thatnameagain
thatnameagain t1_jebo6c2 wrote
It would just do what it was programmed to do. That's all it would base its "opinions" on.
thatnameagain t1_j6p4j9e wrote
Reply to comment by notnickthrowaway in N.Y. case against Trump over hush money to porn star goes to grand jury Monday by TheSausageKing
Barr wasn't adhering to any legal theories in the defense of Trump, he was just defending Trump from justice because he had personal interest in doing so.
thatnameagain t1_j6o5o1e wrote
Reply to comment by InsuranceToTheRescue in N.Y. case against Trump over hush money to porn star goes to grand jury Monday by TheSausageKing
The president is Joe Biden.
There aren’t really any active theories at the DOJ that the president can’t do anything illegal, which is why there have been numerous criminal investigations into presidents like Clinton and Trump while they were in office. I think you were referring to the legal memo at DOJ that recommends against indicting a sitting president.
thatnameagain t1_j65gk6b wrote
Reply to comment by pegothejerk in BuzzFeed says it will use AI to help create content, stock jumps 150% | CNN Business by KennyFulgencio
I agree with the spirit of your comment but I think the details here are really important.
Firstly, it's not rich people who need to be in favor of it (they never will) it's regular people. In the U.S. 80-90% of votes in primary elections go to Republicans or centrist democrats, and until that changes we won't see policies that don't reflect the far right or the center. If we want UBI, we need to vote for it and that means in primary elections since thats where you'll find the candidates who support it.
Secondly, UBI is actually not a good solution in itself to automation because it will create a wealth gap in society that makes the growing one we have today seem tiny in comparison. Why? Because corporations / the 001% will own all the robots and make ALL the money, and then UBI is what filters out to regular people in an economy with minimal upward mobility. So we either need a solution that is based around increasing career upward mobility for most people, or we need to go full socialist and make all corporations publicly owned and all the income publicly distributed.
thatnameagain t1_j65ci3s wrote
Reply to comment by PEVEI in BuzzFeed says it will use AI to help create content, stock jumps 150% | CNN Business by KennyFulgencio
The value lost is that these things crowd out legitimate content from the internet, and this may be the nail in the coffin that fully kills online media in the long term. It can always get worse.
thatnameagain t1_j61buwa wrote
Reply to horny songs that go hard? by siynnn
It's parody of course, but "Double Team" by Tenacious D was basically written to be the epitome of this.
As for songs that are ostensibly serious, "Rock You Like A Hurricane" is kinda it. Everyone only knows the chorus so people are like, oh yeah that's just a song about rocking hard, the band is gonna rock us hard, right? Uh uh, that's a song about what to do when "the cat is purring," which, according to the lyrics, is "give her inches and feed her well" because "Lust is in cages 'til storm breaks loose"
thatnameagain t1_iy904i7 wrote
Reply to comment by BloodyVaginalFarts in World Health Organization to rename monkeypox as mpox -CNBC by wander9077
Yes, don’t call people monkeys. Particularly non-white people who have been called that as a form of dehumanization for hundreds of years.
thatnameagain t1_iy7i1pm wrote
Reply to comment by BloodyVaginalFarts in World Health Organization to rename monkeypox as mpox -CNBC by wander9077
Not very familiar with the history of very common racial slurs are you?
thatnameagain t1_iy7hzwe wrote
Reply to comment by PCM97 in World Health Organization to rename monkeypox as mpox -CNBC by wander9077
Humans not wanting to be associated with being like monkeys is about the oldest stigma in human society.
thatnameagain t1_ivsaknk wrote
Reply to comment by WlmWilberforce in He jokingly compared covid to a zombie apocalypse. An arrest followed. by maxxspeed
They're not in conflict in abstract principle, but they are in the sense of the article.
State-level laws ands state's rights are often cited by conservatives as the proper alternative to "big-government" (i.e. federal government). This was a state law that brought the police down on him even though the main issue is that the police chose to handle it like thugs instead of rational people.
thatnameagain t1_ivq73qa wrote
Based on these responses I assume the majority of you didn't read the article.
- He should not have been swarmed with a Swat team for this or arrested. Simply informing him he had violated the law and asking him to remove the post would have been sufficient and saved everyone a huge headache.
- He wasn't arrested because of anything related to COVID misinformation
- He was arrested because the tenor of his post made it sound like police were literally shooting people on sight right then and there, and obviously this creates a potential for a violent "response" by others. This absolutely crossed the line into incitement, albeit unintentionally. It's not a free speech issue.
- The real issue here is Louisiana's draconian pro-police laws - "Under the state’s law, it’s legal to execute an arrest without a warrant as long as there’s a reasonable basis for believing an offense has been committed"
- If your takeaway from this is "Big government doesn't let us have no freedom of speech" instead of "The police have way too much power to do what they want and that undermines the legitimacy of law and hurts our rights" then you missed the point.
thatnameagain t1_ivlprte wrote
Reply to comment by Rage_Like_Nic_Cage in Reports of alleged voter intimidation and interference in NC ahead of Election Day by Zen1
Biden has given several primetime speeches about this, the 1/6 committee was easily the biggest congressional story of the year, and basically every top democrat has repeatedly said this is urgent. What you're perceiving is the media not taking it urgently enough,
thatnameagain t1_iux1xwm wrote
Reply to comment by dy0dj1 in UN: Global warming to melt major glaciers by 2050, including Yosemite's by BollocksAsBalls
Republicans don't stop talking about keeping immigrants out. That's their solution.
thatnameagain t1_itw30iw wrote
Reply to comment by Proregressive in Hu Jintao: Fresh China congress footage deepens mystery over exit by eager_to_hear
Is there any reason at all to think that Hu was sick? Or any reason one would watch that video and conclude that he was removed for that reason?
Because a rational person might conclude that having him removed like that right after the press was allowed in to get footage and not before was the script.
thatnameagain t1_ittlj26 wrote
Reply to comment by Proregressive in Hu Jintao: Fresh China congress footage deepens mystery over exit by eager_to_hear
What are you suggesting is the purpose of this scripted spectacle then?
thatnameagain t1_it3wilc wrote
Reply to comment by R_V_Z in Air quality around Seattle ranked worst in the world by SounderBruce
2020 had more concentrated super-bad days but it wasn't a straight month of unhealthy air.
thatnameagain t1_ispobkn wrote
Reply to comment by fromcjoe123 in Hong Kong protester dragged into Manchester Chinese consulate grounds and beaten up by AlxIp
Just to be clear, this is being reported on because it IS a diplomatic incident.
thatnameagain t1_jed6jyy wrote
Reply to comment by felix_using_reddit in How does China think about AI safety? by Aggravating_Lake_657
China is not reluctant to attack, they just have no chance of succeeding in an invasion yet. When they can, things will change.