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- Sep 20, 2018
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- SL Rez
- 2005
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- Reluctantly
This makes me wonder why Trump is still not seeing it that way:The comments (and his replies) ...
crooked.com
As in 2016, there is one election, between two candidates, and it remains the responsibility of journalists to help voters understand the choice they will face; also as in 2016, journalists have begun to fixate on a storyline that they perceive as a liability for the Democratic nominee. But this time around, not only does that approach serve to mislead the public about the stakes of the election, there is also literally nothing real underlying it. The Trump re-election campaign confronts journalists with the question of how to cover a candidate whose entire appeal to voters is fiction—words and actions meant to deceive people about the state of the country and the nature of the election. Rather than address that challenge, though, they have chosen so far to simply treat these deceptions as if they’re offered in good faith, helping the campaign mislead voters with potentially disastrous results.
Marine biologist.When I was 8, I wanted to be David Bowie when I grew up...
I remember while Yeltsin was President of the Russian Federation, a similar survey had the boys wanting to be Mafiya and the girls wanting to be dollar prostitutes.Capitalism, baby! Who needs fucking communist astronauts when you can be a commercial whore aka Youtuber?
Indeed.The design that delivered the largest cost reduction linked up transmission lines to form a new transcontinental network: a “supergrid.” Seams simulated a 7,500-mile supergrid that would ship bulk power around the U.S.—a network reaching from Washington State to Florida. Even in the study’s less-ambitious scenario, the supergrid was saving consumers $3.6 billion a year by 2038.
But there was a problem: Improving the energy grid would reduce America’s reliance on coal. According to NREL’s simulations, coal-fired power plants would shut down en masse over the coming decades, and they would drop even faster with upgraded transmission. That proved to be a very inconvenient finding.
Dear tech writers,At first, Simmons tried to console her son. “I was like well, you know, some teachers grade really harshly at the beginning,” said Simmons, who is a history professor herself. Then, Lazare clarified that he’d received his grade less than a second after submitting his answers. A teacher couldn’t have read his response in that time, Simmons knew — her son was being graded by an algorithm.
Simmons watched Lazare complete more assignments. She looked at the correct answers, which Edgenuity revealed at the end. She surmised that Edgenuity’s AI was scanning for specific keywords that it expected to see in students’ answers. And she decided to game it.
The memorandum that the White House shared on Wednesday night, which specifically names Portland, New York City, Seattle and Washington DC as examples of jurisdictions might lose federal funding, is unlikely to result in any of those cities losing significant funding, according to legal experts. Congress determines how funding is distributed, and agencies cannot “willy nilly restrict funding”, said Sam Berger, a former senior policy advisor at the Office of Management and Budget during the Obama administration.
The five-page memorandum “reads like a campaign press release”, Berger told the Guardian. “The first two pages are a bizarre diatribe – that’s not what a government document looks like.”
Even if federal agencies are able to find justification to reduce funding to certain cities, perhaps via grants linked to law enforcement, any funding restrictions are unlikely to hold up to legal challenges, he added.
“The president obviously has no power to pick and choose which cities to cut off from congressionally appropriated funding,” said Laurence Tribe, a constitutional law scholar at Harvard, and recently the co-author of To End a Presidency: The Power of Impeachment. Trump “has no defunding spigot. The power of the purse belongs to Congress, not the Executive. Donald Trump must have slept through high school civics,” Tribe said in an email.
All hat and no cattle. Except for Devin Nunes' cow.![]()
Trump signs memo to defund 'lawless' cities but experts raise legality doubts
Legal scholars say Trump has little power to make good on the document in which he threatened to cut funding to Democratic-led citieswww.theguardian.com
I saw an article about NYC in particular stating that they would lose $7 billion in federal money. Um, where is this lawlessness in NYC that he claims for a reason?![]()
Trump signs memo to defund 'lawless' cities but experts raise legality doubts
Legal scholars say Trump has little power to make good on the document in which he threatened to cut funding to Democratic-led citieswww.theguardian.com
Nor a machine-learning based Dissociated Press like GPT-3.
Thanks, but a weird place on the forums to post this news.I just saw when logging in that Larry Niven will be appearing live at the SL Book Club meeting at Noon SLT today, at Bookclub Island (hosted by Draxtor).
Posted it here if that’s alright...I just saw when logging in that Larry Niven will be appearing live at the SL Book Club meeting at Noon SLT today, at Bookclub Island (hosted by Draxtor).
ETA: Cris, can you move this where it's more appropriate? My bad.