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vonmoltke

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vonmoltke
·l’année dernière·discuss
> The US hasn't declared a war since WWII since executive privilege allows the President to pursue war without Congress declaring war.

That's not correct. Congress no longer passes declarations of war, it passes authorizations of the use of military force (AUMF). The change was made starting in Vietnam because a declaration of war can only target a recognized sovereign nation, while an AUMF can target any state or non-state actor. The President is still heavily restricted from employing the US military without an AUMF.

I think the confusion about this stems from Congress having passed several, a couple of which are pretty broad, and never repealing them. This has allowed various Presidents to use one of the active AUMFs to justify actions, but for those who don't know or pay attention to the details it seems like the President is going around Congress.
vonmoltke
·l’année dernière·discuss
Only within the table of 20 largest point drops. Neither even makes the table of 20 largest percentage drops (which is above).
vonmoltke
·l’année dernière·discuss
> Theres at least two sporting good store is employee run and for some reason my brain can't remember the name (it insists its DEI)

It's REI, and it's actually a consumer co-op owned by its members, not employee-owned.
vonmoltke
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
> Yup, 6 months is a write-off ... any kind of reasonably sized existing project will take weeks to months before one can reach anything approaching full capacity

I won't speak for the GP, but I think you and I have differing definitions of "write-off". I don't consider all time spent below full capacity to be a write-off because, to me, "write-off" means "net unproductive". I believe someone should hit net productive well before it hits full capacity.
vonmoltke
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
> But you handed them in, in person

I have done that exactly once, at a college recruiting event in 2002, and the person who took it and gave me the pre-screen interview never saw me again until after I was hired.

> and had an in person interview

Are you under the impression this has gone away?
vonmoltke
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
Both of those links lead to insults to my EE education.
vonmoltke
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
Coinbase isn't hiding anything. It's the campaign's responsibility to identify donors in compliance with campaign finance laws. If a campaign is accepting donations of Bitcoin, it's their responsibility to find out who owns the wallet. Coinbase only knows, and can only know, the donor's wallet address. Coinbase doesn't even know what the transaction is for. That was one of the points of Bitcoin.
vonmoltke
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
Something is off about those listings. The majority of the transactions went to "Brian Forde for Congress" and have the memos like " .03533216 BITCOINS SOLD VIA COINBASE - PURCHASER UNKNOWN". I don't think these are contributions by Coinbase, but Bitcoin contributions that went through Coinbase. There is probably some byzantine election funding rule that allowed or forced these recipients to list Coinbase as the"source" of anonymous Bitcoin donations.
vonmoltke
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
I just estimated mine, and I would pay about $700/month. A stiff increase to be sure, but easily manageable if I was getting six months salary.
vonmoltke
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
I had "all-day" (0800 - 1400, same as the elementary grades) kindergarten in Florida in 1985.
vonmoltke
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
I can't even place an Amazon Fresh order right now, and the earliest Peapod delivery date I can get is 28MAR.
vonmoltke
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
Grocery stores in my part of northern New Jersey are not keeping up, at the moment. On Saturday I was unable to buy fresh meat (of any kind), sausage (without cheese in it), flour, pasta, or canned beans. Produce pickings were slim, and most items were sold out. Ditto canned soup and bread. That's just the things I was actually looking for; there were plenty of other bare shelves throughout the store.
vonmoltke
·il y a 6 ans·discuss
If you are using "lifestyle business" to mean "a business has priorities other than profit at all costs", you are using it incorrectly. A lifestyle business is one where the owners have set a target business size and profit level, and do not try to grow past this; some owners even actively inhibit growth to keep the business from getting too large. The purpose of the business is to give its owners a fixed cash flow.

A company whose owners are working to grow the business consistently and organically is not a lifestyle business; it is also not pursuing "profit at all costs". Most privately-held businesses fall into this category.

As to "lifestyle business" being a slur, it is unfortunate that members of the growth-obsessed communities use it as such. They don't see a business with a fixed target size as serious. Incidentally, many also think the same about the organic growth case I mentioned. I ignore them, and most other things from VC startup culture.
vonmoltke
·il y a 7 ans·discuss
My point is that top speed is only relevant when a train can reach it. If a train stops every two miles or less (like mine does in the morning), the vast majority of the time is spent accelerating, decelerating, or stopped.
vonmoltke
·il y a 7 ans·discuss
> Now we simply need to make the 50-75 miles in-between more bearable.

Mine is 15 miles, and the problem is stops (which top speed does nothing to address).
vonmoltke
·il y a 7 ans·discuss
Only if the ageism is on favor of the younger person. It is never illegal ageism to always hire the oldest candidate.
vonmoltke
·il y a 7 ans·discuss
> It's probably more of a blog post than a journalism article

What gave you the idea that it was anything but a blog post/personal opinion piece?
vonmoltke
·il y a 14 ans·discuss
The world does have, rightly or wrongly, "process engineers" who use metrics to modify and optimize processes, physical or business. Just look at how widely the attempts to employ Six Sigma have been.

That said, being able to measure something isn't sufficient; one also needs the control to modify the thing being measured in a way that has deterministic effects on the metrics. GP's metrics have that feedback loop with respect to software, which pushes it towards engineering. Process engineers have that feedback loop, even on business processes. Your manager does not; most of their actions do not create deterministic results.