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greggoB

285 karmajoined قبل 7 سنوات

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A robot is beating human pros at table tennis

apnews.com
4 points·by greggoB·قبل 3 أشهر·5 comments

comments

greggoB
·قبل 6 أيام·discuss
> one of them had a seizure

It's insane to me how much dogs are supposedly loved by such a large chunk of the pop, and yet people proceed to go apeshit with fireworks fully knowing how badly this affects them.
greggoB
·قبل 9 أيام·discuss
These sound like two entitely disconnected points, also sans facts?

I could get 25 gbps in Switzerland for CHF 69 pm right now through init7. From what I've seen, this would be considered quite competitive in other countries. In Switzerland this is actually very affordable when compared to salaries.

The article goes to some efforts to show how the Swiss model drives competition which has given us these relatively competitive prices. I'm not seeing how your personal lack of utility for 25 Gbps addresses that, let alone refutes it.
greggoB
·قبل 11 يومًا·discuss
Not everybody across the world is doing that in equal measure (I've not heard of a concerted effort by Europeans travelling to the US to give birth in contemporary times).

People migrate for economic opportunity. South Africa is not a rich country, but sees millions come in from the SADC for this reason, despite some pretty big social problems.

The US is nothing special, it's just a particularly large market of economic opportunity with a history of allowing in migrants. If China was significantly more migrant friendly, we'd see the same happen there. None of this specifies that the US has some secret recipe for success that papers over some of its obvious and glaring deficits.
greggoB
·قبل 11 يومًا·discuss
Are any of these stipulated as criteria anywhere?

There's also proportion of adult in prisons, people who believe in angels, and the mass-shooting high score

> AC units per capita

This gave me a laugh
greggoB
·قبل 11 يومًا·discuss
Define successful?

(You'll probably want to avoid metrics like happiness indices and life expectancy though)
greggoB
·قبل 11 يومًا·discuss
As a non-US citizen, birthright citizenship has always struck me as strangely unique to America - in my mind it comes from a time when it was actively trying to populate the continent (something not a lot of countries have wanted to do, I guess).

Roll forward a few hundred years and the context has changed, so it seems reasonable that the law should too? But I guess it shouldn't be surprising that this is no bueno for SCOTUS, which has an infinite hard-on for Originalism [0] - I certainly can't imagine the conservative justices are ruling based on humanitarian grounds.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Originalism
greggoB
·قبل 15 يومًا·discuss
> for people who are marginalized. Therefore, they are either far-right or far-left.

There are many types of marginalised groups, and many other reasons to want to use VPNs. Putting everything on a left-right political axis seems more than a tad reductive.
greggoB
·قبل 19 يومًا·discuss
How does the EU feature in TFA exactly?
greggoB
·قبل 21 يومًا·discuss
Two things can be true at the same time
greggoB
·قبل 22 يومًا·discuss
[flagged]
greggoB
·قبل 23 يومًا·discuss
I wasn't aware of that fun fact - I always just assumed it was down to the "personal responsibility" mindset ("people must pay for what they use").

Have the courts also said anything about the charge being super low, e.g. like a CHF 1 per month abo or such? I wonder if that would be a way around those rulings.
greggoB
·قبل 24 يومًا·discuss
There was a lot of talk last year about Europe creating funds to attract US researchers burned by these cuts - I haven't heard much about that recently, but if it worked it could potentially have created/started a reverse brain-drain.
greggoB
·قبل 28 يومًا·discuss
> johnny keeping you up all night

People from any and all cultures do this, I have personally experienced it from black and white

> might be unhappy if you treat them all the exact same could

Depending on how you're going about this, you might find you'd be too, in their shoes?

> I don't think there's much stronger way of bringing about racism than actually getting to know and see other cultures

Then I think you need to go and have a real think about things. Also this sentiment is just not backed up by the data - if anything, more insular societies tend to be more racist/xenophobic than open ones. Ofc not everyone in either society shares the same sentiment, and for the open ones it depends on the cultures in question and how the integration is being handled. But in general it just sounds like you've opted for a more bigoted approach, which is your choice I guess.
greggoB
·قبل 28 يومًا·discuss
> That's hardly an argument for open borders - if anything it's an argument for stricter screening of asylum seekers.

If you follow this thread from the top, you'll see I didn't make the claim that open borders make things better; rather, the burden is for the opposing side to show that they make things worse. I would argue this hasn't been accomplished.

> A shift in sentiment, certain kinds of comments being heard more and more, ultimately Brexit.

Ah, you meant specifically in the UK (I thought across Europe in general, upon their entry). In that case, whether British people were already somewhat racist towards Eastern Europeans or became so as a result of freedom of movement sort of depends on who you ask. I suspect it was the former. And ofc now the UK is mourning the loss of said (white) Eastern Europeans as it's having to bring in an increased number of people from (non-white) Africa and India as a result of Brexit, especially in the care industry. For sure nothing will go wrong from here.

> At a certain point you experience enough correlations that you have to trust the evidence of your own eyes.

From my observation, the real underlying problems are economics and integration - when you have a ridiculously high unemployment rate (think 30%+) like in South Africa, the black South Africans direct that towards the the other Africans. When people from other cultures aren't integrated properly (think the UK, France, as opposed to Switzerland, Denmark maybe), you can get the same (i.e. what's happening in Belfast now).
greggoB
·قبل 29 يومًا·discuss
Sure, I'm aware of this and other cases across Europe. The question now is whether or not the establishment of open borders across the continent has dispelled that hesitation or reinforced it. Afaict it's the former, otherwise I'd expect there to be more popular resistance to enlargement.
greggoB
·قبل 29 يومًا·discuss
> The island of Ireland has had pretty low immigration

Seems like you just validated my point - a place without open borders is where a major outbreak of xenophobic violence is occurring, as opposed to mainland Europe.

> if that's where you mean by "here"

It's not, I live in Switzerland, which has one of the highest rates of migration in the EU

> there was a palpable uptick in xenophobia when Romania and Bulgaria were admitted into the EU

I'd be curious to know what this looked like at the time. Regardless, even if we accept it as an example, that doesn't set the rule or show a general causation between open borders and xenophobia

> Pre-1902; one could haggle over the exact date depending on what one considers an open border.

Omegalol - you might want to look up what modern day xenophobia in SA looks like (as well as the current socioeconomic situation) so you can see why that probably wasn't a concern pre-20th century
greggoB
·الشهر الماضي·discuss
So taking your premise on face value, how has open borders specifically augmented/facilitated this racism exactly?
greggoB
·الشهر الماضي·discuss
Where would they be located?
greggoB
·الشهر الماضي·discuss
> Then you haven't been paying attention.

I live here, I think I'd notice if events like the current Belfast riots happened on a more regular basis.

> Arguably a legacy of the time when it did.

I'm from there, so I'd be interested to know what time period that would be?
greggoB
·الشهر الماضي·discuss
Europe has open borders and this hasn't facilitated any increase in xenophobia that I'm aware of, despite many countries having many immigrants.

South Africa by contrast does not have open borders, and is currently going through another bout of violent xenophobia.

I don't think these two things are specifically related.