And that's an excellent defense that should be brought up in court.
Getting bogged down in the debate of guilt muddies the water from the key due process question.
If you start arguing guilt in the public opinion space you end up with guilty or not guilty being the options.
If you argue due process you have "support the constitution" and "shit on the constitution". It's why the shitting on the constitution side wants to argue about guilt, not due process or if sending people to foreign prisons is legal or ethical.
So while he's certainly innocent, it doesn't matter and isn't worth discussing until he's in court.
Ah, choosing to ignore the territorial annexation that took place during the war or annexations that failed? And China?
I mean, there have been some of the largest protests in American history. There's really no reason for the administration to care though. Public approval doesn't get them anything. If a third of the country protested tomorrow they would just dispute the numbers and carry on.
If your goal is to create a white Christian ethnostate and never give up power, people you already don't care about asking you not to isn't going to stop you.
We need more people taking more action, but protesting is just how you communicate that there are numbers to make it safe to resist. The protests themselves won't do anything.
You're skipping the whole "fillibuster" thing. You need 60 to even have a vote on a lot of issues.
To be fair on that one, Puerto Ricans seem torn on what they want.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proposed_political_status_for_Puerto_Rico
Up until Trump the US has been reasonable about independence questions since WW2, for the most part. (Highlighting that independence is different than being free from interfering)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_changes_of_the_People%27s_Republic_of_China
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_occupations_by_the_Soviet_Union

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_territorial_acquisitions_table
Notable examples would be places like "Tibet", several Baltic states, and an attempt on Finland. Hell, Russia is currently trying to annex Ukraine.
They specifically said 20th century, and were obviously referring to the post world war period.
After the wars, the US sought soft power, not territory.
Aligning with them was often a more safe move.
Yes, because we're very clearly following the rules of law here, and a central American nation would never be coerced by the US into engaging in flagrant human rights abuses.
That never actually says they're selling at a loss, just that they're not using the same market based pricing structure as American businesses.
Looking at some other sources, it looks like they overproduced materials to keep prices low, since their primary potential competition refuses to use state money to fund production of critical resources.
It's manipulative, but it's not selling at a loss.
It's difficult to feel sympathetic towards us when we refused to invest in the industry and shutdown the people responsible for helping develop the industry.
If it was that critical we should have just spent to money to develop the industries domestically, which would have made lower prices moot.
Being upset that a country that calls itself Communist doesn't follow free market ideology seems foolish.
Cool. You wrote an opinion that perfectly matched the opinion of a particular demographic that's common on the site, and are now very offended that no one knew you were someone less common.
Which also entirely draws the conversation away from you saying it's good that the government pulled funding from an organization that's doing something good because government messes everything up.
They're already a non-profit. Why are you upset that they got money from the government? Wouldn't the ideal to you be an NGO that got money without being under government control, and was therefore free from business influence as well?
Linux is a great example. It's backed by a non-profit foundation, under the direction of mostly corporate advocates. That's what people talk about when they talk about a non-profit being beholden to corporate money.
The shape of Linux has steadily been pushed towards being more and more focused on server and data center operations, since that's what the people in charge of funding allocation care about, and that's what they'll direct their parent organizations to contribute developers to working on.
Your government sucks. I get that. It doesn't mean I don't expect more from mine, and it doesn't mean that I reject the notion that I should have say in the management of the things around me.
The NGO that you envision will do a better job managing the drainage where I live doesn't answer to me, and I have no recourse if they mess up and flood my house.
I'd like something like the NGO you envision, but with public accountability. This is often called a "government".
Yeah, the lobbying question is a complicated one.
In an ideal world it would be much closer to how the standards committees work. The issue isn't people sharing their opinions and desires for how the system should work, it's when they use inequitable means to bias the decision. My industry, security, has lobbied for official guidelines on security requirements for different situations. Makes it easier to tell hospitals they can't have nurses sharing login credentials: government says that's bad, and now your insurance says it's a liability.
The problem is that lobbying too often comes with stuff like a "we're always hiring like minded people at our lobbying firm, if you happen to find yourself in the position to do so, give us a call.".
It's too easy for people with a lot of money to make their voices more heard.
It's not that the wealthy and business interests should be barred from sharing opinions with legislators, it's that "volume" shouldn't be proportional to money. My voice as a person who lives near a river should be comparable to that of the guy who owns the car wash upstream when it comes to questions of how much we care about runoff going into the river.
So you want it to be run like it is today, but with less money? Do you think they're going to spread whatever incompetence you see them having via funding?
Usually when people celebrate the removal of government from a public service it's because they think it should be arranged to turn a profit.
You didn't list your stance on every issue in your comment so I can only assume that you have the rest of the beliefs that I've always seen go with that opinion.
people will always mess stuff up. Government is just the group of people you have a say in.
When the public good gets messed up, I'd rather it be by the people I can vote out than by the people who only answer to shareholders.
I just don't understand the persistent belief that a profit motive will magically make something more aligned with the public good.
I think you might be overestimating how complex the system is. This isn't collaborative, and it's barely even dynamic. It's essentially bookkeeping around a list of numbers and a zip file of text documents.
https://github.com/CVEProject/cvelistV5/archive/refs/heads/main.zip
The reporting of the issues is already done by other people, they just rely on a central group to keep the numbers from colliding.
https://www.cve.org/CVERecord?id=CVE-2025-3576
Not a whole lot there.
Significantly more worrying is the nvd.
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2025-31161
There's additional data attached relating to not just the vulnerability, but exploitation and the system configuration that's known to be exploitable.
Up until now it was benign, as well as entirely unavoidable, for so much of the infrastructure of the Internet to be closely tied to the US government.
Even corporations understand the value of having a seat at the table. A significant reason for corporate sponsorship of standards groups and such is so that if it comes up, they have a person there who can argue for their interests.
Not even in an interesting or corrupt way.
"Our engineers think it would be better to do it this way, any objections?" And then everyone talks about it.
Leaving means you only get to use what others put together. If your needs don't fit you just have to cope.
Corporations love getting stuff for free, but if all it takes to solve a technical problem is cash, that's great too. Cash is a better way to solve a technical problem than time and engineers.
I mean, trains exist, they're just not the best in the US.
You also seemed to be okay with driving, which startled me but is definitively a viable alternative in almost all cases.
Given some of your other comments, I think I'm gonna take it as a "no" on the "telling the difference between travel at any cost and being more mad at systems and those who control them than individuals" question.
Right, which is a big shift from what you were saying before. Your previous position is what caused pushback, not a dislike for the environment.
In any case, I'm glad you've come around.
you'll agree that in the meantime people need to stop traveling then?
You'll have to forgive my confusion and understand why I might have thought you had an issue with travel in general. Writing off trains and boats didn't help either, nor saying that people who wanted to focus on alternatives to air travel were in favor of destroying the environment.
How far is traveling? What means do you find acceptable? And until when do you mean?
Do I need to wait until I have access to a totally renewable train to go to the nice beach that's a 90 minute drive away? What about the 25 minute drive to the flooded salt quarry that gives everyone a rash due to the stunning population of migratory waterfowl? The 15 minute drive to the park on the river with a vaguely unsettling murk to the water?
But you were arguing people shouldn't travel at all, citing our ancestors who lived their whole lives within a few kilometers. Now you're saying people should travel responsibly and live with moderation, which is pretty different from your previous point.

