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Vertelleus , in Another One Of Trump’s Attorneys Seemingly Admitted (Twice) That His Client Committed A Crime
@Vertelleus@sh.itjust.works avatar

Hm. He really does have tiny hands.

dorcas_gustine ,

I think it is more a short arms problem

HeyJoe , in The first pill to treat postpartum depression has been approved by US health officials

I wonder if you can no longer breastfeed while on this drug. I also hope there really is no terrible health risk that gets found once it starts being used. Drug companies don’t have the best track record for helping mothers out…

BzzBiotch , in Teen Couple Allegedly Kill Girl’s Dad for Disliking Boyfriend
@BzzBiotch@lemmy.world avatar

Guess dad was right?

Son_of_dad ,

The boyfriend looks casually abusive. The dad probably clocked that right away

PeepinGoodArgs , in The invisible laws that led to America’s housing crisis
GrumbleGrim , in Mortgage rates climb toward 7% after America's credit rating was downgraded

The market is fucked. The house I bought 3 years ago has doubled in value. It’s absolutely insane.

And you might be thinking, Great sell it! But then I have to find a new house that isn’t being swallowed up by businesses paying cash for them (good luck). And we will never again see 2% mortgages in our lifetime, so I’m just going to die in this massively overvalued house.

afraid_of_zombies ,

Aren’t your taxes going to explode?

psycho_driver ,

My taxes have doubled in the six years we’ve had our house. Mortgage + taxes + insurance are still way cheaper than what dickbag landlords want to charge for an apartment half this size in the current market. It helps that I’m a DIYer and can fix pretty much anything that goes wrong with the house.

afraid_of_zombies ,

I don’t know what to say. You sound screwed but could have been screwed much worse. Sorry or congrats?

My landlord inherited the property and he is a lazy asshole. Every few years I change the dates on my lease and have him sign it. No plans to ever move. The lowest priced home that isn’t condemned in my city stands at half a million. A friend of mine was out bid on a home in the nearby city by 100k and in cash.

psycho_driver ,

I don’t know what to say. You sound screwed but could have been screwed much worse. Sorry or congrats?

I think the bottom line is that almost everyone is screwed the way things are going. I’m screwed a lot less than other people since I got in at a (comparatively, now) low purchase price and great interest rate. My home insurance company has surprisingly not increased it’s rates for the last two years as well, so that’s a silver lining I suppose.

GrumbleGrim ,

Not as long as it is not reassessed.

psycho_driver ,

Same wrt buying a house at the right time. We do plan on selling ours though at or close to retirement. We’re both working pension jobs so we’ll just buy a modest RV and live off of our retirements + the proceeds from the eventual house sale (if there’s still an America and American market at that point). That’s the plan, anyway.

GiddyGap ,

This is called “golden handcuffs” among real estate researchers.

CorrosiveCapital , in NYPD officers detain online influencer after giveaway devolves into chaos

Incite a riot, get charged. Makes sense.

OldWoodFrame , in Infant RSV shot wins backing of CDC advisors, paving way for fall availability

Anyone with a small child very clearly remembers how brutal last years RSV season was. I bet adoption is going to be high, get it before they have supply constraints.

Fredselfish ,
@Fredselfish@lemmy.ml avatar

It will continue to get worse due to the antivax movement. They will go full swing against this vaccine.

It’s unfortunate that in the 21st century, we are moving backward in the world. We should be exploring the universe and cure all diseases. Yet, we have a large majority of Americans who want to take us backward.

gabe ,

And I think it’s going to be completely reasonable when parents of young children state those that refuse the vaccine aren’t going anywhere near their kids

theangryseal ,

My kids got it, I got it.

It took me weeks to recover. I know they say it usually don’t hit adults too hard, but damn I was miserable.

All the jokers who came in my store saying, “I gawts thuh awr ays veeee” knowing I have babies too. If I ever lost my damn mind and just started cracking skulls it would be because some sick jackass knowingly coughs at me.

I’m thankful that parents will have this. My poor little babies just cried and moped for days.

vzq , in Gay Louisiana doctor says he’s leaving the state over its ‘discriminatory’ legislation

That’s a direct result of losing the Supreme Court. It was the only mechanism keeping minorities and women safe in red states. Now that it’s gone, the apparatus of state power is going to grind them up if they don’t have the resources to get out.

Next time someone says “democrats and republicans are the same” or “Clinton would have been just as bad”, think of the SC and federal district judges she would have appointed. Think of how different things would be for people in Texas, Louisiana, Florida, Arkansas etc right now.

