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@timsev Well this is what a lot of people have failed to realize over the years: the administration is not the government. It's only one piece of the government.

If you want the US government to be on board with something then you need the branches to agree to it so that it becomes the policy of the entire government.

Anything less is little more than a handshake agreement with the individual currently sitting behind a desk who will be replaced.

So yeah, it is wild, but it is wild because so many don't understand that they aren't making an agreement with the whole government, that they are just tying themselves to one administration that will come and go.

@craig_groeschel I just appreciated that you took the time to write this out 🙂

Nice investigation!

volkris boosted

Of interest to no one, but I don't think Pine-Sol contains as much pine oil or pinene as it used to, if any. It doesn't smell like it used to (no this is not a Yankee Candle toot, stop it 🙂 ). It has this weird lab-designed pine-vanilla scent.

I have two bottles of "Original Pine-Sol (R) multi-surface cleaner". One (2020) says "active ingredient: glycolic acid 1.75% . . . Contains pine oil." The other (2023) says, "active ingredient citric acid 1.75%" They both smell about the same. Now that I know which is which, the one from 2020 maybe smells a little more harsh and chemical.

You'd probably do just as well using acetic acid 5%. Maybe throw in some sodium bicarbonate for mild abrasive and foaming action. Citric acid: what a rip-off smh.

Anyway I said I wasn't going to use carb cleaner or Foamy Engine Brite on the stainless steel cooktop, but I caved rather quickly. Don't do that, but if you do, be safe, use the exhaust fan, clean up thoroughly, etc.

I have Bar Keepers Friend, but I cannot deal with oxalic acid today.

@BrideOfLinux

There's just not much to see there. That is how the government is supposed to work, if you don't want to do the job you quit. So it's not really a scandal or worth spending much time talking about.

This is government functioning as intended. Not much else to say.

@AnarresProject Well it's not Musk doing things but rather the heads of agencies and departments who have that authority to do those things.

Yes, employers get to manage their employees. That's how it works.

@CptSuperlative I just think it's really funny that what you are saying echoes goals of MAGA types.

They flat out say that one of their goals is for states to be more independent, and so I guess it's working.

@sun you say that like taxes weren't part of the original deal

@AnnaAnthro this is the same sky is falling rhetoric that was so debunked during Trump's first presidency.

I don't know why anyone would believe it now after seeing it fell to come to pass back then.

@bit101 cool!

I support any effort that promotes that sort of thing.

Although, there is an issue that it has to be societal, not just technological. It's not enough for smart engineers to build the system, we have to have non-technical consumers convinced to look for it and use it.

It just makes me think about how end-to-end encryption is a long-solved problem, technologically, but socially it's still not the standard.

Anyway, here's hoping! But I'm not optimistic, unfortunately.

@karlauerbach No, you have it exactly backwards!

No I'm not talking theory at all. I'm talking that there are substantial procedures that the US government has for addressing the complaints that people are bringing up. We don't need any sort of constitutional amendment, we have plenty of room for Congress to act, for example.

In fact, most of these very substantial, extremely non-theoretical procedures do go through Congress. Whether we elect people that use those procedures or not is a different matter, and it's up to us to hold them accountable for what they do in Congress.

This isn't theory. The Constitution as it is, without needing to talk about amendment, provides pathways to resolution, so there is no crisis. It's just voters voting for representatives to hopefully do what we expect them to do.

And if they don't? Well the Constitution gives us that power to vote against our interests if we want to.

@W_Lucht to be sure, this is every administration, and the US system of government was designed specifically to keep those tendencies in check.

In fact, the US system of checks and balances relies on administrations being so self-interested so they can keep the other branches of government from running amok.

In terms of game theory it's actually kind of brilliant.

@W_Lucht having recently spent quite a lot of time engaging with healthcare and retirement in the US, the stories about not having it are pretty overblown.

Really, it's more that so many in the US choose lifestyles that are harder to stay healthy and retire through.

It's a different set of values. It's a very personal matter what set of values you prefer.

@jfrantzius

@barrygoldman1 each instance operates independently here, and they trade content with each other, but there's no guarantee that any particular instance is going to trade any particular content with any other.

Most importantly, the people running some instances configure them specifically not to trade content with others. So everyone on this platform is under the thumb of their instance operators.

So you might not see replies from other servers because either the other instance is configured not to send you replies or your instance is configured not to accept them from the other.

And that's not even getting into technical malfunctions.

@realTuckFrumper

If you're so reliant on political decisions, well, that was probably a bad thing to rely on in the first place.

Sounds like these tribal organizations made bad choices in the past if a political shift so undermines things they are relying on.

@bit101

There's a drum that I've been banging for a long time, that we really needed to normalize things like digital signatures for authentic reporting, where everybody involved would sign the content to confirm that it's legit. It would create a digital chain of custody, in a way, that we could validate.

I even had friends in journalism outright push back against that proposal. They had their reasons, none that I found compelling.

And so we are now getting to the world that I've been fearing for a while, when AI can generate content and we can't really be sure what is and is not human validated. We never put in place the norms that would help us check authenticity, and now we are entering a world authenticity is going to be more and more suspect.

Anyway, yeah posts like these just make me think about how long it's been that I've been seeing this coming and wishing we would take steps to protect ourselves from its implications.

Well here we are.

@karlauerbach

Again, the reason we are not in the constitutional crisis is because the constitution provides mechanisms to address where we are today. We are still within the rulebooks.

It doesn't matter whether we like it or not, whether we prefer it or not, whether we like such and such a policy, whether such and such is outdated, any of that.

Like it or not, the current state of affairs is within the rulebook, so there is no crisis.

No, isn't causing a constitutional crisis. The Constitution has mechanisms in place to address everything that's happening here. There's no crisis, there's just a need to apply the constitutional order.

But, I just keep thinking that yelling constitutional crisis must be referring to their own crisis wherein the Constitution just doesn't provide them with the tools to impose their political preferences on the country after voters rejected them.

It's a crisis of party, not of Constitution.

They should put forward better candidates than this.

@mekkaokereke

Keep in mind what you're saying: if it hasn't budged in 80 years, then it doesn't seem like a very useful vulnerability. If it hasn't made inroads in that many generations, then that doesn't work.

So no, this isn't about the United States refusal to address racism. This is about a political norm, a durable political structure, which is a very different thing.

If you want people to vote differently then you need to understand why they're voting the way they are, and that's not about racism, clearly, if nothing else based on what you said about how long it's been that people are voting that way.

@portlandy

@breakfastmtn I would simply counter that it doesn't really matter where you preach to the choir, it's still not going to be productive.

And like you said, often it plays into the hands of Trump supporters.

@mekkaokereke Well keep in mind that for a lot of people it's not about attacking groups I don't like, but about this sense of applying the rule of law fairly.

To be clear, I'm not saying that's a correct description of what's going on, I'm saying that's how a lot of people see it.

Like you said above, people didn't learn. Well this is what people need to learn, how other people see things so that we can understand and then engage with them.

Regardless of how you or I see it, a lot of people see Trump as restoring fairness and rule of law. And they need to be engaged on those terms.

@curtosis

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