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sj_zero | @sj_zero@social.fbxl.net

Author of The Graysonian Ethic (Available on Amazon, pick up a dead tree copy today)

Admin of the FBXL Network including FBXL Search, FBXL Video, FBXL Social, FBXL Lotide, FBXL Translate, and FBXL Maps.

Advocate for freedom and tolerance even if you say things I do not like

Adversary of Fediblock

Accept that I'll probably say something you don't like and I'll give you the same benefit, and maybe we can find some truth about the world.

Ah... Is the Alliteration clever or stupid? Don't answer that, I sort of know the answer already...

Seems like this scenario is quickly losing a lot of the high speed in high speed rail, we've just got more expensive trains going slow.

There's additional risks to lines where you're constantly having to change speed. A lot of rail accidents have occurred over the years where trains were supposed to slow down for a certain corner and didn't, which can result in derailments which have both a large human cost and a large environmental cost if there's a bad accident you're going to have to replace whatever is destroyed.

I've criticized people for jumping immediately to a safety argument when it comes to things like small EVs because if it's as people say and the environmental impact is an urgent existential threat to humanity then additional risks are something we need to consider and perhaps make a decision to accept (put another way, does your right to personal safety trump humanity's right to safety as a species?), but I do think the calculus changes somewhat if you're talking about overwhelming environmental consequences in the event of an accident, and it's another thing to plug into an equation considering the cost between the two.

Up here in Canada we have a little airline called Bearskin (Also known as "scareskin", but that's another story) that does a milk run of all the different communities, compared to the big airlines which tend to just hop between major centers. It does take a lot more resources to do a milk run (and presumably would also be so with a high speed rail line that does a milk run), so flights with bearskin tend to be an order of magnitude more expensive than standard flights, representing in part the fact that hitting each little community between new york and la isn't free, either economically or environmentally.

Tiberius Gracchus was a populist during the roman republic. He was assassinated by the elites, one of the first notable assassinations of the age. In a historical sense it wasn't long until Caesar effectively ended the republic and created the roman empire. Thus began 400 years of military emperors sacking Rome to show how cool they were.

If the fed is admitting to it 6 months before an election, it might be the worst stagflation in us history. Zimbabwe hoooooo

Problem with a lot of the analysts is they're looking in the rearview mirror thinking because 15 years ago young people voted one way they'll do the same today, not realizing that people who could vote 15 years ago aren't young people anymore.

Trigun is still in my top anime of all time list, and one of the few anime ever to have some memorable vocal performances in English.

Just in case anyone makes the mistake: Fast food prices increased massively because prices are going up massively because the inflation number from the government is a lie, and everyone who doesn't have their butler do the shopping knows it.

There's a story out there saying people are too stupid to realize how good they have it and the economy is doing great and employment has never been better and inflation is almost back to normal, and yeah -- people know what's going on regardless of what the government and the media try to pretend is going on.

"then he said yes"

Nobody tell the Democrats that the hammer and sickle represent people who work for a living.

Even if you take everything else at entirely the most charitable face value...

... It's really fucked up autographing not just one of the bombs for the photo op, but it says all of them.

Even if these shells were intended for a purely good and just purpose, taking out a worthy target nobody would miss like NYC, LA, or Washington DC, signing each individual shell before sending them out is still a bit much.
Tanya the Evil saying "They're commies. blow the shit out of them."

:| oh no not our billionaires no please dont go its too dangerous

I remember last year which was really nice and temperate, I spent much of nearly every day off outside, and meanwhile I kept reading apocalyptic headlines about how it was the hottest day ever and we were all gonna die.

Unfortunately, Matt was eaten by an NPR reporter for a story.

Sorry to be the one to break the news....

I don't remember the case, but there was one of the big church and state ones I think, and the lawyer was a straight stereotypical big texas lawyer and he seemed to think he could just win the case through sheer force of personality, and that just wasn't happening.

Actually, it was often surprising that you couldn't predict based on who seemed to be doing better at oral arguments who would win the case.

I wanna build a wall, a big beautiful wall, and get the Americans to pay for it.

It's often interesting listening to cases (I had a hobby of listening to supreme court cases for a long time) that the individual people involved don't matter as much as they think they do because the court is setting rules that affect everyone.

It should be mentioned that I'm just a retard on the Internet, and so anything I say about damn near anything is as such.

"COME TO CANADA! NOW YOU TOO CAN LIVE WITH 25 STRANGERS IN AN OLD LADY'S UNFINISHED BASEMENT FOR ONLY 1200 A MONTH!"

The scope would be anything that would be considered "official duties". If you're acting in your capacity as an agent of the state, then you would not be liable.

Clinton v. Jones (1997) is relevant, because it says that while presidential immunity exists, it doesn't apply to actions taken before entering office or "alleged misconduct of petitioner was unrelated to any of his official duties as President of the United States". The next question in these cases would be whether the prosecuted actions are related to official duties as president, and I could imagine that question ultimately going back to the supreme court, given that the court could either be very broad or very narrow and that would be important to consistent legal outcomes.

https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/520/681/

Seeing my son on the ultrasound changed everything. It was still really early on but that was a human being with arms and legs and a beating heart, moving around (actually jumping around in a way he still does today on occasion) made me realize what this "clump of cells" they were talking about was.

It's just science, it's right there. Can't deny reality if you're honest.

Yeah, it's the other side of Nixon v. Fitzgerald. There it was asking about civil immunity and here it's criminal.

I agree that Trump can't get drunk at a poker game and beat a Waiter to death and go "nope, I'm the president, it's ok"

Sovereign immunity obviously only applies to actions taken in your capacity as a sovereign. However, as I said in my other post, if you're in the scope of that immunity then it would be absolute (like civil liability in Nixon v. Fitzgerald) unless limited through legislation similar to how it works in a 1983 claim or the federal tort claims act.

Iceland and Norway get a pass -- they're already like 99% renewables due to geothermal or hydroelectric.

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