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@rbreich Naively, I'd think the right answer is to make it cheaper and more effective to do table stakes things like "make sure people file".

Perhaps if the tax code were simpler this would be possible.

But even if not – why is that the expensive thing that IRS doesn't do, first, if it is short on funds?

@kinyutaka @LevZadov @ekes @justpeachy @ItsTrainingCatsAndDogs@kolektiva.social here's another metaphor: suppose there's a guy who rapes, kills, and kidnaps babies. Then the cops get into a shootout trying to arrest that guy. Someone is killed by a stray bullet.

At this point it's pretty reasonable to thoroughly investigate if the cops are taking necessary precautions to avoid that sort of thing, while at the same time recognizing that it's probably not possible to completely avoid any risk of that and still arrest the rapist baby murderer.

FWIW some people like Jordan Peterson seem to think IDF shouldn't even try to use force here; like in the metaphor don't arrest the guy at all.

@justpeachy @ekes @LevZadov @ItsTrainingCatsAndDogs@kolektiva.social well, I'm asking what those other ways are. I sure hope there are other ways; I've explicitly said I don't know what they are, though?

@justpeachy @ekes @LevZadov @Linux_Is_Best@mstdn.social @ItsTrainingCatsAndDogs@kolektiva.social Then what instead?

@justpeachy @ekes @LevZadov @Linux_Is_Best@mstdn.social @ItsTrainingCatsAndDogs@kolektiva.social No, I mean in response to the mass murder. After the mass murder/rape/kidnapping on Oct 7, naively I would think the IDF would at some point need to degrade the capabilities of the group that carried it out. (especially since they say they intend to repeat it many times: ‘there will be a second, a third, a fourth’). How do they do this while minimizing civilian casualties? I had hoped they could do better than they are now, but I have no idea if that is realistic.

This matters in a practical sense to me personally, because the government I have the privilege to vote for seems to be bankrolling whatever they're doing: because of that it is on me to find an answer to this question, at least in some sense.

@kinyutaka @LevZadov @ekes @justpeachy @Linux_Is_Best@mstdn.social @ItsTrainingCatsAndDogs@kolektiva.social And those internment camps were far from the worst example of things the Allies should have done differently!

@ekes @LevZadov @justpeachy @Linux_Is_Best@mstdn.social @ItsTrainingCatsAndDogs@kolektiva.social Exactly; that gets at what I'm asking. (I don't get the "please... " line?)

So are they missing the mark in this regard? How do we (you and I) evaluate this – assuming we don't want to take the IDF's or Hamas' word for it?

@rticks@mastodon.social @LevZadov @justpeachy @Linux_Is_Best@mstdn.social @ItsTrainingCatsAndDogs@kolektiva.social Dude nobody cares if you block them.

@rticks@mastodon.social @LevZadov @justpeachy @Linux_Is_Best@mstdn.social @ItsTrainingCatsAndDogs@kolektiva.social I just asked for a solution; isn't that evidence?

@LevZadov @ekes @justpeachy @Linux_Is_Best@mstdn.social @ItsTrainingCatsAndDogs@kolektiva.social You see the allies' actions in WW2 as "genocide"? They were *stopping* an actual genocide, although I don't think that was the main goal. Well, anyway, like I said, we could have done a lot better there, sure.

@LevZadov @ekes @justpeachy @Linux_Is_Best@mstdn.social @ItsTrainingCatsAndDogs@kolektiva.social (1) How should they defend themselves? I'm hearing a lot this kind of thing – describing Gaza as an open-air prison, and so on. But no coherent alternative IDF could be pursuing instead.

It would be great if there was some magical way Israel could end Hamas without any civilian casualties, but I don't know if that is possible. Like in WW2, we killed, what, like a million German civilians? That was awful. We probably could have done better. But certainly not 0, right?

@huntingdon @lowqualityfacts I feel like if it had automatic fire capabilities like the military version of the ar-15, the M16, which is an "assault rifle", it would be even more dangerous, wouldn't it?

(And automatic weapons have been essentially banned in the US for decades, there's very little political support for changing that, I think.)

But I think that isn't the point of people complaining that the ar-15 isn't an assault rifle. I think the point of all that semantic hair splitting is that the "assault weapon" bans are incoherent nonsense.

Those laws let you buy things like ar-15s (or similar weapons like a ruger mini), but just not if they have certain safety features or pistol grips. That's just... weird.

Do you want to ban semiautomatic weapons? If not, then why do you want to ban just "tacticool" ones like the ar-15? That, if I understand correctly, is the point.

@deborahh @dangillmor Yeah, that's a pretty good article, I think.

We see he encouraged Trump to keep up the lawsuits and stuff. I think filing lawsuits /etc like this like Gore and Trump (and many others) did after losing has to be seen as reasonable, although Gore did it with much more class, of course. Like, when you hit 50 lawsuits that's probably a sign you crossed a line awhile ago. But gauche is Trump's brand, I guess? (Did Johnson do anything to encourage violence, or "martial law" or whatever?)

We see here that he is pro-life. Lots of people are pro-life: is a label like "far-right" dependent on %age of popular support, or would you label like 40% of the population as "far-right"? I guess, whatever, if "far-right" means "more right than I like" then you do you, but I wouldn't waste any energy complaining about media not following your lead. Same point with certain gender-affirming medical procedures for minors.

We see that like a lot of Rs these days, he doesn't support aid to Ukraine. This is also pretty popular, so it's hard to label this position as far-right as above. Personally I have mixed feelings: I desperately want Ukraine to win decisively and take back donbass/crimea, and I have some concept of the broader problem with this sort of thing happening, but as a practical matter, if nothing else, our continued aid clearly means more civilian deaths in the near term. (Similar analysis in Israel/Gaza.)

@lauerhahn @dangillmor A coup... what did he do along those lines?

Assuming we all agree there's a distinction between "filing lawsuits about what you think are procedural violations" (like what Gore did in 2000) and "attempting a coup" (like what Ferdinand Marcos did in 1972)....

Did Johnson support more the former, or more the latter? (If it's the latter, sorry I missed it in what I've read, I'd love a pointer.)

@ct_bergstrom @drs1969 Yeah, it's a tool that writes (mediocre?) prose; I think it's best to think of it that way.

So if you want to use it to write something, you have to go back and forth with it until the material is correct.

If it answers questions correctly, you got lucky: it's echoing something from its training data, I guess.

That's my understanding of how it could be useful. People seem concerned that it is going to take over the world and kill us all, so I might be missing something, though.

@Linux_Is_Best@mstdn.social @MissingThePt Yeah, it's weird how Musk repeatedly wildly underestimates software engineering complexity.

@jensorensen just saying that woman would have been against Trump in a big way.

@whatzaname @freemo @NikaShilobod yeah I was replying directly to freemo's post end article, which were largely about Soviets. I fully realize his article does not refute your point! We definitely would all benefit from stronger neighborhoods and communities and so on.

@jensorensen More infrastructure spending was one of Trump's main things in the '16 campaign. This cartoon has a really odd understanding of "Trumpism".

@thor The guy in the back should probably try to get his chest up more – i.e. a straighter upper back. Think: proud chest. More like the woman in the front.

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