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@MeidasTouch

Meh. An awful lot of GOP figures are more than happy to use this occasion to fundraise and confirm their rhetoric that they have been unfairly targeted all of these years.

I don't think it's much of a shock that Trump is getting indicted. Heck, that was kind of part of the conservative theory for a good while now. They're not so much losing their minds as they are nodding and saying, yep, saw this coming.

And of course quite a lot of people on the Republican side of things are happy for the off chance that this rids them of the guy.

@PattyHanson

But that's the problem, it doesn't sound like the normal rules would remove her from the case since she doesn't have those conflicts of interest that normally call for recusal.

So long as she is an active judge in that jurisdiction the normal rules say she should be on the case.

@lain

I've heard people make that framing over the years, and I really don't know where they come up with it.

The value of the scientific method is exactly that theories are maybe, leading to testing via hypothesis.

When I hear people saying theory is certain, they really get the whole point of backwards. If the theory was certain there would be nothing worth testing.

Just for completeness, the way I'd frame science is:
A model describes what you see
A theory guesses at how the model works
An experiment stresses the theory, trying to break it
A hypothesis is the stress point where the theory may break

@PattyHanson

You back yourself into a corner there, though, appealing to normalcy while saying nothing about this case is normal.

Well if nothing about this case is normal, then what does it matter if she's demonstrated behavior that isn't normal?

No, I don't believe it's right to give up that standard. We have existing rules of the road that we should apply even if we might not like the outcomes because the alternative is so much worse.

Giving up on the normal processes because we'd prefer something else in this particular prosecution threatens to win a battle but lose a war.

@PattyHanson

Well isn't that the normal standard?

If the judge has passed conduct that is unacceptable then she should be impeached. But barring impeachment, so long as she is on the job, the law professor's position you describe seems pretty reasonable.

@mastodonmigration

Yeah that is some throwing the baby out with the bath water pattern of thought.

If Lemmy can be valuable to the Fediverse community then it doesn't matter one bit whether the developers are good people or bad people or smelly or have their in bad intentions.

This isn't like magic. The software will do what it is programmed to do regardless of the mindsets and motivations of the developers.

@courtcan

I think that overlooks that has been actively *rewarded* for so much of the BS he does, which has conditioned him to do more of it. In particular, we reward him with attention.

He gained power based on popularity of his behavior, as frustrating as that is to watch.

The reason I think this is important is because if we highlight the role of society in pushing him to do this crap, we can work on cutting it off.

We need to stop feeding the troll. Accountability can play into his hands.

@ChuffMeister

Maybe it's not some right-wing conspiracy, and Netflix is simply pointing out that those movies are popular in the world?

@nihilazo

Maybe one way to put it is that yes, a responsible developer will stand by his application, but in the open source world developers are free not to be so responsible :)

Really, it's like writing good comments in the code: arguably a developer SHOULD write good comments, but obviously devs, especially volunteer ones, often don't.

@calcifer

@newhinton

You can spill as many words as you want, but none of it changes the greed of demanding others resources while accusing them of being greedy.

@robarnold

volkris boosted

what plant’s scientific name has the most Main Character energy? I put forward Acer Rubrum as a first bid

@newhinton

Nothing to do with whether it's okay or not. You might think it's okay for people to greedily complain about greed while demanding other people's resources.

Whether that's okay or not is in the eye of the beholder.

Seems pretty upside down to me, though.

@robarnold

@persagen

Just because a precedent is overturned doesn't mean such a course correction is lawless.

Some precedents are themselves lawless, so it's out of respect for the law that they get overturned.

@jasongreen

One quick note, if you aren't familiar with it, the ActivityPub specification goes out of its way to say that entities don't have to be human users.

AP explicitly allows for non-user actors.

@newhinton

I agree that I am completely ignoring that :)

It has nothing to do with people demanding Reddit's resources, demanding other people's stuff, greedily.

@robarnold

Marking Sensitive because not everyone wants to see US political stuff 

@nonproductive

Yep, so that's exactly why I caution people not to rush to judgment here and be aware of that there are contested facts at the heart of this case.

I often do think of it in terms of a murder trial: people keep rushing forward with murder accusations before we even check to see if there's actually a dead victim involved.

By analogy, so many of these accusations over the last decade or so have involved murder accusations where the supposed victim is right there joining the chorus, jumping up and down very much alive, and pointing fingers. The world is just that absurd these days :-)

@Popehat @GottaLaff @TonyStark

@DanielCha

Yes but since a common usage of "adjacent" is exactly "adjoining" that is a distinction without a clear difference.

And that is even if somehow Kagan has managed to go through life ignorant of this definition. I find that hard to believe, but okay.

At the very least that potential equivalence of adjacent and adjoining means that the Court's reading is reasonable. It just applied a common interpretation of the term.

The rest strikes me as jumping through some pretty high hoops to expand executive branch power enormously without clear congressional approval.

Congress is of course free to clarify that it does want the president to have this huge amount of power, but at this point it's plenty reasonable to conclude that this power was not granted.

@newhinton

Yes I am leaving that out because it's not relevant.

If I am demanding your stuff then it doesn't really matter what terms you would prefer to provide your resources, I'm still demanding your stuff, greedily.

A whole lot of people are showing a real lack of introspection, and I think your comment is illustrating that.

@robarnold

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