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193 Following
567 Posts
news junkie from swingville, PA

@mcnado

I believe that. I hadn't really thought about it before, but when people work illegally (cash, "under the table"; I've met a decent number of white dudes who were born here, who do exactly that, actually), they're usually not making enough to end up in any high tax bracket. When you look at how much they make tax free, in a lot of cases, they wouldn't even be making enough for the IRS to keep much of it, if any, if it were legal. There are also a lot of people who have legitimate W2 jobs, who still don't make enough to have to pay taxes, obviously, and so they just get everything back at the end of the year anyway. So there are a lot of people who work in the U.S. either legally or illegally, who don't contribute a thing on tax day, at least in theory. But then look at how there's a tax hidden in basically everything fun and/or necessary, in addition to the sales tax that's actually called that. Tobacco and alcohol both have a tax built in and you never see it. I think gas does, too, but I could be wrong. Anyway, even if someone literally just hands you money and tells you to spend it, you're still paying taxes. So it really shouldn't matter if you're documented or not, right?

I know I'm old man yelling at clouds, but I miss not only physical buttons on devices, but multiple physical buttons.

I'm really getting tired of the current trend seen on headphones. Hold for 5 seconds to turn on, hold 5 seconds to turn off. Tap once for volume up. Double tap for next song, triple tap to turn on noise canceling. Hold the button down for 20 seconds while patting your head and doing interpretive dance in order to pair Bluetooth.

Give me an on/off switch. Give me an analog volume wheel. Give me dedicated buttons for functions

It's like a generation of designers grew up with one button Apple mice, and forgot how much more simple doing actual work with dedicated buttons actually is

Ask yourself this: will fares in self-driving cabs be cheaper? Will subscriptions to vibe-coded SaaS cost less? Will tickets to see model-generated movies be a fraction of the current price?

Or do all these technologies just solve the problem of having to pay people, with no benefit to anyone else except shareholders?

And then ask yourself this: if nobody's getting paid, who's hailing the taxis, using the SaaS and watching the movies?

@mcnado

Make a list of the things you see that we are losing.

Someone mentioned how "kids" who will be voting soon (if we get to) have never really seen anything but the Trump years, and may not even know what's been stolen from them.

πŸ™‚ Daily Quordle 1123
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Doing the Daily Quordle, I felt like my guesses are getting bolder since I started playing Alphalock (thanks for the recommendation @bodhipaksa ).

We have to be bolder. Starting now.

"If companies won’t allow employees to speak out against a slow-moving authoritarian takeover of this country at any point between the start and its successful conclusion, aren’t those companies complicit in the coup?

One of the questions in my story."

https://www.carlyjdubois.com/new-york-times-athletic-transgender-woman/

#transrightsarehumanrights

The New York Times and The Athletic robbed me of my voice and my hope, and helped steal my life: A trans woman's nightmare | CarlyJDubois.com

This is the story of my three-year hell as a trans woman working for a NYT-owned company. I might be fired, but I can't stay silent anymore.

CarlyJDubois.com
Listen, Mangione is not some freaking folk hero, he's a privileged white guy who wasn't used to being told no, especially for illogical, blatantly bureaucratic reasons. He's also a clear demonstration of how profoundly pain can warp every facet of our human existence.
I was Christmas shopping this evening at a trendy young person's clothing store that I've never heard of, and, seriously, they had sweatshirts for sale that said "Make Money, not Friends". I'm so done....

Kamala Harris is changing the way America does politics. And I'm going to prove this by taking you away from Ohio and Michigan and Pennsylvania and the rest of the swing states to talk about a state I'm from. Kansas.

Harris' opponent won Kansas in 2016 by over 20 points. Kansas is so overwhelmingly red that there are currently more people registered "other" in Kansas than there are registered Democrats.

But in 2018, Kansas also elected a woman to the governorship - a Democrat named Laura Jean Kelly. And in 2020, Harris' opponent won by only 8 points. In 2022, they re-elected Governor Kelly to a second term. And in the same year, Kansas Republicans tried to sneak a statewide abortion ban past without anyone noticing. Instead, Kansas came out in droves to defeat that ban in a landslide 60-40 vote.

And now, in 2024, Harris' opponent is leading by only 4 points in the polls. Now sure, you could look at that and say, Trump is up by 4 points against Harris. But remember that Trump LOST in 2020. He needs to pick up NEW voters if he is going to win this year. So another way of looking at those numbers is that Trump is DOWN 4 additional points from 2020, points that he NEEDS to win nationally.

And if you look at the voting lines, they also tell a different story from the polls. 2 hour early voting lines aren't uncommon across Kansas. And there is anecdotal evidence of people standing in line for 4 or even 5 hours to cast their votes. Now, will all of those be for Kamala? No. But ask yourself why would Republicans be standing around for 5 hours to vote in a state that's definitely going to go red anyway.

Folks, here's why people are doing that. This isn't just a campaign. This is a movement.

We are not going back. That includes Kansas. That includes those of us in North Dakota. That includes Texas. That includes Puerto Rico. That includes every state and territory in the Union. Because this isn't just about electing our nation's first black, female President. This is about restoring America to its promise. That we are a place where every person is created equal, regardless of race, creed, gender, orientation, or national origin.

And do you know what? Even if those are Republicans standing out there in the October cold for 5 hours to vote red, that only proves my point harder. Because that means we're making them fight for EVERY state. EVERY state is a swing state now. EVERY state matters. EVERY state is leaning more and more blue. It means that they know that their views are so unpopular that EVERY state in the Union has become a "battleground state". Even Kansas.