https://www.reuters.com/graphics/AFRICA-HUNGER/lgpdkknwlvo/
Darn it COVID! Starvation is a symptom of COVID, right?
Darn it COVID! Starvation is a symptom of COVID, right?
As nice as it is to think, I have a sneaking suspicion some of those are bots, since they look like bots.
On the other side of this, lawmakers sure seem to think that social media is dangerous and harmful, since they're sticking their fingers in at every opportunity to try to regulate it.
Especially since it isn't like any of it is causing taxes to go down or debts to stop accruing. Government is at historic highs in terms of the amount of economic activity going on, yet despite making up so much of the world, they're doing so much less that's actually useful for common people...
With the rise in violent crimes in the past few years, the lawmakers in the UK (and Canada, and the US, and elsewhere) need to get their heads out of their asses.
They're so busy worrying about hypothetical violence that might happen because someone said something mean on the Internet that they're ignoring millions of cases of actual violence being perpetrated against people in the real world.
The cynical part of me thinks the reason is that they know people who say mean things on the Internet aren't a threat so it's much nicer and easier to look like you're doing something by going after them. You don't need to worry about anyone shooting back, you don't need to worry about them fighting back, they're just people saying things on the Internet! You don't even need to leave your office until you make the arrest!
They're so busy worrying about hypothetical violence that might happen because someone said something mean on the Internet that they're ignoring millions of cases of actual violence being perpetrated against people in the real world.
The cynical part of me thinks the reason is that they know people who say mean things on the Internet aren't a threat so it's much nicer and easier to look like you're doing something by going after them. You don't need to worry about anyone shooting back, you don't need to worry about them fighting back, they're just people saying things on the Internet! You don't even need to leave your office until you make the arrest!
This moment reminds me of the mid to late 90s when the religious right and the moral majority as the political bloc were deep in decline. It didn't look like it at the time because they were pushing hard and sometimes succeeding at stuff, but it was the fact that they had to push hard that changed, and that marked a change in trajectory a lot of people didn't recognize at the time.
Can confirm, am retarded and brainwashed and look! It's a watch, and it tells time, but it's also smart! Hey Alexa, order me 20!
Bill c11 and c18 are just codifying the full control of the internet that was already there. It's all just one guy.
I had the first manga and read some of maximum but this was before you could just buy it online so I havent seen most of it
Honestly, the art is different but it's fine. It isn't distractingly bad or anything. The story problems seem much more important to me.
I'm keeping an open mind about the new Trigun, but the story has some serious pacing and structural problems.
They went through the Nebraska arc without even having "that moment", and E.G. Mine is already dead but the whole point of his death is negated because Vash didn't know or care (and I'm pretty sure Vash learned about it and got mad in the original)
I'm guessing next episode is the lost July incident which they're gonna probably use instead of the 5th moon incident to tighten it up, skip out on Elizabeth and that arc, skip out on the BDN arc, they'll probably get Wolfwood in the episode after that.
I'm guessing they'll probably skip the initial Wolfwood arcs for that and probably shoot directly to the last surviving ship arc and close out the series with fights with the gung ho guns, show the story of knives finding the chopped up sentient plant in episode 11, then a big final battle in episode 12 and both knives and vash disappear.
A lot of the key events of the series will have to stay on the cutting room floor. For example, I don't see how the events of Diablo can happen now because the whole point of those events is that Vash snaps from witnessing a mass murder, but he's already witnessed a mass murder.
I don't expect the series will be able to stretch its legs, it's too crammed into its 12 episodes. I don't think they've got a plan to stretch it over 2 seasons and only announced the first 12, they're doing everything too quickly.
Anyway, it's not bad right now, but it's like the difference between Chrono Trigger and Chrono Cross: Chrono Cross was a great Final Fantasy game, but it wasn't a Chrono Trigger sequel. This is a fine anime, it's just not a remake of one of the greatest animes of all time that passes muster.
But we'll see. Maybe it'll get better.
They went through the Nebraska arc without even having "that moment", and E.G. Mine is already dead but the whole point of his death is negated because Vash didn't know or care (and I'm pretty sure Vash learned about it and got mad in the original)
I'm guessing next episode is the lost July incident which they're gonna probably use instead of the 5th moon incident to tighten it up, skip out on Elizabeth and that arc, skip out on the BDN arc, they'll probably get Wolfwood in the episode after that.
I'm guessing they'll probably skip the initial Wolfwood arcs for that and probably shoot directly to the last surviving ship arc and close out the series with fights with the gung ho guns, show the story of knives finding the chopped up sentient plant in episode 11, then a big final battle in episode 12 and both knives and vash disappear.
