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docmox , in A fight erupts in U.S. housing market as deteriorated affordability clashes with the 'lock-in effect'

This is going to have an interesting effect on the labor market. With people being ‘locked-in’ it will ultimately reduce worker mobility. Combine with the emphasis on ‘back to the office’, this will reduce the labor pool available to employers.

The good news is that new build costs are coming down and builders are starting to ramp up again.

UltraMagnus0001 ,

History has shown the working middle class owning a home is good for the economy because of upward mobility. I think you have it spot on.

NewsAutoMod , in Ukraine war: Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, the man behind Kyiv's renewed offensive

Your title might not match the article you linked. Could you review it, and change it if it does indeed not match.

bleep bloop, this action was performed semi-automatically by a bot (:

BrikoX OP ,
@BrikoX@lemmy.zip avatar

Title was changed later, I’m using the original title.

P.S. Comment is meant for the mods, not the bot.

dhork , in Trump’s outbursts met with silence so far by prosecutor, judge

This is what he does whenever he’s challenged, though. Throw dumb shit against the wall in the hope it changes the narrative to one he is in control of.

This prosecutor won’t fall for that. And for all the press about how the judge might be biased, she is still a judge and knows her decisions are subject to review, so she can’t stoop to that either.

ZooGuru , in Investigation finds no fraud by Texas prison contractor that was paid despite cutting inmate therapy services
@ZooGuru@lemmy.world avatar

Wouldn’t this still be fraud? It’s defrauding taxpayers, surely. Just because the prison said it was okay should not make the practice acceptable. Maybe that makes the prisons culpable instead of the firm offering services? Crazy.

czech ,
@czech@no.faux.moe avatar

Yea I'm confused... The private prison officials sanctioned themselves to defraud Texas?

NewsAutoMod , in AT&T stock fell to 29-year low on Friday after reports that telcoms will need to cleanup the lead pollution they made

Your title might not match the article you linked. Could you review it, and change it if it does indeed not match.

bleep bloop, this action was performed semi-automatically by a bot (:

trafficnab , in Pay Raises Are Finally Beating Inflation After Two Years of Falling Behind

Get back to me when we've corrected the last 30 years of wage stagnation too

fatcat420 , in Laid-off Twitter Africa team 'ghosted' without severance pay or benefits, former employees say | CNN Business

CNN reached out to Twitter for comment on the status of the severance package for the former employees in the Ghana office but received an automated response – a poop emoji. It’s unclear whether Twitter still has a media relations department.

This is just sad.

SayJess , in Pay Raises Are Finally Beating Inflation After Two Years of Falling Behind

I’ve worked 2 manufacturing jobs in the past 2 years, and know others that work at other factories. We have not received raises that track with inflation, ever. I know this is anecdotal, but lived experiences often differ to what stats are cited.

Lemmings_together_strong , in Typo sends millions of US military emails to Russian ally Mali

Why the military doesn’t filter emails being sent to an unfriendly foreign nation is beyond me. My company would restrict my account if I began emailing a random .ml domain with attatchments.

venusenvy47 , (edited )

I’m assuming this doesn’t involve intra-military emails, because that would be trivial to prevent. It’s probably because of people sending from another domain. Like if [email protected] is sending an email to [email protected], but he mistypes the .mil part because he is using his iPhone while riding his motorcycle with a girl on the back.

A more realistic example would be [email protected] sending an email to [email protected] to discuss some upcoming meeting about a new aircraft contract.

jecht360 , in Handheld Gaming Consoles Will Soon Require Replaceable Batteries
@jecht360@lemmy.world avatar

Good. Make everything more repairable please. I’d rather a device be a little heavier/thicker with easily replaceable parts.

yuki2501 , in The temperature in China hit 52.2°C (126°F)
@yuki2501@lemmy.world avatar

chuckles I’m in danger!

PaulDevonUK , in 'This is just the beginning': Extreme heat around the world as fires rage in southern Europe
@PaulDevonUK@lemmy.world avatar

If you ask this question then you haven’t been paying attention to the scientists for the last few decades.

MicroWave OP , in Phoenix Breaks Heat Record Set in 1974
@MicroWave@lemmy.world avatar

On Monday, Phoenix reached a miserable milestone: It was the first time since 1974 that it had 18 days in a row of 110-degree or more temperatures. On Tuesday, it was poised to break that 49-year-old record and hit Day 19. The forecast called for a high of 115 degrees Fahrenheit.

People in the Southwest are used to brutal summers. Phoenix has had plenty of days that soar past 100 degrees. Water misters spritz patios, and neighborhoods and playgrounds clear out in the midday sun. Monsoons usually sweep through with refreshing relief. But this stagnant summer is testing even the hardiest, and putting many more people at risk.

NewsAutoMod , in Moderators Wanted

Test (:

Rozz , in US government launches the Cyber Trust Mark, its long-awaited IoT security labeling program

Right on time

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