Kharnsjockstrap
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j8iidfd wrote
Reply to comment by PineappIeSuppository in Biden fires Architect of the Capitol after calls for his resignation by Picture-unrelated
Lynch was ag into 2017 that’s all I posted and I get blown up with ass mad reddit posts. Trump left her AG into the next year and left Yates as her interim. Those are both correct statements.
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j8gdfwp wrote
Reply to comment by UofMtigers2014 in Biden fires Architect of the Capitol after calls for his resignation by Picture-unrelated
Nope? But yates was AG into 2017 iirc
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j8gc2bi wrote
Reply to comment by UofMtigers2014 in Biden fires Architect of the Capitol after calls for his resignation by Picture-unrelated
Sorry yeah Loretta lynch not holder. Stayed on for a year into the presidency. Just figured if he was purging lynch would be first to go and Yates wouldn’t have even been sat
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j8g6u4g wrote
Reply to comment by UofMtigers2014 in Biden fires Architect of the Capitol after calls for his resignation by Picture-unrelated
He literally kept Eric holder and Salley Yates on as AG so if he was doing that he was pretty fucking shit at it lol
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j8g4jfl wrote
Reply to comment by Ignorantsloth in Police in Shreveport accused of fatally shooting unarmed Black man who was running away by WE-NEED-MORE-CATS
To be fair it can be quite vague in a lot of cases. For example if someone is accused of a violent assault and then flees toward a group of people when police approach them is it reasonable or unreasonable to think he could harm someone if he’s able to reach the group. Or if someone is wanted for murder and flees police should police be held accountable for another murder they commit after escaping when they could have shot the person while they were fleeing?
This all hinges on reasonable belief and of course this calculus changes if it’s drug related and no weapon is involved or something but personally when it comes to fleeing felon type rules there’s reasonable arguments in both directions.
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j88jaq0 wrote
Reply to comment by empfindsamkeit in Family of Oakland baker seeks 'restorative justice' for her death following robbery by IAmNotARobot124
Right? Need a job, place to stay and some money? Just find some rube to kill then say you’re sorry.
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j88iy4n wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Family of Oakland baker seeks 'restorative justice' for her death following robbery by IAmNotARobot124
Clown world. As if their opinion should matter since arresting them would primarily be so they don’t rob and kill other people lol
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j19q13e wrote
Reply to comment by barrinmw in Bankman-Fried execs likely to be freed on bail after FTX fraud pleas by cloud_coder
Honestly it’s possible she was behind most of it. The info access from alameda to FTX was pretty one way and SBF continues to maintain he is confused and doesn’t know shit.
Is this stupid, yes, but it’s not outside the realm of possibility that she set him up to fall after she embezzled the funds. If the government feels the same she’ll still get jail time but this also depends on what text messages and shit she’s given them though.
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j0j3mzr wrote
Reply to comment by Millenniauld in Power cuts in seven states as deadly winter storm and tornadoes hit US by GroundbreakingGur930
So the original conversation was about regulation regarding lines and distance to trees. My post is about regulation not being the solution to everything and pitfalls that can be encountered when assuming it is.
There is no need to be hostile. We agree that regulation in some areas is worthwhile just not to stop damage from falling trees.
Companies will already try to limit damage to lines because that’s a bill they’re going to foot. A useful regulation could be something that ensures they can’t pass the cost of damaged lines onto consumers so they would be more incentivized to clear trees but they are already doing this and it’s usually severe winds that blow shit into the lines and not the lines being built directly under trees anyway. Which may not really be a problem regulation can fix especially not the government creating an arbitrary distance between line and tree lmao.
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j0ividz wrote
Reply to comment by Millenniauld in Power cuts in seven states as deadly winter storm and tornadoes hit US by GroundbreakingGur930
So no the government doesn’t just tell someone to do a thing when it comes to most regulation.
There is usually a compliance process which requires frequent disclosures as well as audits, an entire lobbying process before hand because without some industry input the government tends to actually do some pretty stupid shit and periodic feedback periods as well. All of this requires man hours for some pretty intelligent and well paid specialists and it doesn’t materialize out of thin air like in some kind of a time paradox. If they’re working on compliance disclosures, lobbying and audit compliance and fixes then they aren’t doing other shit for the company they are still expected to do so the cost is there regardless if they’re on salary or retainer anyway.
So I’ll pose the question again. Why add all this extra cost for trees when the company literally already does it?
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j0in48d wrote
Reply to comment by Millenniauld in Power cuts in seven states as deadly winter storm and tornadoes hit US by GroundbreakingGur930
Right they already do this. So if they had to also hire lawyers to navigate a compliance process just to do the same thing they already do then you’d be paying a lot more for power
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j0hz3b0 wrote
Reply to comment by kaosaddi in Power cuts in seven states as deadly winter storm and tornadoes hit US by GroundbreakingGur930
Tbf this is a shit proposition if anyone lives in a lightly forested area and not the solution you think it is.
Without regulation tree falls on power lines. With regulation anyone that lives near trees needs to pay a fuckload extra for power to go through so superficial approval process where the government gets to approve of a transaction between two parties who are already accepting the risk that trees might fall on a line
Kharnsjockstrap t1_j8iiyrq wrote
Reply to comment by cubedweller in Biden fires Architect of the Capitol after calls for his resignation by Picture-unrelated
Nah you’re right I’m confused. Post the year lynch left office maybe I’m misremembering.