Cozy fox drinking tea


crochet fox drinking hot tea, cinematic still, Technicolor, Super Panavision 70
Not quite what I was going for, but super cute regardless.

Friendly little jumper helping me with the black flys


Went camping in northern Michigan this week and I was quite popular with the local biting flies.
Delightfully, I found this local food samaritan doing their part to save me, and they were gracious enough to show off a little for the camera.



cat failed to load its texture properly.


Been having fun trying to generate images that look like "good" CGI, but broken somehow in a more realistic looking way.

Detective FuzzyBoots has seen some things


Made with the Krita AI generation plugin.

a fun self portrait I made with control net


digital illustration of a male character in bright and saturated colors with playful and fun expression, created in 2D style, perfect for social media sharing. Rendered in high-resolution 10-megapixel 2K resolution with a cel-shaded comic book style , paisley Steps: 50, Sampler: Heun, CFG scale: 13, Seed: 1649780875, Size: 768x768, Model hash: 99fd5c4b6f, Model: seekArtMEGA_mega20, ControlNet Enabled: True, ControlNet Preprocessor: lineart_coarse, ControlNet Model: control_v11p_sd15_lineart [43d4be0d], ControlNet Weight: 1, ControlNet Starting Step: 0, ControlNet Ending Step: 1, ControlNet Resize Mode: Crop and Resize, ControlNet Pixel Perfect: True, ControlNet Control Mode: Balanced, ControlNet Preprocessor Parameters: "(512, 64, 64)"
If you take a picture of yourself in from the shoulders up, like in the picture, while standing in front of a blank but lightly textured wall it seems to work best.

ASCII is a floof of a cat.


He's not nearly as chubby as he looks.