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A place to talk about whatever you want

38.1k Topics 345.0k Posts
  • Tomorrow's Dinner

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    MikM
    Omg. This lamb has been in the freezer four years and it still might have been the best I’ve ever had.
  • It’s good to be a friend of Letitia

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    MikM
    Turns out one of my daughter's best friends from school (who we also loved) is an Asst AG on Letitia's staff. To be a fly on the wall.
  • Summers: Inflation's worse than they're saying

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    LuFins DadL
    @Jolly said in Summers: Inflation's worse than they're saying: @LuFins-Dad said in Summers: Inflation's worse than they're saying: @George-K said in Summers: Inflation's worse than they're saying: Krugman: Don't believe your wallets, believe our statistics! Are you better off today than you were four years ago? Honestly, I ))didn’t think Republicans were going to try replaying Ronald Reagan’s famous line, since so much of the G.O.P.’s 2024 strategy depends on a sort of collective amnesia about the last year of Donald Trump’s presidency. Is it really a good idea to remind voters what the spring of 2020 was like? For it was a terrible time: It was a time of fear, with Covid deaths skyrocketing. It was a time of isolation, with normal social interactions disrupted. It was a time of surging violent crime, perhaps brought on by that social disruption. It was a time of huge job losses, with the unemployment rate hitting 14.8 percent that April. And do you remember the great toilet paper shortag So people saying that lived experience contradicts the official data haven’t really done their homework. To the extent we can measure Americans’ personal experiences, as opposed to what they say about the economy, it seems to be quite positive and more or less in line with the macroeconomic indicators. There may be multiple reasons for this disconnect between personal experience and narratives. Partisanship is clearly a major factor: Supporters of both parties tend to be down on the economy when the opposing party holds the White House, but the effect is much stronger for Republicans. Even though inflation has dropped, the inflation surge of 2021-22 may still be weighing on economic perceptions. And for what it’s worth, news reporting on the economy, as measured by the San Francisco Federal Reserve, was extraordinarily negative last summer, comparable to the depths of the Great Recession, although it has been more positive recently. Whatever has been going on, it’s important to understand that the political challenge facing Democrats is not that they have to overcome a bad economy. What they need to overcome instead is the false narrative that the economy is doing badly. How can they do this? I’m not a political strategist, but even I can see that telling voters that their perceptions are skewed would come across as condescending. But reminding them just how bad 2020 was and arguing that President Biden, who inherited an economy and a society badly damaged by the pandemic and has led us through the aftermath to a much better place, just might work. Krug’s right on one thing. Tie COVID around Trump’s neck. If I was Biden’s campaign manager, I would have them saying “Why do groceries cost so much?” Then show that M1 Supply chart. “Why are interest rates so high?” Then show the M1 Supply chart. Then I would show Trump repeatedly calling for more stimulus checks. Then I would run a scroll of every approved Paycheck Protection Program recipient and amount. Let's point out a thing or two I think Americans will remember... Trump was dealing with a very nasty virus, effective treatments unknown at first. I well remember the D word being thrown around by some economists, as people lost their jobs and income. Trump probably spent too much money and I'm sure the waste (as it is in any government program, but especially an emergency program) was enormous. Was Biden in the same position as Trump? The two presidents spent somewhat the same and have had a similar toll on the national debt. I submit that early in Biden's term, he got lucky...The disease began to have a lower mortality rate.. The COVID of 2021, was not the COVID of 2019. Plus, testing began to catch up, some medical supply chains eased and we started to have treatment regimens that were better than when the virus first appeared. Lastly, as Jon has pointed out on multiple occasions, what happens on a president's watch belongs to him. That's not fair, but it's reality. The American people blame Biden for inflation, not Trump. The PPP Act was an abomination. Not one single contingency for if a business ultimately didn’t need the loan. There were many businesses that made RECORD profits between March 20 and March 21, whose employees were as effective working from home, that had their payroll covered by the US Taxpayer. And those employees, receiving full pay courtesy of the US Taxpayers also received the equivalent of unemployment payments at $15 per hour for nothing. With no need. That was insane and we will always pay that price, but that was far from the worst of it.
  • Elon & Lemon

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    George KG
    LOL: https://www.yahoo.com/news/don-lemon-interviewed-mediocre-white-173142498.html [image: 1711039422381-screenshot-2024-03-21-at-11.43.30-am.png]
  • AI in academia

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    AxtremusA
    @LuFins-Dad said in AI in academia: ... it will get harder to detect As we use AI to check AI ... https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_adversarial_network
  • Quite Sad - Seniors with no Savings

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    89th8
    True, but if so, find a new bank for your HYSA. You can quickly find a bank that pays 5% on a savings account, no need to get locked into a CD term.
  • Hmm. I don't know. Klaus seems pretty happy to me.

