Something else I usually don't see: A system hitting a fail-safe is a lot easier to detect and handle from the outside than one that just enters an unknown invalid state.
Like, if the rule were "Always-Keep-Running" then hospital equipment power supplies wouldn't have circuit breakers that cut the power when something is wrong. But cutting power seems lot easier to detect for the backup power supply so it can fully take over.
I've felt kind of miffed in the past for not being able to join Discord communities. Discord always wanted my phone number, and I wasn't ready to share that.
Not only Trump. Without the rules, Musk or Putin could run as well, the latter even work-from-home style. Also, if justice being blind is so bad before an election, why not after? Figuring out who won shouldn't involve any courts either. The public will just need to figure out who really won for themselves!
Another thing which I don't see often mentioned, but which alleviate most of the compile-time waiting-pain for me (and I'm actually a dynamic language guy) is the fact that since optimizations are usually what takes longest, the compiler is quite quick about telling me about errors.
But maybe my projects just haven't been big enough :)
Like, if the rule were "Always-Keep-Running" then hospital equipment power supplies wouldn't have circuit breakers that cut the power when something is wrong. But cutting power seems lot easier to detect for the backup power supply so it can fully take over.