The US left wing has a lot of great ideas and some really really terrible ones that are completely out of the mainstream.
That’s probably specific enough, right?
The US left wing has a lot of great ideas and some really really terrible ones that are completely out of the mainstream.
That’s probably specific enough, right?
tl;dr
sYou get to pick one.
And here’s where the mods turn to the camera with roguish smirks, because they weren’t necessarily bluffing.
You know, I’d love to read things that are written to be read, not something that reads like the storyboard to PCG’s video content for this item.
That is certainly one perspective.
We’re all affected by how our respective governments were born, and grew up, or didn’t, or haven’t had the chance to.
Now, I get it. No one wants to feel like they actually voted for the conservative outcomes
This is projection. Can you conceive of someone with slightly different political values than yourself?
A half-measure at best, and you know it, because as with everything they do, we only have bipartisan support if the wealthy get the lion’s share of the money. That’s how it was with Obamacare and COVID relief. It’s what they do.
This is how you debate? “I’m right because politician bad”? Cite a source or two.
That totally matters in a country where marriage policies exist mostly at the state level
lol, with the small exceptions of my own tax bill and federal benefits.
and the Supreme Court has already admitted they’re gunning for gay marriage next.
Right…in which case federal recognition becomes critically important.
Confident doomsaying is always easy and popular on politics threads, and I just don’t buy it here. Before the 2022 midterms, commentators were just as confident that the economy (and inflation!) would hand the GOP a huge victory in Congress. Didn’t happen.
Biden’s done exactly what he said he would, which is to focus on and fight for laws and measures that have a chance of passing the US Congress. Hard to argue with his strategy.
On the economy:
Legislative record:
Hercule Poirot sat in his armchair, eyebrow raised as he read the peculiar Lemmy comment before him. His mustache twitched in amusement at the dramatic flair with which the analysis was presented. He admired the cleverness and relevance to the topic, but couldn’t shake a feeling of familiarity, as if he’d encountered a similar style of writing before.
The detective leaned back, his mind busy with the details concerning the case brought to him by an anonymous client. The client had claimed that the comment was generated by an LLM, an algorithmic language model, and sought Poirot’s expertise in evaluating the comment’s authenticity. It was a clever observation, but Poirot wondered if such a deduction could truly be made based on the content alone.
With a thoughtful stroke of his mustache, Poirot dissected the essence of the comment. He noted the grandiose language, the crafted phrases, and the lack of personal touch. It seemed constructed solely to impress, rather than convey genuine insight.
Poirot’s eyes scanned the room, landing on a shelf of books. He remembered a similar style of writing he’d come across in a novel written by a pretentious author. He retrieved the book, finding a passage that matched the tone of the Lemmy comment.
“Ah, mon ami,” Poirot muttered, smiling wryly. “It seems our LLM has not proven as original or interesting as they would have us believe.”
Poirot focused on the motive behind such an endeavor. Why would someone generate a comment that mimicked an author’s style? Perhaps an aspiring writer sought attention or validation.
With a triumphant glint, Poirot concluded that the motive behind the LLM’s imitation was simply a lack of creativity. The individual had chosen to emulate a well-known author’s style, believing it would garner attention.
“It seems, mon ami, that even in writing, some are tempted to take shortcuts,” Poirot mused, shaking his head. “But true brilliance lies not in imitation, but in the unique voice and perspective one brings to the table.”
With that, Hercule Poirot closed the book and returned it to its place on the shelf. He had solved the case of the Lemmy comment, revealing it to be an uninspiring endeavor. Poirot hoped that the aspiring writer behind the LLM would find their own voice and path of genuine creativity.
Right but to your other point, the admins who don’t fork will send you spam.
Also, even if I don’t upgrade to v0.18, I have to live in a fediverse that have other instances that WILL, and they might pose a problem with increased spam.
A fork avoids this problem how?
I disagree, once your open source project “sprouts wings” you enter an unspoken power battle. If enough of the community disagrees with something the chance of a successful fork grows. Once a project is forked away, you no longer have any control at all.
Who’s writing the code for the fork? If you see them, can you ask them to just submit the PR that the devs said they’ll approve?
Despite what you’re implying, the devs have no duty to fix admin-reported problems using admin-dictated solutions.
They have already said they would accept a PR adding support for captchas. Someone will undoubtedly do this before long.
Until then, why the urgency? What is it that’s preventing you from keeping your instance on 0.17?
How many people who post JS BAD memes could provide a single example of why it’s bad without looking it up?