Th4tGuyII
Th4tGuyII avatar

Th4tGuyII

@Th4tGuyII@kbin.social
autumn_rain,

“…But Republican legislators continued to express doubt that someone would get in legal trouble for masking because of health concerns, saying law enforcement and prosecutors would use discretion on whether to charge someone. Newton said the bill focuses on criminalizing masks only for the purpose of concealing one’s identity…”

I don’t have faith that people would not get harassed or feel threatened by somebody because they are wearing a mask for health reasons. The law discourages mask use.

Warl0k3,

While clearly biased and theres some wording and cherrypicking of studies (that isn’t very egregious, to be clear!) that I’d take issue with in a more formal setting, the content of the article thru to point two are really quite an alright summary of the issues and raises some very valid questions the industry has yet to answer.

However it throws itself off the credibility cliff riiiiiight around this point:

In any event, regulators are loosening safety and security requirements for SMRs in ways which could cancel out any safety benefits from passive features. For example, the NRC has approved rules and procedures in recent years that provide regulatory pathways for exempting new reactors, including SMRs, from many of the protective measures that it requires for operating plants, such as a physical containment structure, an offsite emergency evacuation plan, and an exclusion zone that separates the plant from densely populated areas. It is also considering further changes that could allow SMRs to reduce the numbers of armed security personnel to protect them from terrorist attacks and highly trained operators to run them. Reducing security at SMRs is particularly worrisome, because even the safest reactors could effectively become dangerous radiological weapons if they are sabotaged by skilled attackers. Even passive safety mechanisms could be deliberately disabled.

What in the fearmongering fuck is this? "Oh no, terrorists!" And it’s debunked on the first page of one of its own sources. Regulators have NOT put any pathways in place to “exempt SMRs from many of the protective measures.” If you read the sources, what they have done is put in place guidelines for the evaluation of the current measures, to judge if those measures merit being re-evaluated. Its a path for a path to judge if maybe we should have a path.

And fucking hell, yes of course they would have smaller security contingents, the installations are physically smaller! There’s less to guard! Thats in no small part the point!

Look there are a lot of problems with SMRs and even more questions we just don’t have answers for yet. Those questions need answers before any progress can be made with SMRs. The benefits of lower transmission losses, dedicated power generation for industrial complexes being at all beneficial, or remotely finalized designs for the reactor technology needed here are all MASSIVE outstanding issues that have yet to be solved.

But this shit? "we cant have this source of green energy because terrorists!!!"

Fuck off with that.

There are more than enough issues with SMRs to justify extreme skepticism, hell microsoft wanting a bunch is probably reason enough to abandon the whole concept. We dont need to stoop to disinformation and blatant lies, what the fuck. This is why “nuclear bros” (Which great idea, lets “other” the critics, that’s not a red flag at all…) get so much traction, because they dont stoop to conspiracy theory tropes to support their arguments.

regrub,

It’s a shame the companies exploiting the cheap labor won’t face similar repercussions.

retrospectology,
@retrospectology@lemmy.world avatar

What does a spy plane even report on Gaza?

“Yup, there’s still a bunch of innocent men, women and children crammed into an unlivable space with nowhere to go, right where you left them. Looks like there’s a building still standing if you want to take care of that.”

Shawdow194,
Shawdow194 avatar

Well it's a scaling effect and diminishing returns

To the human eye 480p vs 1080p is significant but 4k vs 8k is hard to tell

I think focusing on new technologies such as AI upscaling/world generation or VR is a better use of developers time and pushes the industry back into the innovative space it's supposed to be

PlayStation official response to Helldivers 2 fans (nitter.poast.org)

“Helldivers fans – we’ve heard your feedback on the Helldivers 2 account linking update. The May 6 update, which would have required Steam and PlayStation Network account linking for new players and for current players beginning May 30, will not be moving forward....

Veritrax,

All Sony had to do was make account linking optional and give a cosmetic to those who linked, and there would have been zero issues.

Binthinkin,

People barely like signing in for one service how did they think people would react to having to sign into two?

what a stupid move, glad they got shouted back into sanity.

rayyy,

The GOP today has no interest in climate truth, honesty, integrity, compassion or intelligence, only self-serving greed and power. Of course the “poorly educated” and Russian propagandized class go right along with it.

BrianTheeBiscuiteer,

But you didn’t break with him when it counted you jagoff.

tja,
@tja@sh.itjust.works avatar

Oh, I would have thought Reddit themselves would offer such a service

XEAL, (edited )

The real analogy would be the chicken eating a human ovule, which would be a ridicoulsy small speck on the plate of less than 1mm of diameter.

Audit says Arkansas governor's office potentially violated laws with $19,000 lectern purchase (apnews.com)

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders ’ office potentially violated state laws on purchasing, state property and government records when it purchased a $19,000 lectern for the Republican governor that’s prompted nationwide attention, an audit requested by lawmakers said Monday....

ThePowerOfGeek,

How the hell did that thing cost $19k? It looks like something you’d get from a 1970s Ikea.

Ohh right… Nepotism and/or money laundering!

Treczoks,

Now that is an attempt of political influence on the justice system.

Put that "Representative" behind bars for that.

Socsa,

It’s always amusing when some CHUD suddenly realizes that the Pentagon is one of the largest single employers in the middle of one of the most liberal places in the country.

grte,

Considering that ‘opportunity’ they gave to long term reddit users it seems like this fleecing was planned from the get go.

Blueberrydreamer,

‘Not supporting a genocide’ is not a candidate running for election.

Nobody here wants to support genocide. It’s not brave statement, it’s fucking common sense. But the options are ‘a guy who’s weakly attempting to deescalate things’ and ‘hurry up and finish your genocide already’. If you truly don’t want to support genocide, there’s a clear pick.

doctortofu,
@doctortofu@reddthat.com avatar

Separately from that, it drives me mad how warped the idea of “consent” is in Windows (and in tech in general). “Later” is not the opposite of “Yes” goddammit!

Imagine sexual consent was similarly warped: Hey Becky, you wanna have sex? You can only answer “Yes, right now!” or “Maybe later,” and I’ll keep asking you FOREVER. So, what will it be?

Hotel Keycards And Dawn Dish Soap Used In 737 Max Production As Boeing Fails 33 FAA Safety Checks (jalopnik.com)

Boeing is having a rough time of it right now, with parts falling off its planes left, right and center. Just last week, a wheel came loose and smashed through a car, and earlier this year the door from a 737 Max aircraft broke off mid-flight. That mid-air disaster sparked an audit from the Federal Aviation Administration, which...

stoy,

The hotel keycard was used to check seals of doors, the dishsoap was used to lubricate the door seals to make them fit better.

The documentation about the steps were vauge and badly documented, neither of which I want in the documentation for building aircraft.

RegalPotoo,
@RegalPotoo@lemmy.world avatar

The point isn’t that the tools were inappropriate, it’s that they were used outside the defined assembly and inspection processes - if you need some lubricant to get the door seal in that’s fine, but the process docs need to specify that. Similarly, if the testing process defines that you need to check for gaps, it should be specifying the thickness of gauge to use and how much of a gap is permissible, not just grab whatever random card you have lying around and poke it in.

gravitas_deficiency,

To be more clear, if Trump manages to capture the presidency, I fully expect him to withdraw the US from NATO.

And the US leaving NATO would be absolutely, categorically, inarguably, and apocalyptically stupid.

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