Then tell me again how your vote doesn’t matter.

dhork ,

No, the problem here is with the Senate, and it’s arcane traditions where unanimous consent is required to get anything substantial done, and if the outsize power it gives the Majority Leader and the committee chairs to set the agends, who are only selected by the majority members. With the normal rules it takes 60 votes to get anything done. But if the Majority Leader or the relevant committee chair doesn’t like a thing, they get a pocket veto to derail it.

Our current situation at the Supreme Court has everything to do with Mitch McConnell and Lindsay Graham deciding that the Senate’s “advise and consent” role includes being able to perpetually ignore the President by failing to schedule a vote. When RBG died, Republicans made clear that they would have voted down a progressive replacement. I think it was Graham that literally challenged Obama to name a more centrist judge, and gave Garland as an example by name. Then, when Obama nominated Garland, Graham pivoted and said that now that Obama nominated that centrist, the Senate still wouldn’t consider the nomination until after the election.

Make no mistake about it, the reason why Graham and McConnell never scheduled a vote is that they knew it would pass. So two Senators essentially vetoed Obama’s pick, which is in flagrant opposition to the Constitution, which says the whole Senate has to vote on it. (Then , of course, when the tables were turned 4 years later Mitch and Lindsay came to different conclusions).

Even if Clinton won in 2020, there is no guarantee these Senate Republicans would have played fair and lived up to their commitments. They would have found new and novel ways to screw the country.

vzq ,

Agreed the problem is multi faceted, and it needs to be fought on multiple fronts. If I were an American I would support statehood for DC and PR to address the small-d-democratic deficit of the senate, anti-gerrymandering rules, all that stuff.

But none of these things are made better by not having a Democrat in the White House.

dhork ,

Those are all Band-Aids, the problem doesn’t get fixed until the Judiciary is fixed, and so much of that depends on the Senate that we can’t fix the Judiciary without fixing the Senate first.

The Senate was originally founded as a check on direct democracy, after all. Senators were appointed directly by State Legislatures, not by popular vote. Which meant that they needed to have direct political connections, both inside their state and outside, to get anything done. And I think that’s the origin of their arcane rules, they considered themselves part of an exclusive club, so they made rules that reinforced those personal connections to get anything done.

I doubt the founders ever intended for Lindsay Graham to have a permanent veto on naming Supreme Court Justices, or “Coach” Tuberville to have a permanent veto on confirming high-ranking military appointments. Yet here we are.

Soundhole ,

Let’s be clear. The normal rules are 50 votes to pass legislation. The fillibuster was never meant to be a permanent fixture and needs to be abolished immediately.

dhork ,

It’s more than just the Filibuster. The Senate rules are complex, on purpose, to make actually getting things done difficult, and revising those rules required unanimous consent.

Look at what “Coach” Tuberville is doing. There are a bunch of military promotions that require Senate confirmation. The normal process is to debate each one individually. Debating them and approving them together, in one batch, requires changing the rules, which requires Unanimous Consent. Coach is withholding that consent because the military is transporting women in their ranks who need health care that might require abortion to states that allow it. Which has nothing to do with the merits of the promotions.

He is using the Senate rules as a cudgel to hold Military Readiness hostage until he gets his way. And it’s the inane structure of the Senate rules that allow this.

Frog-Brawler ,
@Frog-Brawler@kbin.social avatar

Clinton failed. Should have run a better campaign.

vzq ,

Obviously. But that’s not the point I was making.

Pandantic ,
@Pandantic@lemmy.world avatar

If they only would have let Obama appoint his justice! Then RBG could have retired instead of dying on the bench trying to hang on until a dem president. That whole shit was so underhanded, and then the GOP called it BS when dems tried to keep out a literal rapist.

vzq ,

They dared the dems to do something about it, and the dems blinked. They always blink.

Pandantic ,
@Pandantic@lemmy.world avatar

😭 yeah… It’s such pain to have to fight someone who’s fighting dirty. You either have to figure out how to beat them anyway, or get dirty yourself, and dems weren’t ready to get dirty yet.

notabird ,

There was a thread yesterday saying the usual “Democrats should pick a better candidate than Biden”.

DrGumby ,

Im in school in Louisiana where there is a big push to improve the state healthcare ranking from 49/50 to 40 in the next 10 or so years.

Nation wide, over 50% of doctors stay in the same state they did their residency training in. So if you get the resident, chances are you get a doctor in the long term. You want residents to do their training in your state.