A lot of the key events of the series will have to stay on the cutting room floor. For example, I don't see how the events of Diablo can happen now because the whole point of those events is that Vash snaps from witnessing a mass murder, but he's already witnessed a mass murder.
I don't expect the series will be able to stretch its legs, it's too crammed into its 12 episodes. I don't think they've got a plan to stretch it over 2 seasons and only announced the first 12, they're doing everything too quickly.
Anyway, it's not bad right now, but it's like the difference between Chrono Trigger and Chrono Cross: Chrono Cross was a great Final Fantasy game, but it wasn't a Chrono Trigger sequel. This is a fine anime, it's just not a remake of one of the greatest animes of all time that passes muster.
But we'll see. Maybe it'll get better.

I don't know for sure. There's obviously an overwhelming amount of data in there, I've had conversations on a wide variety of topics from law to history to chemistry to biology to space exploration and it didn't always have a perfect answer, but it had a decent answer.
My dad got his ham radio license just recently. There's some really neat stuff out there. There's special low signal strength signalling standards that dramatically increase the amount of distance you can communicate over using a PC as a signal processor. A PC is practically mandatory equipment.
One thing I didn't realize is that you only get to talk to where you get to talk to. Solar activity has a large bearing on where your signals can hit. In a time with few solar flares (like the past decade) it's much more difficult to bounce signals over to the other side of the earth.
One thing I didn't realize is that you only get to talk to where you get to talk to. Solar activity has a large bearing on where your signals can hit. In a time with few solar flares (like the past decade) it's much more difficult to bounce signals over to the other side of the earth.
I, for one, show love for my unvaxxed brothers and sisters.
Lots of people weren't at risk, weren't in a situation where they'd get it, or were in a situation where even if they got it it'd be fine, and they shouldn't have been forced to.
At this point, if the truth ever comes out about the vaxx, there will be literal guillotines for the public figures involved. Not because the vaxx was evil per se, but because the state and culture overstepped its bounds in forcing it down everyone's throat.
Lots of people weren't at risk, weren't in a situation where they'd get it, or were in a situation where even if they got it it'd be fine, and they shouldn't have been forced to.
At this point, if the truth ever comes out about the vaxx, there will be literal guillotines for the public figures involved. Not because the vaxx was evil per se, but because the state and culture overstepped its bounds in forcing it down everyone's throat.
And the most toxic thing is that these women don't have kids, then realize they're going to die out and their ideology will die out with them, so they start trying to indoctrinate *our* kids.
Fuck off, you made your choice.
Fuck off, you made your choice.
That's a good point, but I think it goes beyond simple women's liberation to a society that actively shames women for just wanting to be a stay at home mother. My wife actively lies to people when they ask because she's so sick of people treating her decision to be a housewife like it isn't a valid life choice.
That being said, I think you could say both things may be related. Women were being liberated just as much or in some ways more in the 1940s than they are today (proportionately speaking), but there was literally a baby boom.
That being said, I think you could say both things may be related. Women were being liberated just as much or in some ways more in the 1940s than they are today (proportionately speaking), but there was literally a baby boom.
I've managed to catch it in really silly errors. One time I asked it for a libertarian argument against deregulation of fintech, and it immediately got confused and gave me a libertarian argument for the deregulation of fintech.
(A libertarian argument against the deregulation of fintech would be that because the banking sector is so heavily regulated and so heavily subsidized and so heavily insured by the taxpayer that deregulating fintech without deregulating the rest of finance including removing insurance and government guarantees presents moral hazard that potentially could cause government to increase in scope as the deregulated fintech industries rely more on government insurance and assurances than were originally envisioned by the people who created those programs with only traditional banking in mind.)
(A libertarian argument against the deregulation of fintech would be that because the banking sector is so heavily regulated and so heavily subsidized and so heavily insured by the taxpayer that deregulating fintech without deregulating the rest of finance including removing insurance and government guarantees presents moral hazard that potentially could cause government to increase in scope as the deregulated fintech industries rely more on government insurance and assurances than were originally envisioned by the people who created those programs with only traditional banking in mind.)
I tend to agree with you. It's impressive how much ChatGPT gets right, but even as much as it gets right ultimately it's clear when you're reading its output.
I also find it's sort of stubborn such that if it's messing something up it's really hard to get it to stop.
I also find it's sort of stubborn such that if it's messing something up it's really hard to get it to stop.