Thinking about it, I think we hit dozens of sovereign debt crises before they get inflation in check. The problem is that they've been so irresponsible around the world for so long, but they've driven themselves into this corner. Assuming for the sake of argument that they don't start applying financial stimulus during inflation because they don't want to be seen as fuelling inflation despite the recession we're probably already in in lots of economies around the world, the next stop will have to be a bunch of sovereign debt crises because there's just so much debt you can't afford to raise the cost of that debt without ending up in a situation where you just can't drop enough debt to keep up.
This isn't really a new prediction for me, I was saying this before the pandemic that you can't live off of get fueled government spending forever. Eventually, you spend so much money that you start having to cut those same services because you're spending all of your money paying back your bond holders.
This isn't really a new prediction for me, I was saying this before the pandemic that you can't live off of get fueled government spending forever. Eventually, you spend so much money that you start having to cut those same services because you're spending all of your money paying back your bond holders.
This also refers to people who want shit fixed.
"I want you to fix this." It'll take a few days "no take only fix!"
"I want you to fix this." It'll take a few days "no take only fix!"
Wow, I didn't realize it was that cheap.
At some point I need to replace my Amazfit Bip, I'll have to look closely at a pinetime when the time comes (wait...)
At some point I need to replace my Amazfit Bip, I'll have to look closely at a pinetime when the time comes (wait...)
An ironic lament, considering their policies are solely responsible for the upcoming famines.
Every tiem!
Every tiem!
Someday.... We will fine a cure for death.
Until then, we must continue to do whatever the drug company lobbyists tell us to. It's the only way.
Heil Trudeau!
Until then, we must continue to do whatever the drug company lobbyists tell us to. It's the only way.
Heil Trudeau!
You know what the worst part of being a good dad is?
You're throwing death flags all the time! "I love you son!" "I can't wait until you grow up!" "I love our little family!"
It's like being one day from retirement for the rest of your damn life!
You're throwing death flags all the time! "I love you son!" "I can't wait until you grow up!" "I love our little family!"
It's like being one day from retirement for the rest of your damn life!
Forest fires are part of the forest life cycle. The trees grow, they release seeds, eventually they die, biomass accumulates, forest fire happens, no more biomass, newly fertilized ground, heat from the fire opens up the seeds, new trees grow.
Anyone aware of any good deepfake tts? Not for anything nefarious, I'd like to make an audio book version of my book and figure it'd be easier to get the computer to do the reading than to sit and hammer through it myself.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8AAlhrNZBhI
I really like this video. I think it's just tts from a book, but its message is great.
I really like this video. I think it's just tts from a book, but its message is great.
The idea that Javascript of all things is dead is insane. As you said, it's all that browsers support anymore.
Hell, there's a lot of stuff using javascript on the bloody server-end! That stuff isn't going away, it sure looks to me like it's doing very well.
Hell, there's a lot of stuff using javascript on the bloody server-end! That stuff isn't going away, it sure looks to me like it's doing very well.
There's a vibrant FreeBASIC community, which is a direct descendant of the Qbasic/QB45/PDS71 community.
If qbasic isn't dead, then nothing is.
If qbasic isn't dead, then nothing is.
I've been stocking up, same thing -- first time ever. I'm not some insane prepper, but reality is what reality is, and the laws of physics don't care about how many dollars you print.
I suspect the demarcation would be age. I think they stopped teaching cursive relatively recently since it isn't something most of us use on a daily basis now that word processors and the like exist.
In November 2021, my first child was born. I wrote a book to him, which I called The Graysonian Ethic: Lessons for my unborn son.
He's 7 months old now, and he's absolutely beautiful. I know he won't be able to make use of my lessons until he's much older, but I'm proud that he has this book to help him navigate through the world.
I talk about a lot of things in the book: How he has to think for himself and be aware of logical and rhetorical fallacies; Basic first principles that a young person needs to think about from a moral and practical basis; Some of the stories from his parents, grandparents, and great grandparents and how he can apply lessons from those; How to perform miracles -- how to successfully do things that most people wish they could; Different times I've failed in my life and lessons he can learn from that; Grit, and how you need to be tough; An existential crisis I had and some of the lessons I learned along the way; Building something in his life because his natural gifts won't last forever, and to think ahead because life is long and you need to remember that today is usually not the last day of your life; Environmentalism and social justice; Success, and that it'll only come if he fights for it; Economics, because I think that's important to understand for building a life, and on change and how it happens in the world and in yourself; How to handle it when you make a mistake, and constructive ways to deal with that; That the internet is not your friend; How you should embrace guilt and shame (in a specific healthy way); attraction, ways to meet the opposite sex, and a lot of warnings because attraction is a great positive and a great risk to your life; and finally how nobody owes him a thing and to be thankful for everything you get from anyone without being naïve.
Along the way I talk about science, history, geology, archaeology, genetics, and whatever other topics I need to explain my way of thinking.
I decided that if I was going to write this book, the best way to get it printed nicely was to publish it, and if I'm going to publish it, I might as well see if others might be interested in it as well, so it's available in paperback and kindle on amazon. Personally, I make more money off the ebook, but I prefer people buy the paperback since it'll be more permanent in the long run.
https://www.amazon.com/Graysonian-Ethic-Lessons-unborn-son/dp/1777932505/
He's 7 months old now, and he's absolutely beautiful. I know he won't be able to make use of my lessons until he's much older, but I'm proud that he has this book to help him navigate through the world.
I talk about a lot of things in the book: How he has to think for himself and be aware of logical and rhetorical fallacies; Basic first principles that a young person needs to think about from a moral and practical basis; Some of the stories from his parents, grandparents, and great grandparents and how he can apply lessons from those; How to perform miracles -- how to successfully do things that most people wish they could; Different times I've failed in my life and lessons he can learn from that; Grit, and how you need to be tough; An existential crisis I had and some of the lessons I learned along the way; Building something in his life because his natural gifts won't last forever, and to think ahead because life is long and you need to remember that today is usually not the last day of your life; Environmentalism and social justice; Success, and that it'll only come if he fights for it; Economics, because I think that's important to understand for building a life, and on change and how it happens in the world and in yourself; How to handle it when you make a mistake, and constructive ways to deal with that; That the internet is not your friend; How you should embrace guilt and shame (in a specific healthy way); attraction, ways to meet the opposite sex, and a lot of warnings because attraction is a great positive and a great risk to your life; and finally how nobody owes him a thing and to be thankful for everything you get from anyone without being naïve.
Along the way I talk about science, history, geology, archaeology, genetics, and whatever other topics I need to explain my way of thinking.
I decided that if I was going to write this book, the best way to get it printed nicely was to publish it, and if I'm going to publish it, I might as well see if others might be interested in it as well, so it's available in paperback and kindle on amazon. Personally, I make more money off the ebook, but I prefer people buy the paperback since it'll be more permanent in the long run.
https://www.amazon.com/Graysonian-Ethic-Lessons-unborn-son/dp/1777932505/
It's ironic, the SJWs claim to hate racism and racist policies, but back explicitly racist policies, actual systemic racism.
That being the case, there's definitely something poetic about a backlash.
That being the case, there's definitely something poetic about a backlash.
I know. I've been talking stagflationary recession since at least 2020. It was possible before that, but shutting down the economy and giving everyone a bunch of money basically put a final nail in the coffin.
tbf, debt's gonna debt.
Financial guys might call me a retard, but I think it's a moral good and a practical good to carry as little debt as possible because shit happens.
Financial guys might call me a retard, but I think it's a moral good and a practical good to carry as little debt as possible because shit happens.