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@Setok

Well it makes sense since Mastodon is a piece of software, not a service, arguably operated by many different service providers, and there's no solid way of accurately counting all of its weekly active users.

I'd say folks on the Fediverse aren't challenging Twitter. They're in something of a different industry.

@Sarahp

@mnutty

Firstly, I'm pretty sure the GOP won't take both House and Senate much less do so with a set of members who will cooperate.

Secondly, even if somehow that happened, Congress still couldn't drop Constitutional restrictions on presidential action.

So most importantly for this context, a president can't claim unchecked power if he's relying on the democratic process to cooperate AND still has to abide by constitutional restrictions.

The idea that Trump can just seize that power gets weaker with every qualification to the story.

@mnutty

Right, and so not by a president unilaterally, no matter what idiotic promises he might make to his base, which is why we need to call him out for making false promises to his base, AND call him out for failing to keep previous false promises.

We need to point out how weak Trump is, and how he is bound by law, not play into his claims to his base that he's going to do all this stuff he has no authority to do.

@bflipp

Anyone wanting to sic their followers on someone can simply link the thing, perhaps with a screenshot as you suggest, so keeping QT away from authors doesn't block the negative practice; it only blocks the positive that comes from it.

@paninid @taylorlorenz

@james

No because that doesn't convey the author intent of embedding and building on the post.

It doesn't bring that conversation into this one. Instead it says, "that over there"

And it doesn't carry the same level of informing the original author that he's being included in a new composition.

There is no real, full alternative for the QT

@taylorlorenz

@mnutty

You imagine incorrectly :)

No, agencies tend to exist by law passed by congresses and are bound to uncountable legal agreements made year after year. Presidents have no authority to do what's being claimed here, whether they want to or not.

Again, if Trump is telling his supporters he has authorities that he doesn't, promising things that he won't be able to fulfill, why in the world would we buy into his nonsense?

The better response isn't to buy into Trump's garbage. The better response is to point out that he's an idiot who can't live up to the promises he's making, just as he didn't live up to them before.

This false idea that a President Trump would have these powers is exactly what he's running on. Let's debunk that, not promote his campaign rhetoric.

@TMRuppert

The problem with your argument is that you named a bunch of primarily state and local government responsibilities to claim that the feds have underinvested.

And that's a big contributor to the problem: all too often we see other governments not doing their jobs and investing in their citizens, escaping accountability by passing the buck to the US.

And none of that really overcomes the Occam's Razor, that these representatives simply believe these to be ineffective ways of using federal resources. We don't have to grasp for malice to explain it.

@IvidappAvidapp you might want to check out the list of special features that @QOTO has added to their Mastodon instance.

Everything from QT to QT opt out to fancy math formatting and Markdown support.

It's a long list.

qoto.org/about/more

@blake @Mastodon

And for better or worse, some people want it this way.

Hirad  
Yes. I am suspended by mastodon.social! An entire instance blocked a user who isn't even on their own server. No warning and no way to request an a...

@realcaseyrollins

I figure they're bound to count different subsets of instances and so have different user counts, even setting aside policies for types of instances and maybe what counts as an active user.

In the distributed system there is no central point to actually count all users, so it will be an estimate no matter what.
@mastodonusercount

@edgeoforever

Believe it or not, there might be a difference or two between Hillary and Trump and their situations...

@blake

And some customized installations of have / already, so it's definitely doable.

@IvidappAvidapp @Mastodon

@TMRuppert

*shrug* it's their job to prioritize federal resources and identify places where the spending isn't turning out to be effective.

They're still talking about spending A WHOLE LOT OF MONEY, just not quite as much as others want to negotiate for.

@docjohng

Hmmm. I'm suspicious of this article, as at least the part I could read was vague on details like direct quotes from spokespeople or details on the accounting.

Missing details like that are a warning sign that the reporter might simply be misunderstanding or otherwise not accurately capturing the situation.

@mnutty

Again, it's just one example of how the article misleads, but it misses that presidents don't have the authority to do that.

He wants to purge the government? That's nice. And it's exactly why the system was designed without that possibility.

So no, it's not credible.

AND it plays into Trump's hands to act like it would be something he could do. We should be countering the guy by pointing out to his supporters that he's making empty promises and lying to them.

@zip

Don't discount the possibility that maybe the solution that seems so obvious to you has been considered by experts and upon deeper study found to have serious issues and maybe wouldn't work after all.

I always remember once hearing a podcast with a recurring segment called, "Why don't they just...?" where they took obvious solutions like these and asked experts why they didn't implement them. So often there were **really good reasons** not to implement the ideas.

These issues are more complicated than I think you're giving them credit for, especially once humans are involved.

@matdevdug

By sticky do you mean popular, or something different?

@mnutty

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.

@heideroosje

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.

@mnutty

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