As it's most often seen on news sites - where scrolling too far gives you another article - a handful of reasons.
One: there are frequently still links (think "about us" / "contact us" kind of pages) in the footer that you might need to access, which you can invariably now never reach, because as soon as they're in view they're replaced by more content.
Two: as the parent poster so accurately put it, "fucking with the browser history". It becomes entirely indeterminate whether the back button now returns to the previous site, or just goes back by one piece of content.
Three: the new content is almost certainly unrelated to the page I started on, and not of any interest to me.
An average of 5.2% (800k votes) not counting - called "informal" in Australia (as it is here in New Zealand), you might also see "spoiled".
However the question is, with 89.9% turnout and 5.2% spoil, are they still achieving better voter engagement overall than we did in NZ with 78.2% turnout but only 0.6% spoiled?
You could probably argue either way; as some people definitely wouldn't consider showing up but voting for no-one, will they check a box at random (and does this benefit the first party in the list alphabetically?). I'm sure someone has written a paper on this.
Sadly the one harness my boy hasn't managed (or indeed, even tried) to escape from was from Amazon.
I'll leave the link anyway, in the hope you can find something similar: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C93LKV5F - sadly it seems to be from one of those fly-by-night brands so I don't really like your chances.
You definitely want something a bit thicker / padded though, anything that's just straight straps seems to get wiggled out of. I can see how the dog harness you've got (likely designed with a chihuahua in mind, where neck straps have to be avoided) is a bit too much fabric for a cat's comfort though.
This said, the biggest expression of displeasure I got to the harness was the cats flopping over and pretending their back legs didn't work.
Once outside mine seems to very much be a "sniffing the flowers" type of cat, just wanders around near the house taking in the new sights and smells, chewing on a bit of grass, etc. Being an indoor cat, even walking on grass seems to be an experience he doesn't 100% vibe with. At least I've not had to retrieve him out of a tree, I guess?
I tried carrying him 20 paces further from the house and he just made his way straight back to safety. Not with the biggest sense of urgency ever seen, but clearly headed back toward the familiar: https://imgur.com/a/PawWQLT
From LTO 1 to 9, the capacities (TB) were 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.8, 1.5, 2.5, 6, 12, 18. LTO 6 also rather let the side down there.
Apparently though LTO 10 is going to get things back on track? I've seen claims it will achieve 36TB, but I'll believe it when I see it.
The real problem is the environmental requirements for LTO 9 and newer have become too strict. The longevity is still (supposedly) fine, but the tapes are much more sensitive to temperature and humidity fluctuations when in use.
Brand new tapes have to be brought into the environment where they'll be written for 36-48 hours to acclimatise before being used, and then have a 60-90 minute "calibration" in the drive before they can be written to.
Honestly, it could put the use of the newer types of tapes entirely out of the reach of many.
I got one with crypto addresses for "donations" for the first time today. That seems to be a new addition, messages from 2, 3, and 5 weeks ago didn't have them.
I have also received some "alternate" versions from pseudo-random usernames (ones not on your chart) from the sh.itjust.works instance. Mostly the same copy as always, but delivered entirely in an image rather than image+text. Thought that was interesting.
Rubbish trucks are a good example of this, often being drivable from either side (at least where I am). That allows the driver to better see their colleagues and bins on the roadside while driving in the suburbs, but switch to the regular position for driving to and from a landfill site.
Batteries are great for forklifts too, for exactly this reason.
For the same lifting capacity, a battery forklift is roughly half a metre shorter than a comparable LPG/Propane or Petrol/Diesel model, which really helps with the turning radius.
Also there's the whole "frequently driven indoors" aspect for forklifts.
Reticulated gas is charged by the kWh here in New Zealand. The meter may well be calibrated in m³ (I don't have gas at home, so I don't know for sure) but all pricing is energy, not volume.
For bonus points, if instead you buy your gas in cylinders - a pair of 45kg (~100lb) cylinders is a common installation for houses without piped gas - those are sold simply by the unit. The best conversion for that I can find is one energy retailer describing one 45kg cylinder as 2200MJ (611kWh).
I expect this is one of those things that is overall horribly inconsistent depending on where you live.
Not that long ago in New Zealand we had a lot of the same.
In Christchurch (which is a sprawling, flat, and low-lying city), the combination of smog from widespread wood fireplaces plus old sodium street lights, when driving in from the outskirts at night you'd see a grotty orange-pink cloud hanging low over the city.
It's improved a lot, partly due to policy, although a fair bit due to the city being extensively damaged by an earthquake, and fireplaces (which had their brick chimneys destroyed) being replaced by heat pumps.
Looks like they hired the same artist who made the one of Cristiano Ronaldo.