But with the new laws, so many of my classmates are not even considering doing their residency training in Louisiana. I sure as hell dont want to. So this law is making more people seek training outside of the state and less will likely return after. Its going to end up draining even more doctors out of the already horribly health deprived state. Absolute lunacy.

We ain’t getting to 40 like this.

GiddyGap ,

This is part of the GOP strategy.

Senator Josh Hawley from Missouri has openly acknowledged that the GOP strategy is to make it so miserable for Democrats in red and purple states that they will move to blue states. That would, in turn, cement Republican power in the White House, Senate and thereby the Supreme Court.

dunning_cougar , in WATCH: Man in giant inflatable Trump costume taunts former president outside DC courthouse

This guy f***s.

BigJim ,

You can say fucks on the internet

thefartographer ,

I’m telling!

dunning_cougar ,

I try to be sensitive to victims of sexual violence and verbal abuse. But I don’t mind for my own sake.

SatansMaggotyCumFart ,

The word ‘sake’ offends me.

Can you try to limit your usage of it?

dunning_cougar ,

Yes, my apologies if I caused distress.

pozbo ,
@pozbo@lemmy.world avatar

I find the word distressing to be vulgar. Please cease use of it.

dunning_cougar ,

I’m sorry for triggering any negative connotations associated with that word, I’ll be more sensitive going forward.

Snowpix ,
@Snowpix@lemmy.ca avatar

Excuse me, the word “vulgar” offends me greatly. If you would be so kind, please refrain from ever using such a vile word around me again.

Solarius ,

“Guy” could also be triggering for some trans folks! May want to just use gender neutral pronouns regardless of who you’re talking about because you never know who’s reading and how it could affect their day ^_^

dunning_cougar ,

Yesss thanks for the feedback, I’ll do better in the future. The article seemed to indicate a male identifying person, but I shouldn’t have assumed that.

CeruleanRuin ,
@CeruleanRuin@lemmy.world avatar

Saying “trigger” is insensitive to victims of gun violence.

_haha_oh_wow_ ,
@_haha_oh_wow_@kbin.social avatar

Reported to the cyberpolice.

CeruleanRuin ,
@CeruleanRuin@lemmy.world avatar

He was saying farms. Because the guy is a wheat farmer.

Cold_Brew_Enema ,

Farts?

JustZ , in Incandescent light bulbs are officially banned in the U.S.
@JustZ@lemmy.world avatar

The new rules went into effect in 2007.

However, some conservative and Republican lawmakers denounced them for interfering with consumer choice and placing undue burdens on businesses. Under former President Donald Trump, the Energy Department scrapped them in 2019.

Conservative in your bed room to inspect your genitals, but your light bulb are out of reach.

NOT_RICK ,
@NOT_RICK@lemmy.world avatar

Undue burden, fucking lol. How dare the government force businesses to save money and maintenance time!

hoodatninja ,
@hoodatninja@kbin.social avatar

Funny to see that this was pushed under the Bush administration.

theodewere , (edited )
@theodewere@kbin.social avatar

they aren't "Conservative", they're just cowardly bullies and ignorant fucking trolls.. they don't deserve any fancy names..

you have to actually understand governance and be good at it to consider yourself Conservative.. these people are morons and ignorant fascists, who destroy everything and steal whatever isn't nailed down..

SymphonicResonance ,
@SymphonicResonance@lemmy.world avatar

While opposed by many conservatives, the Bill was signed into law by conservative ( GW Bush). Go figure . Also Intresting to me is the members of the Senate that didn’t vote on the bill: Biden, Clinton, Dodd, Hagel, McCain, Obama .

JustZ ,
@JustZ@lemmy.world avatar

This is about Department of Energy rulemaking, a regulation, not a statute.

SymphonicResonance ,
@SymphonicResonance@lemmy.world avatar

I am going to assume that you are not American, so you are ignorant about how our laws work. The DOE is enforcing parts of the Energy Policy and Conservation Act that were amended by the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, which I mentioned in my previous reply.

You can read the bill here: www.congress.gov/bill/110th-congress/…/text . Including this:

Amends EPCA to prescribe energy efficiency standards for general service incandescent lamps, rough service lamps, and other designated lamps.

So yes, the DOE is making rules but it can’t makes rules in a vacuum. It is directed to do so by the bills signed into law by the President of the United States (or in some cases just by Congress if a veto is overridden). In 2019, the Trump administration’s DOE blocked the rule that was going to be implemented. In 2023 the Biden administration’s DOE enforced the rule. None of this could happen without congress.

