@jrp I'm with you, personally, but then I'd say with good UI design there's room for all of us here, for different users to tailor their experiences to their personal preferences.
My reasoning: character count isn't about content but about form.
And practically, while your fediverse reading program might not be able to understand a post well enough to see what the content is about, and give you a warning, it can easily detect character count and do something you'd like if the count is too large.
If you want to skip all posts above 500 characters or whatever, it would be trivial to program a client to do that. It's a UI issue.
@KeithDevlin well, what examples do you have of that happening?
Occam's Razor would have us at least consider that maybe they rule in certain directions because the argument they propose is simply the right one, that there isn't this conspiracy involved.
@DemocracyMattersALot
@MugsysRapSheet that's because Trump's recounts never made it to SCOTUS in a way that warranted its action.
In Bush v Gore the Court was involved because a lower court had demanded a recount. When it comes to Trump it was the opposite: lower courts rebuked him already, so there wasn't anything for the SCOTUS to do.
@philip_cardella@historians.social @TonyStark @CivilityFan @axeshun
@bigheadtales what case?
But as we can see in this article, the solution didn't work and people were left without housing.
@MugsysRapSheet it's not that simple as this is a judicial process involving multiple courts going through processes of hearings and preliminary injunctions and appeals of the injunctions.
If you really want to simplify it that way, though, the answer is no. The appeal was over an injunction that actually allowed Border Patrol in.
But again, this matter is not that simple.
@MugsysRapSheet when you go directly to the ruling you'll see that's not what they ruled, regardless of the reporting.
Here's the order for you to read for yourself. It's short.
In fact, they would have had to issue a long ruling, not a short order, had they actually ruled that officers can come in an cut razor wire.
https://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/courtorders/012224zr_fd9g.pdf
@MugsysRapSheet that's not what's happening in this legal proceeding.
The state isn't ignoring SCOTUS. It's that SCOTUS didn't say what so many are running around claiming it said.
@JaniceSelbie well, where in her rulings do you see magical thinking?
@swanksalot I mean, the Court issued plenty of rulings even while he was on the bench where other members disagreed with him.
Nothing really odd about it.
Yes, justices are wrong sometimes. That's why we have more than one, and why they're limited in their authority.
@cspcypher yeah, but then we introduce those chaotic humans to the mix, and it turns out society is not so amenable to being designed and well-ordered :)
I wouldn't say so much words of wisdom as words of someone who doesn't seem to have met humans yet.
That gets it exactly backwards.
From what the article says, people value apartment rental enough that they'd naturally pay more for them, and owners are willing to rent at those prices.
So the higher rates are natural, reflecting the value of housing.
The problem here is that the government solution stands in the way of people renting at those naturally higher prices, artificially constraining the housing market.
People value housing. These restrictions stand between people and what they want to rent.
@accretionist@techhub.social hijacking the topic?
@Jayslacks wrote about his feeling that Biden was boring, so I chimed in that I wish that was the case, as his tenure has been pretty disruptive.
And that lack of boringness is something too few people are aware of, though it should be pretty significant to their voting decision.
And then you pivoted to Trump, in a very hijacky way, before starting up with namecalling and all this other nonsense.
I'm happy to chat on topic as I think there are important things to discuss there.
@thisismissem nah, the other side of the coin is that the way humans have evolved means we can adapt to it.
@Free_Press I generally hear them complaining that Biden hasn't delivered Ukraine aid effectively, and without reason to think that would change they don't want to throw good money after bad.
@jeffjarvis I wish that was the case.
We need to be spending far more time focusing on the actual reasoning presented in the decisions that the Court hands down and not continue to be distracted by stories of personal drama.
We shouldn't care about ACB's father. That's her business. We should care about the rulings, as that's ours.
@accretionist@techhub.social
But to be serious, anyone who's actually interested in the state of science in the US can compare budgets against research output and program requirements to see that in the last couple of years those expected performance metrics have been missed more and more due to orders coming down the pipeline from the Biden administration.
I know I was in a meeting just last week going over astoundingly poor numbers from the past couple of years.
Anyone who's interested in this should really be pulling up those numbers from federal agencies and even filing FOIA requests to see the internal arguments about it, because it has been a major thing that's been coming up that hasn't been getting as much attention as it deserves.
And again, I'm not saying it's anything intentional. As far as I can tell it's just micromanaging by people who don't know what they're doing, but it is seriously impacting scientific efforts throughout the country, and even the world.
@accretionist@techhub.social
Again, welcome to social media!
Where you can believe anything you want, and if you don't care you don't care, and that's perfectly acceptable around here.
But maybe other people do.
And heck, maybe other people will consider that you're the Russian plant trying to move attention away from these serious problems.
But who cares? It's just social media.
And enormous amounts of wasted money out of the US Treasury, but never mind that.
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 ;)