hydroacetylene
No bio...
User ID: 128
Texas has limited ability to export power, but exporting reactors and critical equipment/parts, that it can do- as well as ensuring maintenance and operation personnel(who will be 90+% red) are trained in Texas.
There are lots of people who claim to have run into Arabs- like actual from the Middle East Arabs- pretending to be Mexican or Guatemalan to get into the U.S. and behaving in ways that are more suspicious than usual for illegal immigrants(most of those who report it are illegals or adjacent to that community themselves). My guess is that most of these are just economic migrants whose odd behavior can be chocked up to cultural differences, but it’s certainly not implausible that there are eg Iranian assets hiding among the illegal immigrant population for whatever purpose. Obviously the lack of terrorism indicates that they’re not committing mass terror.
The South African government was widely condemned and sanctioned for its campaign against the ANC when the ANC was an actual literal terrorist group.
Finding a pro-life jury in Dallas or Travis county takes work, but it’s very doable, and while it would be controversial Texas doesn’t need to care- it’s not actually illegal to exclude jurors who are likely to nullify the law.
And being seen to address the power grid issue(whether or not it’s an actual issue) is important for legitimacy.
Why don’t you build your homeland in the old Pale Of Settlement instead? It’s more fertile, has more natural resources, more space, and is not in the middle a powder keg of religious hatred which will require you to be a nuclear-armed siege state for the rest of your national existence?
I have some bad news for you about current events in Ukraine.
Deer processing is going well- mild sausage is all stuffed and spicy sausage is just waiting on a new sausage stuffer(a minor hiccup was when I dropped the nozzle on my old one and had to order a new one). Chili grind is all made and the steaks are cut out and packaged.
I do this every year and it’s always an experience.
It’s an odd place, but it’s also the case that the nuclear push seems oddly export oriented.
Israel is not committing a genocide in Gaza, they’re winning a war in an urban environment.
How many of them, for that matter, are uninsured patients with hospitals trying to wriggle out of an EMTALA violation.
The relevant standards under current Texas law are here: https://www.tmb.state.tx.us/dl/1C5CBA1C-052B-403F-A0D1-FAF22ADD05CB
They were updated to respond to cases like this. That seems like relevant information.
Possible Nuclear Power Push in Texas
Today, the state government's commission on nuclear power expansion released a report(https://gov.texas.gov/uploads/files/press/TANRWG_Advanced_Nuclear_Report_v11.17.24c_.pdf) pushing for Texas to invest in nuclear energy. Not normally a huge deal, but the report was specifically requested by Greg Abbott and is released at the traditional time for Texas to set policy goals. There are seven policy recommendations:
-
Create a state agency for coordinating, enacting, and funding the nuclear industry.
-
Create a unified point of contact for permitting nuclear projects, to simplify bureaucratic requirements.
-
Expand related programs in state run trade schools(and Texas public technical education is generally acknowledged as a thing the state does well at in general), with substantial industry input.
-
Foster necessary manufacturing capabilities locally.
-
Public outreach about the benefits of nuclear power.
-
State fund to mitigate the risk of project cancellation.
-
State fund to mitigate the capital costs of nuclear plant construction.
Now I legitimately find this all interesting, and I'm curious for motteizean feedback on the helpfulness/practicability of those seven items and the further considerations listed afterwards in the document. I'm particularly interested in if fancy economic structures are helpful.
As to why this is an even bigger deal 1) the document explicitly calls for requesting a delegation of federal authority by an act of congress and 2) the GOP is going to need something to run on after Trump. The 'red state model' is already the most likely and Abbott has presidential ambitions. Plus, the timeline is about right for it to become a national level issue in 2028. Particularly if the Trump administration doesn't have a particularly good four years, the GOP is just going to need to start running on copying what successful red states do on the national level, and Texas is the biggest wealthiest and most successful red state. Even partial success can have major implications.
Trump isn't campaigning, conventionally. He's performing kingship. And people love their king.
