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EU wants over 70s to prove they can still drive every five years
  • I've seen many driving professionals. The vast vast majority have substantially better driving behavior per km traveled. Again well supported by data.

    Similarly, the regressive nature of increasing barriers to driving is well understood. This can be easily shown by looking at the effects of drivers license prohibitions on undocumented immigrants. Again, there is data.

    Your point about offsetting costs is ignorant to history. A tried and true approach to "starve the beast" is breaking something now and promising to fix it later. The fixes never come, the costs

    It seems like you are someone easily swayed by anecdotes over actual evidence. That's a really bad way to make policy decisions.

  • EU wants over 70s to prove they can still drive every five years
  • That seems wildly regressive and disproportionately would harm working poor people, who generally would struggle to afford the time and expense involved.

    There's no evidence that experience degrades driving skill, just aging

  • Deep space experts prove Elon Musk's Starlink is interfering in scientific work
  • For the third time, you cannot separate the grifter from the grift. That's not "Fuck Elon", that's "starlink is not, and never will be, what was promised"

    Similarly, you can't weigh an abstract possibility versus a real cost. You want the conversation to be some philosophical discourse about social vs societal value. But it's not that, it's a real situation right now.

    And in this real life situation, we have to evaluate what starlink actually is - - a failed toy for wealthy early adopters - - and not what some abstract "could be".

    Especially when we know for a fact that any public promises of that potential are certainly intended to mislead and not inform.

  • Deep space experts prove Elon Musk's Starlink is interfering in scientific work
  • To my knowledge absolutely nothing critical to Ukranian defense uses Starlink.

    And again, what is niave is to not heavily discount any claims Elon makes. Starlink provides neglible value currently, what potential might exist is imaginary.

    The best thing for the world is to realize Elon was a sunk cost and move on

  • Deep space experts prove Elon Musk's Starlink is interfering in scientific work
  • Okay but you're falling into Elon's trap. You can't weigh future potential against current harm naively. Particularly when it comes from somebody with a long history of over promising and under delivering. Since we pay the full price up front (loss of science, etc) but will never reap the full benefits promised.

  • Is climate change sending us towards an apocalypse, or will it just make life shit/hard?
  • Like everything else, the global wealthy will survive with the wealthiest elite thriving. The global poor (mostly in the the global south) will suffer the majority of the consequences. It'll start with crops withering for lack of water and get worse from there.

    There'll be a great sorting between those two groups as the dividing line becomes starker. It probably won't be pretty. It definitely won't be fair. There's no guarantee the line won't be drawn within a country and not just between them.

    How fast does this happen? If left to just "natural" processes, loss of modern agriculture will take many decades - - just slow enough to boil the frog. But humans have a particular tendency to drive faster than we can see. So in the likely chances whatever actions we take to "mitigate" climate change backfire in our face (fingers crossed on Elon dropping a bunch of rust in the ocean and killing all the krill), I think it's more likely that many decades is optimistic.

  • These are the privacy permissions that you grant for Meta's new twitter competitor
  • None of that can be explained by allowing private companies to collect digital data.

    What you've posted is a great example of scaremongering.

    Again, if you want to advocate for privacy, you need to make a direct and explicit connection. Not this tinfoil hat, arm waving general conspiracy thinking. It's not compelling

  • These are the privacy permissions that you grant for Meta's new twitter competitor
  • I think what people need are clear examples, concisely expressed, of the explicit harm experienced by forgoing a certain quanta of privacy, since the benefits are apparent (eg gain access to a certain service/community/etc).

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