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Comment Re:Seriously ...? (Score -1, Troll) 252

Be as sure as you want, it's still 100% subjective. Recording the police might not be interference in general, but doing so while standing close enough to be in the way is. It's not the absolute you've been indoctrinated (and yes, you have, your TDS is obvious) to believe.

But believe whatever you want, since you're obviously too cowardly to go do anything.

Comment Re:Seriously ...? (Score -1, Troll) 252

If their concern is safety, whether or not they're safer at home is entirely relevant. Perhaps they're saying they don't feel safe in the US out of fear of not saying it at home. Stranger, and more outrageous things have happened in fascist regimes, and the UK isn't the only country heading in that direction of late.

Comment Re:Seriously ...? (Score 0) 252

But if you've talked trash about the US online, you may not be allowed into the US. But you might not want to say that out loud for whatever reason, and thus need an excuse.

Just because they say it's over safety concerns doesn't mean that's the real reason. (And the Ig Noble folks aren't necessarily the ones lying, they have been probably been told it's over safety concerns.)

Comment Re:And the elected officials (Score 2) 76

They never have to do anything other than feel good symbolic plans or micro-regulations, just have to keep on the perpetual campaign trail.

The amount of money to be made leading the charge against the latest crisis guarantees that the people in charge not only won't make any effort to solve the problem, but they will actively prevent it from being solved. Once it's solved, you have to move on, and maybe (gasp!) get a real job.

Comment Re:Claude (Score 1) 21

Does it matter? Your choices are "support the best (overall) AI, which just got blacklisted (1950's Red Scare-style) by the Trump government for refusing to illegally surveil US citizens" ... or "support the AI that said it will happily surveil Americans illegally".

To me it's not even a choice.

I feel like I should point out that they didn't refuse to illegally surveil US citizens, they refused to surveil US citizens for the government. Their entire existence is built on surveilling everyone everywhere all the time to whatever degree they can.

I can't help but wonder if their reluctance to do so for the government is fear of a FOIA request revealing just how pervasive it is.

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