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Comment Re:10 years of brexit (Score 2) 22

companies started planning their exit strategies.

The strategy was so crystal clear, "brexit means brexit" after all, that companies had no idea even what to plan for. The bad ones buried their heads in the sand, the good ones wasted avst amounts of time and money having to cover all reasonable contingencies.

Naturally, in keeping with the entire theme, it wasn't just planning for exit, it was an utter shitshow of trying to plan.

Comment Re:Planned economies (Score 1) 150

I'm sorry is it 2016 when he was but where was Matt Walsh opposing tariffs in this second term, I can find a quote of him supporting the idea of replacing income tax with tariffs or is he just not talking about it because he's too busy pushing civil war, race baiting and generally being a traitorous piece of inhuman trash.

He's probably sad he doesn't get to pile on Shapiro with the groypers because he needs the paycheck. You got any other examples besides one of the absolute worst people in media today? Great example of the supposedly sane right, one of the most unhinged mainstream commentators jesus things are worse than i thought.

Comment Re:By digital sovereignty. (Score 1) 22

Let's put it like this.
  • Natural Gas accounts for 12% of Germany's electricity generation in 2025
  • Wind accounts for 30% of Germany's electricty generation in 2025
  • Solar accounts for 19% of Germany's electricty generation in 2025
  • Biomass accounts for 8.5% of Germany's electricity generation in 2025
  • Lignite accounts for 16% of Germany's electricty generation in 2025
  • Hard coal accounts for 6% of Germany's electricity generation in 2025
  • Other sources (Coal Gas, Incinerator plants, Oil, Hydro) make up less than 8% of electricity generation in 2025

Now you can throw around buzzwords like deindustrialization, or you can look at the actual numbers.

Comment Re:What about top speed? (Score 1) 82

you get a very disorienting "why won't it slow down" feeling, and it's easy to panic.

You don't always even panic. It's weird: if you do something in muscle memory enough, you don't consciously think about doing it. This is why driving etc is smooth because you aren't thinking about every action. When something breaks [see what i did there!] you at best get a creeping feeling of wrongness that takes a while to percolate up to your conscious brain.

I can relate a few anecdotes.

One typically dismounts a bike by first lifting your foot up off the pedal before putting your foot down. After an accident where I slipped off a pedal climbing a hill, I switched to toe clips, which require you to tilt your foot down then slide it up and out. Lifting doesn't work. First time I came to a stop, I toppled over into a puddle while hauling my foot upwards, but not even thinking about it. I wasn't panicking because I hadn't even noticed until I was at about 45 degees at which point I had a brief flash of "oh shi..." before landing in the puddle. But it's funny: lower level part of my brain wanted to lift my foot and just kept applying increasing force to match the requirement, but didn't inform me.

Next (harmless) was on moving to the US. I was driving along and then my partner asked me what was wrong, which confused me. She then asked why I was batting at the door. I had *NO* idea I was doing that. I'd only ever driven a manual on the other side of the road. Based presumably on engine noise etc, my hand was searching continuously for the nonexistent gear stick on the wrong side of the car. The weird thing was it was going all of its own accord. And because nothing had gone really wrong, nothing jogged my low level brain out of that loop, so it was happily searching forever, and my conscious mind was completely unaware.

Third was in winter, wearing heavy boots driving an unfamiliar rental canyonero, and clipped the gas with the side of my boot while braking. The car wasn't slowing properly, and the low level feedback control part of my brain just kept commanding more force, so I kept kitting both pedals ever harder. I got a creeping feeling of wrongness as the car wasn't stopping, but it's basically of the form "why is my limb not working properly".

I then rear ended someone, and I can't remember how I realised what the fuck I was doing. Anyway the guy was really nice.

Comment Re:Estimates based on conjecture (Score 5, Insightful) 112

Actually, you are the ignorant one here because you want to justify your denial. Because scientists are aware they are just human, there are a lot of safeguards in place. The first one being the scientific principle. But I guess you lack insight into what that actually does and why it was created.

Global warming is a settled issue but we are spending millions of dollars on studies to confirm it on the theory that what is lacking is proof.

This nicely illustrates how deep your ignorance goes. This is not why these studies are done. The reason they are done is to refine and get more detail. That will be invaluable for evaluating the impact of things that could still be done and to prepare for the effects.

Comment Re:Using an economic lens (Score 1) 77

I think they are holding out to sell the buildings at full price.

Never gonna happen. Full price was before 10 years of decay and rodent infestation + neighborhood gone to shit. Nevertheless, high supply, low demand is supposed to result in low prices.

What a nice idea! But then the commons are not only not commons, but they become properties and whatever herdsman gets the biggest herd will buy it all up and you get a monopoly.

One, how so if the agreement is ownership in common. And two, how is it worse than it all being owned by a (land)lord who rakes in the better part of the profit while considering herding animals to be beneath him?

Sounds like you drank the cool aid.

Comment Re: this is getting old (Score 3, Informative) 112

You must live a sheltered life in your long dead mom's basement.

Literally everywhere things have gone from bad to worse.

New deserts are forming apace in Southern Europe and in Central Europe snow is now a rarity.

Asia is turning into a sweltering hell in the summers, India is enjoying gulf-desert temperatures.

Tree species are dying out, and with them all the wildlife they hosted.

Model projections of the 90s (30 years ago) have been proven correct:

https://phys.org/news/2025-08-...

Lucky you who have no kids and grandkids to worry about.

Comment Re: Good News... (Score 1, Insightful) 112

Indeed, it is not a 4C rise... Yet.

But with the new policies of the trumpistan that goal is now also within easy reach.

The old people have doomed the future - they've always tried, but this is the first time they had the technological means to make it happen.

Good jorb, I guess.

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