By sticky do you mean popular, or something different?
This article was pretty sensational, fearmongering for clicks. It was a good example of why so many have lost respect for outfits like the NY Times.
Your mention of independent federal agencies is one great example: the article plays fast and loose with the legalities around independent agencies, overlooking the legal barriers that distinguish them from other agencies, ones that would prevent exactly the thing the article is trying to hype up.
It's just foolish for this reporter to act as if a president can revoke checks on presidential power, as if those are voluntary.
They're not.
Not really, since it's relating to internal processes.
It's what's called bureaucracy.
It's only authoritarian to the extent that it attempts to impose on people outside of the government.
Link to your source?
I mean, that's why the work to combat climate change might not actually be so important.
The reason I don't agree with that take is because, assuming Bluesky is designed and intended to be distributed down to the user level, there's hardly a point to throwing resources at a futile effort of moderation that's just going to be thrown out the window the moment they launch the distributed feature.
Another way to look at it is that the lack of moderation today might be an indication that they really are committed to being so distributed.
There's just not much point to wasting resources that way if their intention is to open the flood gates to really user-focused platform soon.
Well I think it depends on one's definition of better.
Difficult moderation is an unavoidable issue of being a more distributed platform, or being more user focused, so it comes down to whether one believes it more important to be distributed or tied to administrators, who can do that moderation.
It comes down to where each of us might prefer that balance.
This, too, is not to be taken seriously.
It's a sensationalized claim that is completely unrealistic, completely detached from how the US government is actually structured.
Because the Supreme Court did not call for a second majority black district.
It laid out requirements for complying with the Voting Rights Act, and there was no such quota involved.
Heck, It's even factually false that Republicans rejected a call for a second majority black district.
They merely followed the Court to make a district competitive and let the voters decide.
What do you mean?
What have they done lately to rub you wrong?
Well, we keep electing the congresspeople who maintain this as the law.
And then we reelect them when they fail to fix it.
We really need to emphasize this: if we want better government we need to stop reelecting the exact same congresspeople who fail to fix it.
Otherwise, well, yep, these are the laws that were passed by representatives that we empowered.
And that's especially sad because a frustrating proportion of educated and even intelligent people are willing to accept the paradox of doing nothing being doing something
and then harangue someone for something they literally didn't do.
Well right.
SCOTUS did NOT order the creation of a second majority black district, despite reports wrongly saying otherwise.
It laid out the conditions for meeting the Voting Rights Act, and the quote in the article pretty well reflects what the Court said: it has to be left up to the voters, and not gerrymandered for a particular result.
https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/22pdf/21-1086_1co6.pdf
Yep. And this sort of sensationalized reporting is why so many have lost so much respect for outfits like the NY Times.
They get clicks yelling and going right up to the line of "dictator" and they get their clicks, but the public ends up mislead as the article doesn't have all that much meat to it.
I think if you listen to conservatives, conservatives make it clear that that's not what they're talking about.
In my experience, the extremely common meaning of "deep state" among conservatives is the civil service, the career employees of the federal government that they have disagreements with.
Of course, half the time the conservative using the word will be so uninformed about how the government functions that they won't know WHO they have an issue with, just that it's someone in there.
Well, I've always thought far too few tech type people are familiar with some of the applications of cryptography, PKI and all of that.
If more knew about it we'd have widespread use of pgp, web of trust, and many other techniques with very practical benefit.
And of course I'm referring to technical people knowing about the crypto stuff. Much of it is legitimately technical, so I wouldn't fault common users for not knowing about all of this magic inside their applications :)
But yeah, someone who's not familiar with it could be excused for seeing those dichotomies/binaries. Without such solutions, the problems are real.
Welcome to the platform that spurns the algorithms that brought them more of a variety of posts :)
There are some upsides for users for good algorithms.
I think they're confusing a want for absolute power with the simple fact that there are separation of powers concerns to protect judicial independence in the federal government.
Yes, SCOTUS gets to police itself, because despite the downsides of that idea, it's better than letting the other branches order around the head of the Judicial Branch.
I think the most pressing and fundamental problem of the day is that people lack a practically effective means of sorting out questions of fact in the larger world. We can hardly begin to discuss ways of addressing reality if we can't agree what reality even is, after all.
The institutions that have served this role in the past have dropped the ball, so the next best solution is talking to each other, particularly to those who disagree, to sort out conflicting claims.
Unfortunately, far too many actively oppose this, leaving all opposing claims untested. It's very regressive.
So that's my hobby, striving to understanding the arguments of all sides at least because it's interesting to see how mythologies are formed but also because maybe through that process we can all have our beliefs tested.
But if nothing else, social media platforms like this are chances to vent frustrations that on so many issues both sides are obviously wrong ;)