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Right. It's one thing to build the equivalent of Result into the language -- great. It's another to make it only support simple enum variants and not be extensible.

"I know it when I see it" notoriously does not work in law, either. Instead, we have the Miller test.

Pt 1 of the Miller test is just "I know it when I see it" where "I" is a hypothetical random person

Not really. It has slightly more well-defined criteria than that. Material must satisfy all three prongs to be considered obscene.

Most of the increase seen in utility costs is for transmission, not generation. Generation is an important piece, but it's not the only piece.

In the US, you don't have an expectation of privacy in public places.

I'm in the US. I have an expectation of privacy in public places.

I suppose you can expect whatever you want, but the law is not on your side.

Surely it's problematic that Batman doesn't have consent to hijack phones? Whereas participating in Ring is voluntary?

Anyway, movies aren't, like, the arbiters of truth. Sometimes they just have simplistic themes.


By that logic having a phone is voluntary as well

Is it voluntary to be recorded by Ring cameras?

In the US, we don't have an expectation of privacy in public spaces.

This is kinda what minimum wage jobs are? You could say depression era WPA/CCC programs were an example of a government providing this.

No, minimum wage jobs are kind of the opposite. They push underqualified people to the side, since who wants to pay $15/hour for someone only capable of producing $5/hr of value. And most jobs generally come with more obligations, like "we need you here 2pm - 10pm, Sunday, Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday".

School shootings are incredibly rare, and existed 25 years ago too.

> incredibly rare

312 shootings in the past 5 years [0]

that's an average of ~ 1 shooting every 4 school days (across ~ 120,000 schools)

that is not incredibly rare; you can try to rationalize it, but if you're a parent and your kid is going to school every day for 12 years, that's about 3000 opportunities for this rare event to happen to them

If I'm computing this correctly, that's approximately 4 * 120,000 = 1 / 480,000 chance of it happening on any given day, or a 1 / 160 chance of it happening to your child in the course of their lifetime; compare that with a 1 / 15300 chance of getting struck by lightening over your lifetime, or a 1 in 800,000,000 chance of dying in a plane crash (this is according to Gemini, I didn't research these numbers thoroughly).

And yet, look how much effort we put into airplane safety.

> existed 25 years ago too

sure, but it's so much worse: [1]

55 shootings in the '70s 80 in the '80s 157 in the '90s 121 in the '00s 260 in the '10s 312 so far in the '20s

the fact that we know this has been a problem for 50 years and instead of doing something about it, the problem is actually getting worse. All so that some grown men can play with their guns (please don't tell me that it's about 2A ability to "resist tyranny"; that hasn't been true for a very long time)

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_school_shootings_in_th...

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_school_shootings_in_th...


That 300+ figure (60/year) is including things other than mass shootings people typically think of as school shootings (e.g., targeted gang violence).

There are ~74 million children in the US. Even taking your number at face value, it's 0.00000081 shootings per child per year. This is rare.


It's not shootings per child that matters, it's shootings per _school_.

I don't want my child to be traumatized by a school shooting on their school even if they themselves are not killed. That's pretty basic. If multiple people were shot and killed at your workplace, how would you feel about continuing to go there? You think that survivors of a plane crash where other people on the plane died are ready to get back on a plane the next day because "the chances of it happening again are small"?

And I don't care whether it's targeted gang violence or some other type of shooting, it's still an event where someone with a gun is on the school and kills one or more people.


FWIW "gunfire" as a killer of children (under 18) is mostly inter-gang violence, not school shootings or anything else. Cars dominate. Guns are mostly a risk factor you have some control over as a parent (don't have guns at home, don't raise your kids into gangs), whereas car culture really isn't.

FYI this is like telling poor people that they just should move to a better neighborhood. This advice is about as practical as telling people to move to Manhattan to reduce car accident injury risk for your teen driver.

It’s actionable. Kids with present parents don’t join gangs. Kids who aren’t in gangs aren’t targeted by gang shootings. You don't have to be rich to be involved in your kids lives.

Investors, or management?

> Hims offered semaglutide for $99/month. That’s a 90% discount on unsubsidized consumer prices for injectable semaglutide.

It's not a 90% discount. Novo charges $350/mo or less.


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