Are you this old? pic.twitter.com/V2KJSnPQvH
— Jen Gentleman 🌺 (@JenMsft) January 11, 2021
Hotdog Stand!
Indeed I am.
Are you this old? pic.twitter.com/V2KJSnPQvH
— Jen Gentleman 🌺 (@JenMsft) January 11, 2021
Hotdog Stand!
Indeed I am.
one may wonder whether there's another motivation in saying vaccines will not necessarily guarantee freedom of movement
— sol (@fire__exit) December 8, 2020
Oh, of course. Lockdowns are showing how much power can be wielded and what it can achieve, and how easy it was to hoodwink all too many and destroy “pesky” businesses.
Lockdowns will be around a long, long time.
Even though I support Trump and many of his violent-ass supporters being banned from most platforms, the efficacy of this shows that the large tech companies have entirely too much power and nearly full control over the public commons.
This is not a good thing at all. I don’t have a lot of practicable answers for how to correct this vast imbalance of power. Breaking up these companies, though necessary, isn’t enough. The network effect will always be what it is, inexorably.
We have created a monster we can’t tame, control, or expel. That worries me as much as an attempted coup.
Love this. Had no idea there was a live version; have been listening to the studio version for years. Laure has an amazing voice. I love how she doesn’t stick to completely classical style but adds a lot of heavy metal flair to it. Makes it so much better.
If you watch no other part of this video, watch starting at 4:10. What the fuckkkkkkk.
Y’all, they’re all really good. But listen to how tight that drummer is. That’s like millisecond timing.
And Cleopatra on bass, alright.
That is fun. And the percussion in this song is great. Missing from most songs that should just have more.
I watched some of the show Hunters.
What the fuck.
Someone watched too much Tarantino without understanding what old Quentin was even attempting to do. It’s like a pastiche of a pastiche. Too much of it is like something made by a somewhat talented high schooler, but a high schooler someone gave $10 million to. It’s both trying too hard and not polished enough to be interesting.
Don’t recommend.
Another thing I wonder is why so many people are so incredibly bad at risk assessment?
I take risks but I always understand to the best of my abilities exactly what risk I am taking, what risks I am foisting on others, what the consequences will be if I fail, and what the benefits will be if the risk pays off.
Habits of an old trader, I guess.
But it’s not even hard. If you don’t concede to basic reality, of course, this will never help you. And most people seem to have very little connection to reality: half the people in this country don’t believe masks work despite not understanding anything about them, think the Covid-19 pandemic is a hoax, believe in extensive election fraud and that seditionist insurrectionists were just some lost tourists taking an unscheduled tour of the Capitol in full battle rattle.
It’s impossible to assess risk if your reality has been Fox News-ed into dipshit-ville. So half the country is a lost cause.
But what about the rest? What explains their complete mispricing of risk even by their own measures? Writing a book called Risk and the Real World is probably pointless because you can’t make people smarter, only angrier. Alas.
Americans, do we know why the brainworms make so many of you think things like "If a measure does not provide 100% protection and eliminate all risk why bother reducing the risk?" about things like messengers and face masks? Is it a specific region of the brain that's chewed up?
— Naomi Wu ๆบๆขฐๅฆๅงฌ (@RealSexyCyborg) January 12, 2021
I’ve been contemplating a great deal lately this bizarre Manichean thinking so characteristic of Americans. It’s just so strange.
Why do they believe a measure has to be 100% effective or it’s useless? Is this a result of the binary nature of STEM education, where either the answer is right or completely wrong? I want to understand but I just can’t produce any plausible model of this utter failure of assessment of the world.
The Chinese Communist Partyโs Global Lockdown Fraud.
I think this article is overstating its case in most areas (and about PCR testing, it’s nearly completely wrong), but about lockdowns I agree with most of it.
Remember, lockdowns were about flattening the curve to avoid overwhelming hospitals early — they were never intended (and in most places could not work as) a complete solution to the pandemic.
Not transmitting the virus matters, but mental stability, overall societal health and freedom matters too. Thus, extended lockdowns are bad policy and should’ve abated as other mitigation measures came to the fore: universal masking, better ventilation everywhere, more outdoor activities, testing and tracing, and state-sponsored quarantine of the infected or those suspected to be infected.
We did none of those things and thus one must ask why did we not? Is it just that our society is incapable of any concerted action? Yes, that’s part of it but the larger overarching impetus is that lockdowns massively benefit the rich and entrenched corporations. That is the number one reason for their absurd continuance past all excuses of efficacy and reason.
My personal guess is 90% or more of the decline in cases post-March had nothing to do with lockdowns and everything to do with warming weather, exposure to sunlight leading to increased Vitamin D production, higher temperatures and better ventilation due to spring/summer clement weather conditions. Most transmission, naturally, occurs in the home.
By the way, Taiwan had “no stringent restrictions on movement and no local or national lockdown” and has had among the lowest case rates and fatality rates in the world.
Lockdowns are, mostly, bunk policy and we should halt them immediately and move on to better ideas.
I know I am not the first one to say this, but there are a lot of very well credentialed people in tech worrying what would happen if internet giants collectively de-platformed a group who isn't right wing, while totally erasing the fact that it already happened to sex workers.
— Lesley Carhart (@hacks4pancakes) January 12, 2021
Absolutely no one cares about sex workers, though. Liberals are ridiculous prudes who are extremely terrified of sex. They largely deeply detest sex workers. The right is of course no better (but seems to be less vindictive about it for some reason that I have yet to figure out).
In my early life particularly, some of my closest friends and confidantes were or had been sex workers, but that shouldn’t have to be the case for someone to have empathy for anyone in that field.
But most people…just don’t seem to have that capability.
I put about 50/50 odds on another coup attempt between now and the end of January 20.
Now’s the best time, if you are going to do such a thing.
Violently overrunning police to storm the seat of government during a joint session of congress in a bid to overturn the result of a presidential election is categorically different from smashing the window of a Jamba Juice during a BLM protest. So f*cking stop it, right now.
— Will Wilkinson 🌐 (@willwilkinson) January 7, 2021
Aye, proper nailed it. Why is that not clear to more people?
Itโs a game. LARPing is a game. Qanon narrative is a game. Kayfabe is a game. A serious game, to be sure, but basically a game.
(Also: the intense stupidity of many of these folks is not to be dismissed as an important explanatory factor for a lot of what we are observing.) https://t.co/fiR3Q3bTME
— Nils Gilman (@nils_gilman) January 11, 2021
Yeah, ain’t that a hoot?
Insurrectionist Calendar:
Monday: Work, mow lawn.
Tuesday: Work, wash clothes.
Wednesday: Sedition, insurrection, treason, coup.
Thursday: Work, clean kitchen. Prison for sedition. Oops.
Friday: Work, take cat to vet. Prison for sedition. Oops.
Saturday: Muddin’ with the boys. Prison for sedition. Oops.
Sunday Huntin’ and drinkin’. Prison for sedition. Oops.