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Comment Re:Neither (Score 1) 82

Right, and with fair pricing and disclosure. What is interesting here is that the solution to a terrible, exploitive buying experience is to make the seller even more sociopathic.

Comment Re:They still want tolls? They'll get bombs, inste (Score 4, Insightful) 212

"The only question in my mind is if Kamala would have started dropping the bombs sooner or later."
Sure it is. Maybe Trump will improve your talking points later.

"Kamala was all "Yea! War!" so maybe she'd have not done it?"
Citations please.

"One is to start/continue wars behind an orange retard. The other is to start/continue wars behind some brown bitch-retard."
Sure, both sides. Super original. Which "retard" worships Putin? I mean, besides you.

"Kinda finding it hard to see any real difference"
Sounds like a you problem. And how did Kamala Harris become part of the conversation? We all know, of course.

"Do you want those announcements from some dumb bitch you would not let operate a can-opener by herself or some angry ancient orangutan-looking asshole who you'd bet against putting his pants on by himself?"
Not being a raging misogynist like you are, the choice is clear. I prefer not to have a 34-time felon, rapist and child molester threatening genocide of nearly 100M people as my President, we know what you prefer.

"Great choices, partisans. Lovely situation you've both-sides'd us into."
Wait, who's doing the both-sidesing? You have us mistaken for those "retards" you are so familiar with.

Comment Re:Costly status quo? (Score 2) 61

"...while maintaining the existing overall parity between the bad guys and the worse guys."

In reality, probably yes. But it is conceivable that a "last vulnerability" could be closed and "overall parity" would be broken permanently. The problem is that the bad guys continue to add new vulnerabilities for the worse guys to use, and that will likely accelerate with the proliferation of these very tools.

Comment Re:New religion (Score 1) 136

"Religions generally accept wisdom from sacred texts."

This is false. Religions CREATE privileged texts, which they call "sacred texts" or scriptures, which contain stories that are fabricated. Religions do not "accept wisdom" from these created texts because religions create those texts.

Now, parishioners could be said to "generally accept wisdom from sacred texts." Perhaps that is what you meant. Religions are a mechanism to control people, scripture is a tool that is used.

Personally, I think the entire premise here is absurd. AI usage doesn't create two kinds of users, there were these two kinds of users before AI came into existence. Religion is particularly effective on one of those two kinds.

Comment Re:Laws are weird (Score 2, Interesting) 197

"... this CO scheme wouldn't be legal here in CA..."

It would not be legal in Texas either, but legal is what a judge says it is. Judges aren't there to find you not guilty.

Earlier in my life I had a friend whose father was a prosecutor. He claimed his father had never lost a case and couldn't understand criticism how that result was not something to brag about. Turns out his father was a personal friend of the judge that tried his cases and served as a temporary judge in that same court when the judge wanted time off. He thought this level of corruption was a point of pride. Texas, although likely occurs everywhere.

Speed limits are set to ensure a ready supply of people to fine. The more effective and automatic enforcement is, the larger a problem there is going to be with the public. Local government basically steals whatever money it wants while officially looking good to the voters by making the "bad guys" pay for things. That will end when the "good guys" get fines in the mail.

Society seems to be engaging in a race to ruin its infrastructure.

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