I’m more worried about fraud at the elector level, not at the voter level. If the survey covered that, I’d say that there will absolutely be (another) attempt this year.
I’m more worried about fraud at the elector level, not at the voter level. If the survey covered that, I’d say that there will absolutely be (another) attempt this year.
Chuck Feeney is over here looking like a gigachad though:
He [Feeney] decided to give virtually all his money away to various domestic and international charities and philanthropic efforts over his last 40 years or so. In September 2020, Feeney closed down his philanthropy company, having given away his wealth, minus retirement savings for him and his wife.
That makes more sense. Thanks for sharing.
One note about Sagas - they tick up on your first main phase, so you’d copy the Binding the Old Gods again before getting the forest.
Edit: but yes, you’d get the forest in your main phase after it re-entered on your upkeep.
Of course, in context it’s a lot different. Conceptually, it’s interesting, but only taken without the context that the goal is clearly to subvert the balance of powers between the different branches of government and turn it into an authoritarian government.
If anyone reasonable were to suggest it, it wouldn’t be so terrible though. It’s just that we know how Trump would abuse that office to push his own agenda.
An office to consult with could have helped pushed some of Biden’s things, especially regarding student loan forgiveness. It’s not always clear what is and isn’t legal, and ideally a president would try to push the boundaries as much as they can to accomplish what they believe is best for the country.
Trump is just a uniquely bad dude. Give him a hammer and he’ll turn it into a weapon before he builds anything productive with it.
Yeah, the timing of the article makes it clear what the motive is. It’s to distract discussion away from the article about Stallman.
Taken wholly out of context, a legal office to work with the president to ensure their orders are legally sound and hard to challenge sounds like a good thing. Does that not already exist?
The rest of this nonsense can cease along with his whole campaign, and the world would be better because of it.
Up to you. Two people can make mistakes at the same time. Whether there is truth to the claims, I’m not sure, but if there is truth then there are some unpleasant details in it.
I’ve been uninterested in standard since they changed the rotation to 3y. With this, I know I’m done now. It was fun while it lasted.
I had no issues with UB sets and products as fun eternal format content, but if they’re adding more nonsense to standard, no thanks. I much preferred the old, smaller standards.
They didn’t endorse or reject his agenda. They slammed it. Presumably into a table or something.
Good point. Committing genocide is completely justifiable as long as you’re not the only one doing it.
To add to this, funerals for veterans/active duty can be a bit more involved. I’ll admit I don’t know who pays for the military ceremony, but someone does.
The whole situation around Israel has bipartisan support. Even if it’s political, it’s hard to say they’re picking a side there.
If you’re hoping for the standard lib to have things built on evolving standards and ecosystems like HTTP clients, then I doubt that will ever happen. There are plenty of examples of why that would be a terrible idea (urllib
, std::regex
, etc).
Sometimes when I don’t leave comments like that, I get review comments asking what the line does. Code like ThisMethodInitsTheService()
with comments like “what does this do?” in the review.
So now I comment a lot. Apparently reading code is hard for some people, even code that tells you exactly what it does in very simple terms.
This reminds me of a time my friends thought I was weird for going to a brewery with them. They thought I wouldn’t have fun if I didn’t drink.
The brewery also makes their own root beer, so it ended up being fun anyway.
TL;DR:
From today the license applied to the project will be the Apache 2.0 license with an extra line forbidding usage of the codebase as an integration or app to Atlassian’s Confluence or Jira products.
While it’s disappointing to see the additional restriction, it’s better to have a project the devs find sustainable than to have nothing at all. It seems like the goal of this change is to protect their main source of funding.
Worst case, people can fork the code before the change.
I won’t be getting any of the Marvel UB content, but I love that Captain America is a Jeskai card.
Makes sense, given that steel is an iron/carbon alloy. I guess decarbonization would be making the process more efficient and capturing more of the carbon into the steel?