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Logical city planning is planning a city in such a way that provides the greatest overall loving experience to it’s inhabitants and passers-through.

This depends on the location of the city. Traffic prevention and green spaces are 2 things that need to be balanced. If a road that thousands travel on daily is being demolished to make way for a park that a few hundred people will maybe use, then it could be doing more harm than good.

This is ultimately a decision for communities to make, not us armchair planners, and it looks like they valued the park more.

Sprog, is that really you?

Also, there are lots of 3rd party apps by now that make it easier to search for sublemmys. Jerboa on Android, Memmy on Iphone.

What do you have against Manjaro? Ubuntu and Zorin I can maybe understand, but even they are great ‘gateway’ operating systems to ease the Linux transition (and much more secure than Windows/MacOS).
It’s a bit vain to want it at the expense of logical city planning. If the destruction of that road caused major traffic issues or inhibited road access to areas, that would explain why OP added quotes.

I used it not a week ago and spent a whole day failing miserably at getting the card to work before realizing that someone had a working Realtek driver on GitHub.

It’s still around, and still painful.

‘Red flags’ is an figure of speech meaning clues that something is wrong or unsafe. For example, if you went to get in a taxi but there was blood all over the seat, that would be a red flag.
So many better, easier options than a simple toggle in your settings. Drop it down a sewer grate, pry out the battery, drop it in a faraday cage.

The problem with communism is that it can never be properly applied, and more importantly, maintained. The most basic principle of communism is that all are given equal access to resources, which are gained through equal effort.

The issue arises of leadership. With any population over 20 or so, a direct democracy is not suitable for all minor decisions. Imagine the inconvenience of gathering a huge population just to decide if the logs should be brought up the east or west side of the mountain. Centralized decision-making is quick and efficient.

A leader must be assigned to distribute tasks and resources more effectively - but as scholar Lord Acton simply puts it, “Power corrupts.” No leader is completely free of selfishness, prejudice, and bias. There will be inequalities in workload and reward - and just like that, you’re back to having a proletariat.

Sadly, no. Youth are generally much, much better at learning new things than old folks. Familiarity is what she needs - my best advice is to find a way to install Windows 10 while you’re over there for something else like a holiday.