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    MikM
    I wasn't going to drag you into this, thinking it would just add to your burden. Y'know, British and all.
  • Sponsored Prayers

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  • Beato: The Bach Effect

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  • Universities have a Computer Science Problem

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    George KG
    @Klaus said in Universities have a Computer Science Problem: Cool! On what kinds of webpages does that work? Pretty much anything, as long as there's been a snapshot taken. Some more obscure sites won't have anything, but it's a great resource for stuff like this. ETA: Sometimes it gets caught in a CAPTCHA loop, but overall, very useful.
  • You WILL learn LBGTQ history

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    RenaudaR
    @LuFins-Dad said in You WILL learn LBGTQ history: @Renauda said in You WILL learn LBGTQ history: Not to you. Can you post something sensible? What has Milton Berle to do with poofters homosexual subculture? Milton Berle and Bob Hope used to dress in drag for bits. The Trans community points to that and call them Trans. I never paid any attention to that aspect of their comedy routines. The Python crew often dressed as English wifeys or in blatant drag for their sketches as well. No big deal. The so called “Trans community” out there ought not to appropriate any of them as their own.
  • "I am not a gun expert"

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    MikM
    @Jolly said in "I am not a gun expert": I'll answer my own question. Gun Jesus speaks: https://m. Link to video Makes perfect sense.
  • Trump & Abortion

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    LuFins DadL
    I fail to see how that has any impact on whether Trump’s policy is a winner or can pass. My guess is that it can’t and won’t. It might sound good to a few uncommitted voters, but in essence it’s a nonstarter. Reps in California and NY would not dare to vote for restrictions. First, they would need to vote against it just because Trump proposed it. Second, it would be political suicide for them. Now, even if the Republicans manage to control both houses after the election, it goes nowhere. Reps in LA (including Speaker Johnson), Texas, Arkansas, Alabama, etc… aren’t likely to vote for a policy position that allows abortion beyond what their state laws allow. The position is fluff. The other thing that is concerning is that if a law gets passed by one party, it’s just going to get rescinded the next time the other party gets power. It’s going to just keep ping ponging, and it’s too important an issue for that.
  • For George and Kluurs - Best Hot Dogs

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    MikM
    Yeah, within Da Region I’ve found little difference in dogs. Some gas station places have really good ones. But as a metro area, Chicago has IMO the most consistently great food. If you aren’t good there you don’t last.
  • Salary Needed to Live Comfortably in US as Single Person

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    LuFins DadL
    Yeah, those numbers are way off… A family must make over $300k to raise two kids comfortably in six cities. Two working adults need to make a particularly high combined income in San Francisco ($339,123); San Jose ($334,547); Boston ($319,738); Arlington, VA ($318,573); New York City ($318,406); and Oakland, CA ($316,243) to raise two children with enough money for needs, wants and savings. There are A LOT of variables, here. Do the jobs require childcare? Does their lifestyle necessitate owning a car? Does it necessitate owning 2? Did they walk in to the relationship with 20% down for a home? Let’s assume the worst.. Arlington - Both Parents work the exact same hours Mon-Fri so the two kids (aged 2 & 3, so school is not an option and daycare is necessary) . Also, both jobs are not conducive for taking mass transit, and are not near enough for car share… 2 vehicles. And they were broke when they met, so they are renting a 2 bedroom apartment… $2300 per month or $27,600 annual rent - https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1200-S-Courthouse-Rd-APT-539-Arlington-VA-22204/2082052342_zpid/?utm_campaign=iosappmessage&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=txtshare Grocery budget between $600-1,000 a month. Let’s call it $800, or $9600. Electric, Water, Sewage - $250 per month or $3K per year. Let’s add on Fios at $1200 per year. Two modest car payments would be another $6K per year ($250 each) Childcare would be $1600 per single child, or $2400 per month for both. So that’s $28,800. Let’s add $5K for gas and maintenance for the cars and what… $3500 for car insurance? $16K for medical insurance… That’s a total of $129,500. So based on those numbers, and their formula, that family needs a net of $260K. But… The formula calls for 30% to be for entertainment. $78,000 seems to me to be WAAAAYYYY too much to be spending for a family of 4 for entertainment, especially as I put the cable and internet into the 50% needs. I would suggest that less than half would be sufficient for a GREAT vacation, movie, museum, concert tickets throughout the year, various kids activities, toy, and such. $26K would give them more than enough…. As for the 20% debt/savings/retirement… That sounds right, but the drop in the entertainment budget will also affect this. $210K per year would be the gross… Add on taxes and you are going to be coming out about $240K per year. Even that seems to be high to me, as there is plenty of shaving we can do to that first section to bring it down quite a bit…
  • Making AI Video from Single Photo

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  • Pre-publish controversy

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    taiwan_girlT
    https://www.theverge.com/2024/3/20/24106779/lk-99-superconductor-researcher-ranga-dias-misconduct Different research person than the article @George-K quoted but related to teh same type of research. An investigation has found that the physicist who claimed to have developed one of the first room-temperature superconductors engaged in “research misconduct,” as first reported by The Wall Street Journal. Ranga Dias, a researcher and assistant professor at the University of Rochester, has been under investigation by a committee of outside experts since last August over concerns about the accuracy of his findings. “The University has completed a thorough investigation conducted by a panel of scientists external to the University who have expertise in the field,” University of Rochester spokesperson Sara Miller says in a statement to The Verge. “The committee concluded, in accordance with University policy and federal regulations, that Dias engaged in research misconduct.”
  • Magical Negroes released

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  • Intermittent fasting

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    CopperC
    If you are fat, eat less, you will get smaller. If not, eat even less.
  • The "Chicago" Test

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    MikM