The presidential race has never been a meritocracy
What does that have to do with the article?
I hate when people do this. I saw someone left a milk carton on an unrefrigerated shelf the other day smh
Hamas is the ruling, elected authority of Gaza. And even before them, other Palestinian officials have rejected multiple peace deals. That doesn’t mean all Palestinians are culpable, the same way not all Israelis are responsible for Netanyahu’s actions.
Its is a ‘both sides’ issue when the Palestinian side has rejected every peace deal, commits terrorist attacks, and calls for the genocide of Jews. Nobody looks good in this conflict.
Why is everyone so black and white on this issue? Israel has a right to exist. Palestine has a right to exist. It shouldn’t be hard to understand.
This joke is so old, time since epoch was negative when it was made
Damn that’s sad. War is hell.
Yeah that’s a bluff. Google searches surely make up a huge portion of their traffic.
A “US-American” if you need to be very clear. But most people just say “American”.
The Julia and Mandelbrot sets always gets me. That such a complex structure could arise from such simple rules. Here's a brilliant explanation I found years back: https://www.karlsims.com/julia.html
Is this the first media interview he's done since NewsNation? If so, I wonder why he went with the BBC. Just a news outlet he likes or does he want to reach a British audience for some reason?
I have to disagree with this paragraph. That Tailwind enforces a design system is its biggest strength. Having a small selection of colors, font sizes, and padding to choose from is what makes a website feel much more cohesive than one where developers pick arbitrary values every time they style an element.
But you don't need Tailwind for that; design systems are easy to implement these days using CSS custom properties.
How does recent Congressional testimony fit into the broader universe of reports relating to Unidentified Aerial Phenomena, or UFOs?
This is an interesting discussion on The Lawfare Podcast with Washington Post national security reporter Shane Harris. They discuss the recent Oversight Committee hearing and the UAP phenomenon more broadly. Harris seems fairly open-minded about the claims being made and while maintaining a healthy level of skepticism.
These are fair counterpoints, thanks for the reply. My point was more that work is necessary in any society given today’s technology, even in one designed to be as egalitarian and non-coercive as possible
Having to work isn’t a societal issue, it’s the physical reality. Without food, water, and shelter, you’ll die, and someone needs to work to provide those things.
I want a post-scarcity utopia as much as the next guy, but until then, work needs to be done.