I suppose they are going to get mad at the slow uptake and start forcibly de-registering vehicles from the road system to push the demand.
Or they could gradually phase out gas stations so there'd be no way to fill your tank. That way they wouldn't have to take your car away. You could have all the ICE cars you want; you just wouldn't be able to put gas in them!
From TFA
one Ortiz article, for instance, warns that volleyball "can be a little tricky to get into, especially without an actual ball to practice with."
What was that you were saying about the articles being "informative, well-written, and enjoyable to read"?
My point was that one should criticize the articles themselves, not the fact that a computer rather than a human wrote them. Besides, I think the passage you quoted was just an observation that while many people might have basketballs and baseballs around the house, fewer people may have volleyballs, potentially meaning more effort may have to be made to get into the sport.
Better yet, enforce what's there now. DMCA takedowns are filed by specific individuals, under penalty of perjury.
Are they filed under penalty of perjury? I don't think so.
You can't suppress "undesirables" voting if it's mandatory
Sure you can. It's just that in addition to not being able to vote, the "undesirables" would also have to pay a fine.
Hopefully Star Trek Strange New Worlds season 3 can get into production ASAP now.
I'm afraid they lost me after their "musical" episode.
Still, I'd say the fault lies with the state (no barriers or signs)
As a previous poster commented, this bridge was on private property so the state couldn't have put up barriers or signs.
As it was, the medical system would have collapsed without lockdowns and then death rates would have gone up beyond what is sustainable. The lockdowns served to prevent a collapse of society and they were _needed_. Everybody ordering them was clear that they would have drastic negative effects. But the alternatives would have been a lot worse.
This is demonstrably false as many states simply didn't lock down in the way you describe. Yes, some of those states did suffer higher death rates initially (primarily in nursing homes, where such deaths were likely to have occurred anyway), but the other states quickly caught up.
Driving at high speed sometimes on sidewalks and expecting pedestrians to move quickly to avoid them.
Why couldn't the city just impose speed limits on them?
How is Rutherford's experiment explained then ?
Well, Rutherford's experiment had a person *looking* at the atoms. TFS says you're not allowed to look.
Yeah, and I'm an incredibly good looking person. A solid 10. Handsome face with beautiful, sensitive eyes and a solid square jaw, and a totally ripped body: Michelangelo could not have carved a more beautiful specimen. But only if you don't look.
Be glad you got to live for a while in the decades during which global air travel was made available for peanuts.
But should we be glad of that? It was partly as a result of cheap air travel that people moved far away from their extended families. It's no big deal to move from one coast to another when you can take the kids to visit grandma for $300 return. In the old days, people tended to not move so far away and extended families were often within easy driving distance. But during the decades of cheap air travel, families scattered all over the continent. Now that families are so far flung, the door will be slammed shut. That is not a good thing.
Happiness is twin floppies.