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@edgeoforever

I think it's more that he's a completely empty-headed idiot who doesn't know anything until someone else tells him what to think, **and that point really should have been emphasized all along**.

People attacking Trump for his beliefs, instead of for not having any, just enamored him to his supporters, many of whom respect the guy for having a spine.

Sadly, so many of his critics bought into the story that he had these strong stances, therefore supporting the myth that got him elected.

volkris boosted

@SteveThompson

If they received such poor college education that they'd fall for the line that SCOTUS is to blame for the lack of loan forgiveness, that's just a reflection of failure at the high school level.

And maybe colleges really need to tighten their standards so that students don't waste so much money on educations that they're sadly unprepared for.

@corbden

Yeah, that's definitely a concern, and I'm glad we did develop stylesheets to address it.

(Setting aside issues of how *well* the stylesheets actually worked in the real world, that is.)

Still, this gets into the different schools of thought as to whether it's more important to convey the author's intent or to give the viewer what they want.

It's a debate with arguments on both sides, but yep, br is the tool for the author's intent and p is the tool to empower the reader.

And of course this actually ends up mattering more than just superficially when accessibility and screen readers come up.

@benbrown

@corbden

Ha! No! I am [jokingly] horrified by this comment!

So jokes aside, I'd say p and br have very important differences:

p is a semantic label, saying this is a paragraph. Render (or read or anything) it as you think best.

br is a command to insert a line break, saying nothing about why it's in there or what the content is.

Each has its place, and (as I recall) p is especially powerful because with stylesheets you can both say what you've written AND order it to be spaced the way you want.

@benbrown

@GhostOnTheHalfShell

Honestly, if that's the case it says more about the state of journalism than anything else, if journalists have such weak perspectives of the world that they can be so shaped by social networks.

At that point every single article you read is probably not giving you an accurate view on the world.

@e_urq

@tcely

It's worth highlighting how much outright misbehavior there's been in the nuclear regulatory space for decades now, up to the point of courts calling out illegality and regulators just ignoring the rulings.

And the misbehavior seems to all fall on the anti-nuclear side of things.

So this isn't merely a case of political disagreement or development of public policy. Once laws are so ignored it becomes a case of outright corruption.

@Angelica

@bespacific

I'd say you're leaving out the most important branch of government.

We need new laws passed to reform the laws around tax deductions, but we keep electing and then reelecting the same congresspeople who fail to do it.

@swest6602

The article is confusing a few different things and in the course misunderstanding the structure of the US government.

For example, you really can't talk about independent agencies in the same way as normal executive branch agencies. One is under presidential control and the other isn't, by definition.

But the big thing I'd respond with is this: the reason the US has a president in charge of the executive branch is because then he can be held to account for executive branch functioning.

If the president wants to fully own the DOJ, then great! He will personally stand for impeachment should the DOJ misbehave.

That's the trade.

@ikantolol

Perhaps that's what you get without defederation :)

But I say that with my eternal emphasis that each user should be empowered to shape their own experience here, as much as practical, even if that includes an experience that some of us might view as cesspoolish.

@BenJammin @Double_A

@nicol

The big issue I'd see is that the skillset needed to operate a site like Tumblr might not be very front and center in that group of superusers.

From technical through organizational skill, it sounds like a job one can't really do as a side project, and I'd worry that users wold focus on their personal goals for the site without having the abilities to actually implement those goals.

@darnell

@drrjv

The important thing here is not what some rich guy did or what Thomas did, but rather was a law actually broken, and if not, let's elect the people who are willing to fix the law.

And stop reelecting those who aren't.

We need to not get distracted by the drama and instead reform laws that need reform.

@ProPublica

@strypey

Well there ARE some clever applications of that are underappreciated but that might help break some of those dichotomies.

Just for one trivial example, letting a platform have a hashed* version of an address book would allow lookup against the book without them actually having the contact info.

*and salted, but nevermind

@bigheadtales

I mean yes, if you really want to look at it that way, a government is a grand conspiracy. And a government with a constitutional basis has the details of the conspiracy written right there in public.

Police are prevented from doing something about it? Police are part of the government!

@rainbear

Sure, and if you can't tell, I'm critical of those design choices :)

But it is what it is. Horse is out of the barn. Now we work with what we have.

@bigheadtales

Right. The Constitution that doesn't mention the DOJ, but *does* mention that "The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America.”

The design of the US government is exceedingly clear about this point because it was considered just so important that there be one person, a president, to be held accountable for the actions of his branch.

Should the DOJ misbehave, it's the president's neck on the line, for very good reason. He faces impeachment should he not keep the DOJ in line.

To disconnect the DOJ from that source of accountability is to set the federal police free from their constitutional limits.

It's a very dangerous proposal.

@nanowiz

As far as I recall, qualified immunity requires good faith, and if the guy is issuing fake tickets it'd be hard to see how it would apply to him.

@rainbear

Basically, the software engineering decisions that went into the ActivityPub protocol were really focused on the instance, not the user, being fundamental, for better or worse.

The benefit of the doubt argument might be that they were imagining different instances having different communities, with a sense of home community.

But in the end it does make it like email, where if you had email addresses at gmail and msn, you wouldn't expect the inboxes to synchronize.

There are some people with ideas about how to make what you describe work, but they generally seem to be kind of kludges, trying to make the protocol do something it wasn't really supposed to do.

@gabriel

I really don't see this clip as pumping Bitcoin.

It sounded like a pretty tame description of cryptocurrencies in general, contrasting them with other potential asset classes.

fediverse 

@mjc

Probably yes, depending on exactly the sort of case you're referring to.

If it helps: posts don't live on the origin instance. They are broadcast to other instances, and basically every reply is a brand new post, with a reference to the old post, that also gets broadcast to other instances.

Checking out the standard, though, it leaves it optional ("may") for clients to notify the origin instance that there was a reply.

At least, if I read it right.

w3.org/TR/activitypub/

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