The initial messaging was there because we'd just seen people stockpiling enough toilet paper to build houses with, so it was a pretty good message to tell people to leave N95s to healthcare workers instead of rioting to try and hoard them privately.
Yes, if that was what they'd said. Instead, Fauci lied to the public and told them masks weren't necessary, in order to convince them not to hoard them so that the healthcare workers could get the limited supply. The lie was in service of a good objective, but I don't think public health officials should be lying in their official capacity, regardless of the motive.
I am content with the conclusions any random reader will reach upon reading this discussion thread. I don't feel anything more needs to be said, but feel free to keep going of course.
Here is the video of the police informant having kicked in his door.
I have nothing but your word that that is a police informant, but certainly somebody broke into his house.
natch, I just looked up there where I posted a link to the free text version of the Pasco County lawsuit- and predictably, you failed to engage with the linked material.
I already stated what I think about the Pasco County situation. You can go read my comment about that. I don't know what more "engagement" you are expecting.
Ana’s has, you consistently fall into the category of disingenuous people who demand links, and then fail to engage with evidence.
I just watched the only video you have bothered to link, and commented on it. Previously you said to go watch some videos, but didn't link to any of them or even the channel, and there are many people on YouTube named Richard Moore. Now that you're actually pointing out some stuff I've watched some of it. I stopped when I saw the video of being stuck behind a slow driver presented as evidence that he is being stalked and harassed. That's a perfect example of what I'm talking about. Normal interactions that we all have on a daily basis become part of the delusion. That's what this phenomenon is.
And no, these are not easy to link at all, because it takes time.
Not easy to link? Here's one that took me about 5 seconds.
There's a lot to criticize Microsoft for, but compiling code that by default won't run on 20 year old operating systems would seem to be pretty far down the list.
Here's where I'll note that wanting to maintain your local voting rights to make infrastructure decisions for yourselves isn't really a partisan issue.
The Republican platform is 1) abortion 2) guns 3) whatever the Democrats oppose. So as soon as a prominent Democrat endorses local control of infrastructure, Republicans are against it.
If anyone should be punished it should be the lawyers or the client for not keeping their super secret documents secret.
The privilege belongs to the client, not the attorney. If the client wants to talk about privileged information they are free to do so - only the attorney is bound.
Since when did Google ever provide personalized help for anything?
In my experience, if you're paying Google for a service you get pretty good support. Otherwise, nada. I don't know if that holds for this product though.
Police patrol non-white areas more because they believe non-whites commit crimes more. Therefore they find more crimes there, because that's where they are. The AI is given this data, and predicts more crimes in non-white areas because that's where the police reports come from. Police then patrol those areas more because the AI told them to, generating more arrest records in those areas to feed back to the AI. And so on. Get it now?
Now you might say that this is appropriate, because in actual fact lower income areas have more crime, regardless of whether there are any police there. The thing is, even if that's true more police there doesn't help. The crimes don't stop just because there are more police around to arrest people for them, so this whole program isn't helping anyone.
There's this button near the bottom right of your keyboard. It has a little dot on it, and above that a symbol that looks like >. If you push that button after you're done with a thought, it will make your comments much easier to read.
I'll just take this opportunity to note once more that the definition of 4G includes gigabit speeds when stationary. So the fastest 5G in the world doesn't even qualify as 4G. When will we get real 4G, with 6G or 8G, maybe 10G?
We're usually not bad at it, there's just little political benefit in the unglamorous maintenance aspects of infrastructure, so it often doesn't get done because there's no money for it.
On the post: ICE Is So Toxic That The DHS's Investigative Wing Is Asking To Be Completely Separated From It
Re: Re:
When did he say that?
On the post: NY Senator Proposes Ridiculously Unconstitutional Social Media Law That Is The Mirror Opposite Of Equally Unconstitutional Laws In Florida & Texas
Re: Re:
Yes, if that was what they'd said. Instead, Fauci lied to the public and told them masks weren't necessary, in order to convince them not to hoard them so that the healthcare workers could get the limited supply. The lie was in service of a good objective, but I don't think public health officials should be lying in their official capacity, regardless of the motive.
https://slate.com/technology/2021/07/noble-lies-covid-fauci-cdc-masks.html
On the post: Retailers Are Blaming The Internet For A Retail Theft Surge That Might Not Be Happening; Media Is Helping Them Out
Re:
You don't. You steal stuff from the store and sell it on Amazon or eBay.
On the post: State Department Report Repeats Talking Points From Group Who Wants To Ban All Porn
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
I enjoyed your TED talk but just wanted to mention that it's spelled "cui bono".
On the post: Confused Judge Grants Project Veritas' Prior Restraint Against The NY Times
Re: Re: Re: Other Side
You have a reference for that claim? NBC employees were there on the scene with the FBI?
