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@pdbowman

Well, it's like saying fans give the umpire at a baseball game the authority to say whether it was a ball or a strike.

Yes, you can quibble over whether to trust the umpire when you're really, really insistent that it was a bad call. The fans decide whether to believe you over the umpire, so the fans give or don't give that authority. Sure.

But at the end of the day, the umpire still has the call that matters to the outcome.

@Bergetoons

If you read the Supreme Court opinion, that's not at all what they ruled. It also ignores that a lower court had also ruled the election map unconstitutional.

That's the contradiction that the Supreme Court had to settle, two lower courts giving LA contradictory rulings.

The article also misses that redistricting didn't start with Trump. As usual, he just glommed onto an effort already underway to claim popular credit.

@T2R

That may be the case, but then what?

If we lean into the nihilism where there's no hope in the body politic, then it kind of promotes the conclusion of, why should these politicians bother fighting?

I mean, most of the politicians are manipulable morons--they wouldn't know how to fight if they wanted to. The executive branch is definitely full of such people, so even if the legislators faught their laws would hardly be executed.

The way out is to say the US system puts power in the hands of the voters to get the government they vote for, whether they're morons or not.

@Solemarc

Yep, the way package repos are used these days promotes that kind of thing, which brings me to my reaction:

"This is just the price of building modern web apps,” sounds completely correct, and it's just a shame that this IS the price we all pay for what the industry regards as the form of a modern web app.

It's caveman stuff to not wire in all of that stuff.

...and so cavemen had faster web browsing even on ancient computers :)

@wnd @jbz

@lisagetspolitik

The problem is, that's the completely opposite of what the Supreme Court said in their ruling. They emphatically said overt dilution of Black vote is absolutely illegal.

It was the heart of their ruling.

So the problem is that these protests rooted in claims that informed folks know to be false just end up looking foolish and misinformed.

It's like a protest saying that our government needs to address the flat earth issue. The protesters won't make much headway.

And in this case it serves to sully the whole idea of Selma.

@blag

I don't think this is a good application for ActivityPub.

Bookmarks are naturally supposed to stick around while AP is focused on a stream of events that are naturally ephemeral.

Permanent with a momentary aspect vs momentary with a permanent aspect.

@jupiter_rowland

Right, this sort of thing should be part of how the reader crafts their experience personally, not up to the poster trying to engage with the vastly different individuals who might or might not ever be exposed to it.

It actually sounds like a great application for AI. Maybe it can't order the shirt I want from an online shop, but it can recognize eyes for me if I don't want them in my feed!

But the operation of the poster and the operation of the reader are independent. Only the poster knows exactly what he wants to express, and only the individual reader knows exactly what he wants to read.

If the poster wants to label a CW, then by all means, that's part of his expression! If the reader doesn't want to see something, then by all means, he should be empowered to filter it out to suit his wants.

So for example, a challenge about what does and doesn't count as eye contact? No, I wouldn't challenge that but rather leave it up to the individual reader. What counts as eye contact to one might not to another, and there's absolutely nothing wrong with that.

It's great, actually, showing the power each person has to customize their own experience.

@collective_truth

@zjmontague.bsky.social

It's just another case of actions that are largely performative.

They'll waste resources making a list for the sake of showing their base that they did something.

@micchiato

I think this is very noteworthy:

"Former President Joe Biden’s disastrous decision to run for reelection, and his stubborn refusal to step aside"

His decision to step aside? As if it was his choice? NO. The party needs to take responsibility for adopting him as their candidate. They absolutely didn't have to.

Biden was clearly a bad candidate, but the party chose him anyway. And they skipped a primary to pivot to an even worse one.

If we're conducting an autopsy of the party, this needs to be shouted loudly to hold the party accountable and demand change from them.

@admin

Folks yelling about the uniparty don't seem to notice the stark differences between the two parties in the US.

Yes, there are points of consensus throughout the US population that drives parties to some overlap, but it's just nutty to be yelling uniparty given what we see on a day to day basis.

@samiamsam

That's pretty much the opposite of what was described above.

Above was described hiding pregnancy and inappropriate medical care, not being open and seeking correct care.

I don't think you got it.

@moelassus

That shows how so many are focusing on the wrong branch of government here.

If they want law changed then they have to look to the legislative branch, that makes law, rather than the judicial branch that is bound by how the legislators we elect legislate.
@thenewoil

@dougiec3

Well, what are specific examples of why you're taking exception to his stance?

@T2R

I just emphasize: it's not that they need to get out of the way, it's that voters need to stop electing them.

Voters have the power. Voters actively go out to cast votes. When we act like it's up to the politicians we disempower ourselves.

@Nordstahl

I think we all suffer a lot of betrayal these days, we all feel that we put trust in people who turned out to be untrustworthy.

Remember: polling shows a historic loss of faith among the public in institutions ranging from the press through churches. All of that is a form of betrayal.

The part that I notice, though, is how often people keep believing their betrayers, as if they want to maintain the time before the betrayal was seen.

volkris boosted

Favorite new thing learning French was encountering the phrase "un peu trop hexagonale" meaning "a bit too hexagonal" to mean "a bit too French" because France is roughly the shape of hexagon. I'd encountered "l'Hexagone" plenty of times, but didn't know one could be hexagonale.

@Nonilex

The AP headline misrepresents what happened.

The Supreme Court did not reject the VA congressional map as that wasn't before them. It also did not reject a bid to restore congressional map favoring Democrats. Again, that wasn't before them.

And it really wouldn't have been before them since that's not how the Supreme Court works.

The SC declined to get involved by temporarily pausing the state court's ruling. That's all.

supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/25/

@T2R

Don't tell them to fight. Stop reelecting the individuals who failed to fight.

It's really on us that we acknowledge that these individuals keep screwing up but we actively vote to return them to office anyway.

They botched this whole process... but they'll use their failure to score political points and get our votes.

@ShingoMouse

Remember: stop electing and reelecting the representatives who have been ineffective at promoting the things you care abuot.

We keep watching representatives fail and then reelecting them anyway.

It's really up to them to get the job done. And up to us to stop choosing to give them the power that they fail to use.

@Nordstahl not sure what you're referring to exactly, but have you considered that maybe what you believed as a child, well maybe you might have learned better as you grew up?

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