When Trump visited the hurricane Helene devastation, he didn't say 'when I am elected my administration will release x gazillion dollars for flood relief'. No, his message was that he was already moving assets into place to help them. His strongest retainer was solving communications in the region and he had other vassals sending relief. Royals reassure their people.
Trump's pitch can be summed up as 'if only the tsar knew- put me on my rightful throne, because I'm the tsar who knows'. That's what the McDonald's shift was about, was empathizing with the commoners. He's got a claim on legitimacy from the 2020 stolen election that at the very least isn't any more spurious than descent from Amaterasu or Woden. And people know, intuitively on a pre-rational level, that the gods of the land are angry when the rightful king is usurped from his throne, and they know that the harvest will be poor and the weather bad and the kingdom's enemies stronger because of it. Joe Biden was not making a gaffe when he referred to the 'great MAGA king'.
Trump is a larger than life character playing a role in a storybook that's written in every human mind. There's the kingdom, torn asunder by turmoil(border chaos and inflation) and with foreign conflict(Gaza and Ukraine), ruled by usurpers(democrats) with the rightful prince(Trump), exiled and persecuted(felony convictions), supported by a handful of loyal barons(republican governors), and the viziers(Musk and RFK) who defect to him when it is clear that all is not well. And people listen to and believe in stories. Not economic analyses and statistics. If you want relentless popularity, treat math as a four letter word and imply a story.
IME homeless people give better advice more cheaply and less judgmentally than therapists.
Uh, isn't the evidence that therapy- or at least forms of therapy- is genuinely helpful to people with actual mental health issues- or at least some subset thereof, eg PTSD- pretty ironclad?
Therapy is probably worse than talking to a parent/pastor/friend, because therapists are paid strangers who’ve been trained to see every problem primarily in terms of feelings.
Why on earth would you talk to either therapists or AI for advice? The ordering of who to go to should be something like elders->good friends->randos->the denizens of your dreams->homeless crack addicts->unfeeling algorithms->anyone who charges for advice.
The evolutionary drive to form families is the sexual drive. There is no other drive.
Yes there is. Adoption is common enough. Some people- not all- really enjoy raising children and want to do so desperately.
I mean it’s entirely possible that a slightly larger trivially small fraction of the population in Oklahoma supports themselves non capitalistically; realistically all of his geographical examples are better explained as urban vs rural though, and the class neighborhood difference is probably false.
I wonder if Gaetz is a maximally unacceptable figure put forth to make the still-controversial real appointment more palatable.
I'm not sure that 'sexually conservative culture' is the key ingredient. AFAICT Africa generally has no taboo on male adultery and lots of prostitution; you'd expect a sex strike to work worse in a sexually conservative culture with those conditions vs a more liberated society, because presumably prostitutes aren't participating in it.
I bonded with my own grandfather hunting, and fishing, and when school was out by helping him with various tool-related tasks he wasn't too old for. I legitimately don't know what non-redneck grandfathers do with their grandsons.
Gaetz is gonna have some radicals in his staff that are much more competent, I’m pretty sure.
Try Into Great Silence about the Carthusians. The Island is another good monastic film.
Grinders are disassemblable for cleaning, for obvious reasons. Cleanup is mostly a wipe-spray-dishwasher if applicable thing. That being said, some mixtures are much messier than others- the liver in boudin, and eventually the rice, take flossing over anything hard to get to.
The meat to spice ratio can be a few grams off without messing anything up; taste is pretty simple to get right as long as it’s mixed thoroughly and evenly, although offal as an ingredient can be difficult to manage. Consistency is much trickier because the meat to fat ratio is much more tedious and particular. Sausage is almost definitionally much fattier and saltier than most meat, and exactly how fatty or salty is a major driver of what you wind up with.
Fortunately I was using venison as the meat, from which all the fat is removed as part of processing, allowing me to straightforwardly weigh beef suet or pork fat cap in. In the past, when I have made boudin, or used commercial pork, the correct fat percentage has been much more difficult.
Cutting the fat out of the venison was tedious and messy and took more time than the rest of it combined. I find it a satisfying hobby, if definitely ‘work’.
More options
Context Copy link