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Comment Re:Them/their/they? (Score 1) 205

There was a murder a while ago, and it came out that the murderer had 'preferred pronouns'... they/them, I think. The article about the murder was written in accordance, 'they killed the family...', 'they stood over the body'...

It was hard to parse out what happened; I'd almost argue that the article contained factual inaccuracies. I wish I had saved it, because it was a great example of how having pronouns depend on situational incidentals is absolutely unworkable.

Comment Re:The actual objection (Score 2, Insightful) 449

I don't have a firm opinion whether ivermectin is effective as a treatment against Covid; if it has an effect, it doesn't seem like a strong one.

But it is clear that nobody calling ivermectin 'horse dewormer' is intellectually honest in the slightest, and those that do are probably not worth engaging with.

Comment Re:3.5T may not be best solution (Score 1) 175

The freedom to choose your lightbulbs. It's part of a greater freedom, like the ability to complain about a TV show is part of a greater freedom. I'm 90% LED, but occasionally buy an incandescent... the light's better, and fluorescents/halogens are a terrible alternative to either.

Comment Better than Pocket (Score 1) 134

Not that I want ads... but I think I would prefer ads to the absolute crap that Pocket serves up.

The other day for some reason Pocket turned back on, and I was amazed at how low quality it was. Lowest denominator clickbait blog posts, as bad as any facebook stream... lowbrow political commentary, whackjob health advice, and so on. I'd rather see a laxative commercial.

Pocket is supposed to be a curated stream of higher-quality articles; it seems more like a stream where any quality or intelligence has been carefully filtered out. It was like a twitter stream.

Comment Re:Maybe Social Media shouldn't... (Score 1) 451

The Wuhan leak hypothesis was always plausible, despite any and all accusations of racism that flew accompanied it. It's not certain, because there's no hard evidence beyond the circumstantial. There may not ever be; China has done a very thorough cleanup job of the lab.

Nor is there hard evidence for direct animal transition; again, it's just circumstantial. What's happened in the last few months is that more smart money has shifted to the lab-escape scenario.

The idea that it was genetically enhanced is less likely. Put through gain-of-function processes? Maybe.

Comment Re:Depositions (Score 1) 104

I can't imagine that the CEO doesn't examine, weekly or more frequently, a finance report listing budgeted and actual spend of all the major departments in their company. They'd be negligent if they don't.

If I run this through my Bayesian processor, I think it's far more likely Cook is simply lying than that he doesn't have a reasonable estimate of those expenses. But... I don't really blame him for lying. I'm sure he was told that this was the safe answer to any question fishing for particulars.

Comment Re:Meh. (Score 2) 256

The brains of men contain stronger front-to-rear connections while those of women are better connected from left to right.

https://www.the-scientist.com/...

I don't want to say it's settled science, but... this has been known for many decades. Scientists can determine the gender a brain belongs to by examining its physical structure.

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