JustZ ,
@JustZ@lemmy.world avatar

I’m an American attorney and focus on administrative law.

Mic_Check_One_Two , (edited )

I will say that incandescents still have a specific use case in entertainment. Newer fixtures are LEDs, but stage/film is largely comprised of community theaters and indie projects that can’t afford to pay $500 per light to upgrade to LED. Because a lot of fixtures need to be completely replaced, instead of simply swapping out an incandescent lamp for an LED.

Basically, LED’s fucking suck at dimming. They’ve gotten much better in recent years, but they’re nowhere near incandescents. If you need a slow gradual dim over two or three minutes for a stage effect (like the sun setting during a play) incandescents can do that easily. The dimmers will have distinct “steps” (because they’re digitally controlled, and are 8 bit, so they only have 256 “levels”), but the thermal inertia in the lamp’s filament will smooth out those distinct steps. For example, going from 246 to 245 isn’t immediately noticeable, because the filament just slowly cools and dims as the voltage drops slightly. It naturally smooths out the dim curve. But LEDs don’t do that. When you drop from 246 to 245, you get a distinct “jump” when the light immediately shifts from one intensity to the next. Even small steps are immediately noticeable, because there isn’t any thermal inertia to smooth out that dim.

So we don’t use LEDs on voltage dimmers. Instead, we dim them electronically. This comes with its own set of problems though. For starters, it means you’re installing an entire control unit, instead of simply replacing the lamp. This is a retrofit part that attaches onto your fixture and replaces the standard lamp socket. (For reference, the right image is the standard lamp housing, and the left is the LED retrofit.) But if your fixtures are super old, (as is common with lots of churches and community theaters,) they probably aren’t going to fit the LED units that are on the market because lighting fixtures aren’t universal. So now you need to replace the entire fixture, instead of installing a retrofit. And that’s obviously even more expensive, because now you’re buying entire fixtures. And when even smaller theaters will have 50 or 60 lights, that $500 retrofit quickly begins to add up. Especially when you consider that the vast majority of theaters are non-profit, and will need to fundraise to buy them. So you suddenly have a bunch of small non-profits and churches looking at mid-five figure bills just to keep their lights on. Larger spaces are looking at bills closer to six figures.

Next, there’s the issue with color. LEDs have historically been really bad at something called CRI. That’s basically a measure of how well you’re able to distinguish individual colors in the light. Incandescents emit photons at everything in the visible spectrum, so they actually have really great CRI. They tend to bias towards warmer colors, but cool colors are still acceptable. But anyone who has used early LEDs knows how “washed out” they can make things look. This is because LEDs have historically been hilariously awful at CRI. They’re usually monochromatic, meaning they only emit light in a very narrow bandwidth. So everything outside of that narrow bandwidth gets lost. Even the “white” LEDs have historically just been a combination of several monochromatic emitters. So you can see things that are red, green, or blue, but anything else in between looks faded. Or it’s a “full spectrum” emitter that has major dips in certain spots. This is obviously horrible for something like film, where actors and directors tend to complain when your lights make them look sickly and pale in every shot.

It also complicates the setup slightly, because now every single fixture needs both a power and a data cable, when previously they only needed power. Lights are controlled via a protocol called DMX, and previously you could simply run DMX to your dimmers to control everything. But now each individual light needs DMX. Not a huge issue for permanent installs, but for a tour that is setting up and taking down their lighting rig multiple times per week, this extra labor time to set up and run data quickly begins to add up. And as someone who has had to troubleshoot plenty of systems, every single fixture is now a potential point of failure for your lighting rig.

New builds should absolutely be planning on using LEDs going forwards, and they have already been working on that. Pretty much every theater or church built within the last 5 years has LEDs. But before that, the dimming/color issues with LEDs made them untenable for use on stage. So anything older than that still has incandescents. And the ban has actually caused a run on supplies, with theaters/churches/film studios/etc scrambling to stockpile incandescent lamps while they’re still available, just to postpone the inevitable $30k-$90k bill to upgrade to LEDs. And ironically enough, the entertainment lamps have historically had a carve-out exception to the law. But lawmakers have repeatedly threatened to close that loophole. So every time it makes the headlines again, there’s another mad rush for lamps as every single theater, church, and film lot scrambles to refresh their stockpile.

