (90 percent)
Immigration generally has a net positive economic effect for the US economy. (97 percent)
Antitrust laws should be enforced vigorously. (93 percent)
Addressing biases in individuals and institutions can improve both equity and efficiency. (90 percent)
See also the surveys conducted by the University of Chicago's Clark Center for Global Markets. (The website seems to be a bit broken at the moment, possibly due to a recent domain-name change. Older surveys can be found using the Internet Archive.)
Capping annual rent increases by corporate landlords at 5 percent, as proposed by President Biden, would not make middle-income Americans substantially better off over the next ten years. (85 percent)
Capping annual rent increases at 5 percent, as proposed by President Biden, would substantially reduce the amount of available apartments for rent over the next ten years. (72 percent)
Capping annual rent increases at 5%, as proposed by President Biden, would not substantially reduce US income inequality over the next ten years. (79 percent)
The protagonist of Houellebecq's Submission tried joining a monastery for a non-permanent period, but left after just two days. I don't know how realistic that is.
Standard US tips are 20% of the bill.
A cursory Google search suggests that 15 to 20 percent is the standard range.
Restaurant owners strongly encourage credit card payments
What about the big class-action lawsuit regarding credit-card fees? And the other lawsuit regarding credit-card policies that forbade businesses from "steering" customers away from credit cards and toward cash?
In my town it is residential sprinkler systems, even though we haven't had a deadly fire in 100 years. The fire chief's car even has "residential sprinklers save lives" on the side of it. Guess what the other half of his family does? You guessed it: residential sprinkler systems.
To be fair, residential sprinkler systems have been mandatory in the IRC since year 2011, so your jurisdiction is not necessarily being corrupt here.
They are one more point of failure and horrific water damage, all for no real net increase in safety.
The NAHB also opposes this code provision, considering it a waste of money when three-quarters of house-fire deaths occur in houses that don't even have working smoke alarms.
Culture war in building codes?
In most of the United States, the building codes are based on codes issued by the ICC (International Code Council), including the IECC (International Energy Conservation Code). Apparently, the committee in charge of updating the IECC for 2024 attempted to insert a bunch of mandatory provisions that were not directly related to energy conservation. The NAHB (National Association of Homebuilders) summarizes the objectionable provisions as follows:
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Electric-vehicle charging infrastructure in both residential and commercial buildings
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Solar-readiness provisions in residential buildings
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Electric-readiness provisions for electric cooking, clothes drying, and water heating
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Penalty for using natural gas for space or water heating in commercial buildings
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Electrical energy storage system readiness in commercial buildings
These insertions were appealed to the ICC's board of directors, which (by votes of at least 10 to 7) ordered that they be moved to nonmandatory appendices of the code.
Slave owners ran breeding programs
This was debunked decades ago. See Time on the Cross.
movie options
Note that Logan's Run and Soylent Green (Make Room! Make Room!) also are available in their original book form.
Wikipedia's list of sovereign states may be of interest to you.
The rightmost column of the table also includes information on autonomous regions. If 1 percent of people have heard of Suriname and Guyana, then 0.1 percent of people have heard of Gagauzia and Adjara!
I keep wondering what women do with their time and money
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics can answer that question with its Consumer Expenditure Survey and Time Use Survey. For example:
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Dollars spent per year in the 2021–2022 period on "toys, hobbies, and playground equipment": 69 for single men, 94 for single women (for dollars spent on "pets", it's 282 vs. 647)
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Hours spent per day in 2023 on "playing games": 0.50 for men, 0.24 for women
What's the base rate of mechanical failure across these marques? Does anyone know?
This site claims to have analyzed millions of used-car auctions to determine long-term mechanical reliability. Its overall "manufacturer quality index" looks like this:
- 90–89: Lexus, Toyota
- 79–67: Hummer, Porsche, Scion, Mercedes-Benz, Honda, Infiniti
- 57–32: Remainder (57 is the average)
- 19: Suzuki
- 12: Smart
- 0: Mini
Apparently, the Lieutenant Governor of Vermont actually implemented this advice in his office, and was censured for it by the state's Speaker of the House after legislators "reported feeling uncomfortable".
“Offering feminine hygiene products in an office and seeking out women to let them know about the availability is not acceptable,” [Speaker] Krowinski wrote in the letter, dated Feb. 2, 2023. “While you may have good intentions, it has left women feeling very uncomfortable and unsure why they were chosen or why it became a topic of conversation with you.”
Surely not in your pockets
Some pistols are small enough to fit in a pocket.
Possibly the funniest paragraph ever written in a court opinion:
In the fall of 2021, Complainant, [Appellant] Dawson's 14-year-old daughter, asked him if she could go to her boyfriend's house. Dawson agreed but conditioned his permission on her letting him “eat her out”. Sometime after, on a day when Complainant stayed home from school, Dawson acted on this.
Source (found on this government webpage, though you would be forgiven for expecting a link to ArchiveOfOurOwn or Literotica)
The article also states that he didn't report any dividend or capital-gains income on his 2022 tax return. But maybe the mutual funds are in an IRA or something.
they just amended the bill to delete everything past "this will take effect" and wrote their own bill, which seems unbelievable
It isn't out of the ordinary. If you run a search for "Strike all after the enacting clause" in Congress, you will see more than a hundred such amendments proposed in the current session, and if you filter by "status of amendment" you will see that many of them succeeded.
Don't forget to escape your asterisks. w\*man Fr\*nch
yields "w*man Fr*nch" instead of "wman Frnch".
A game developer has delivered an interesting rebuttal video.
Why shouldn't we have the right to the server binaries so we can keep playing these games?
Are you going to allow monetization of these servers or not?
If we don't allow monetization - Who would be the party that enforces non-monetization of that server?
If it's the government I feel like we're making an insane amount of red tape.
If it's the original company then this doesn't work if they shut down.
If we don't allow monetization - Who is going to pay for the hosting if the servers cannot be monetized?
If they cannot be monetized then these servers will also eventually shut down due to cost.
We don't up preserving games like this we just shift their death down the road.
If we do allow monetization - This leads to a really weird attack potential if people can monetize the servers.
- You make an awesome game that has a small community.
- I want to monetize that game and run my own servers.
- I create a shitload of bots and constant exploits to erode the game and your business.
- Your business closes and now I can monetize your work without anyone stopping me.
This isn't unlikely as we've seen mass attacks such as with TF2.
We actually see echoes of this in the mobile market already as well.
The only defense right now is DMCA or other takedown measures.
Devs legitimately have very little protections as-is and this would erode that further.
This creates an incentive for abuse where the abuser is protected as they are within their legal right to operate said "abandoned" games servers.
The standard recommendation for website archiving is wget (with the options for recursive and archival downloading enabled). I don't know whether it works on Substack's Javascript-heavy archive pages, but you can just manually scroll down to load the entire archive page, then download that manually and tell wget to download everything linked from the downloaded page.
Alternatively, you can use SingleFile to download individual pages manually.
I voted "no", but I felt obligated to voice my objections anyway.
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