On the post: Court Tells Cops Who Got A Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 25 Years That Of Course Framing People For Crimes Is A Rights Violation
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Uh…it’s PASCO County Fl
I am content with the conclusions any random reader will reach upon reading this discussion thread. I don't feel anything more needs to be said, but feel free to keep going of course.
On the post: Court Tells Cops Who Got A Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 25 Years That Of Course Framing People For Crimes Is A Rights Violation
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Uh…it’s PASCO County Fl
I have nothing but your word that that is a police informant, but certainly somebody broke into his house.
I already stated what I think about the Pasco County situation. You can go read my comment about that. I don't know what more "engagement" you are expecting.
I just watched the only video you have bothered to link, and commented on it. Previously you said to go watch some videos, but didn't link to any of them or even the channel, and there are many people on YouTube named Richard Moore. Now that you're actually pointing out some stuff I've watched some of it. I stopped when I saw the video of being stuck behind a slow driver presented as evidence that he is being stalked and harassed. That's a perfect example of what I'm talking about. Normal interactions that we all have on a daily basis become part of the delusion. That's what this phenomenon is.
Not easy to link? Here's one that took me about 5 seconds.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgIV1bfnWMs
It's extremely easy to link.
I really don't care what I remind you of.
On the post: Dallas PD Brags About Stealing Money From A Woman At An Airport, Is Now Facing Scrutiny From Its Oversight Board
Re: Dogs can sniff out money
Dogs can detect substances at concentrations of one part per trillion. Sniffing some cocaine on money is trivially easy for them.
https://phoenixvetcenter.com/blog/214731-how-powerful-is-a-dogs-nose
On the post: Google Will Cripple OnHub Routers Starting Next Year
Re:
There's a lot to criticize Microsoft for, but compiling code that by default won't run on 20 year old operating systems would seem to be pretty far down the list.
On the post: Court Tells Cops Who Got A Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 25 Years That Of Course Framing People For Crimes Is A Rights Violation
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Uh…it’s PASCO County Fl
That's about what I expected. If there were really video evidence of everything claimed it should have been easy to link to it, yet... nothing.
On the post: 3 Out Of 4 Americans Support Community Broadband, Yet 19 States Still Ban Or Hinder Such Networks
Partisan
The Republican platform is 1) abortion 2) guns 3) whatever the Democrats oppose. So as soon as a prominent Democrat endorses local control of infrastructure, Republicans are against it.
On the post: Confused Judge Grants Project Veritas' Prior Restraint Against The NY Times
Re: Re: Re: Re: Other Side
This should get funniest comment just for "concussed hamster".
On the post: Confused Judge Grants Project Veritas' Prior Restraint Against The NY Times
Re:
The privilege belongs to the client, not the attorney. If the client wants to talk about privileged information they are free to do so - only the attorney is bound.
On the post: Google Will Cripple OnHub Routers Starting Next Year
Re:
In my experience, if you're paying Google for a service you get pretty good support. Otherwise, nada. I don't know if that holds for this product though.
On the post: Unsecured Data Leak Shows Predicitive Policing Is Just Tech-Washed, Old School Biased Policing
Re: Re: Re: Racist Computer?
Police patrol non-white areas more because they believe non-whites commit crimes more. Therefore they find more crimes there, because that's where they are. The AI is given this data, and predicts more crimes in non-white areas because that's where the police reports come from. Police then patrol those areas more because the AI told them to, generating more arrest records in those areas to feed back to the AI. And so on. Get it now?
Now you might say that this is appropriate, because in actual fact lower income areas have more crime, regardless of whether there are any police there. The thing is, even if that's true more police there doesn't help. The crimes don't stop just because there are more police around to arrest people for them, so this whole program isn't helping anyone.
On the post: 'Anti-5G' Jewelry Found To Be... Radioactive And Dangerous
Re: Re: Re:
But you are saying "they are harmless."
On the post: Another Report Shows U.S. 5G Isn't Living Up To The Hype
Re:
There's this button near the bottom right of your keyboard. It has a little dot on it, and above that a symbol that looks like >. If you push that button after you're done with a thought, it will make your comments much easier to read.
On the post: Another Report Shows U.S. 5G Isn't Living Up To The Hype
4G
I'll just take this opportunity to note once more that the definition of 4G includes gigabit speeds when stationary. So the fastest 5G in the world doesn't even qualify as 4G. When will we get real 4G, with 6G or 8G, maybe 10G?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IMT_Advanced
On the post: DEA Gives Former Marine Back $86,900 Cops Took From Him During A Nevada Traffic Stop Caught On Body Cam
Re: A reminder of how to handle interactions with police officer
That isn't a question though, I think it's better to ask "am I free to go?"
On the post: Texas Regulators Learned Nothing From February's Carnage, Prepare To Repeat The Cycle
Re: Re: Re:
We're usually not bad at it, there's just little political benefit in the unglamorous maintenance aspects of infrastructure, so it often doesn't get done because there's no money for it.
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