JustZ ,
@JustZ@lemmy.world avatar

Some good points. Indulge my rambling a bit. I did a little work in the nightclub biz, remember DMX, the lighting protocol not the rapper; used to love changing the patterns, especially like the slow, down-facing strobes, made everyone look like an old cartoon.

In an equitable, cultured society, theater and stage arts get all money needed. In America I think many theaters sit empty six days a week, and I hate to see it, but nice things cost money and if the money isn’t there…

Hard agree that new installs should use LEDs.

Mic_Check_One_Two ,

In America I think many theaters sit empty six days a week,

You’d be surprised. I work in a mid-sized theater. We had nearly a thousand rentals last year, and most of them weren’t open to the general public as ticketed events. We have three main rental spaces, so that comes out to roughly one rental per day, though there are obviously some days we’re empty and some days we’re at full capacity. But my point is that you’d only really be aware of the publicly ticketed events, because those are the only ones you’d have access to. Theater spaces are popular for all kinds of events, not just plays and concerts. There are a lot of corporate events that happen throughout the week, for example. But you wouldn’t notice those, because they’ll tend to happen while you’re also at work and they’re not announced anywhere because they’re private events. Those big corporate events where the sales team wants to circlejerk about hitting their quarterly targets in front of a big PowerPoint presentation? Those need a rental space that is equipped to handle them. We just had a recording session in our main hall, at noon on a Thursday. There are weddings, banquets, parties, luncheons, classes, etc that all need space to host their events.

Saneless , in Twitter neighbours complain of lit-up ‘X’ sign working at high intensity

What an insecure aged boy Musk is

MercuryUprising ,

He’s showing us how much smarter he is than the rest of us and why he deserves the billions he has.

Saneless ,

I wish this place had a sarcasm font so it doesn’t seem like someone is actually dense but instead is being quite funny. So hard to tell these days

Butters ,
@Butters@lemmywinks.com avatar

You really need a font to detect that as sarcasm?

Saneless ,

Sadly these days, it’s too real a statement for someone

ChaoticNeutralCzech ,

this place

We should have implemented a sarcasm flag in the English language, like in Lojban, where unmarked jokes, sarcasm and offhand remarks are syntactically incorrect. However, English is a natural language undergoing evolution and generally does not conform to new prescriptive rules.

varikvalefor ,

We should have implemented a sarcasm flag in the English language, […]

.i ma nibli

What logically necessitates?

Blastasaurus , in Passengers were stuck on plane for 7 hours with no air conditioning, no food or water provided, woman says

My flight two weeks ago had to make an emergency landing in Winnipeg (ew) as two people became seriously ill due to it being so hot on board.

I wonder if flights are limiting a/c to save a buck?

SulaymanF OP ,

Good question, but no. The temperature at jet cruising altitude is -20 degrees, generally the planes get affected by cold (feel the windows) and they actually pump in warm air from the engines. Why it got too hot on board is a mystery, did you feel too hot? Maybe a thermostat malfunctioned?

Son_of_dad , in Shots again fired at site of Parkland school massacre in reenactment after lawmakers visit

What’s the point of the reenactment? Peterson was a coward, that’s clear, and the court already gave him a pass for being a coward, so why even pretend to care and do tests and reenactments

Thepinyaroma ,

The criminal court gave him a pass. I believe this is a civil lawsuit from the families of the victims.

It’s not justice but it would be better than nothing to make sure he dies broke.

Lord_McAlister , in Google is charging its employees $99 a night to stay at its on-campus hotel to help "transition to the hybrid workplace."

Sooooooooooome people say man is made out of mud, the poor man’s made out of muscle and blood. Muscle and blood, skin and bone, a mind that’s weak and a back thats strong… You move 16 tons… whadaya get? Another day older and deeper in debt… St. Peter don’tcha call me because I can’t go…

I owe my soul… to the company store…

ConstipatedWatson ,

Obligatory reference to the Joe VS the volcano version of 16 tons

ryannathans ,

Someone beat me to it

sundog ,

If you see coming better step aside, a lot of men didn’t and a lot of men died. One first of iron and the others steel if the right don’t get you then the left one will…

bibliotectress ,

For the uninitiated: youtu.be/74WvUV7H8Nw

feedum_sneedson ,

That South Park montage was genuine art, I swear.

cassetti ,

First thought that went through my mind as well lol

Eternity_html , in The first pill to treat postpartum depression has been approved by US health officials

Republicans will say it’s against their religion somehow and try to ban it.

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