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tertius

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tertius
·22 dni temu·discuss
So man makes company, man shares profitability of company with world to invest in. World complains they can't outvote man.
tertius
·22 dni temu·discuss
It's not bad. Great returns, company is extremely well run.
tertius
·22 dni temu·discuss
Ubiquiti is a giant publicly traded company... Read about the CEO, this won't happen.
tertius
·4 miesiące temu·discuss
Ah yes, use only index fingers to type.
tertius
·4 miesiące temu·discuss
Which planner do you use?
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
This is what I said.

> If you can't argue the counter of your own position in the most honest way possible then either you're not prepared or not honest.

I didn't say that if your position is on the opposite side of child abuse and you don't want to change your position that you aren't honest.

Yes, I'm prepared to try and make the strongest argument possible for things I may not fully understand, until I do. Whatever those things make me feel.

Sometimes the strongest arguments have large flaws (mostly moral with you examples) but sometimes we just don't understand the opposing arguments and then just create strawmen to rage against.

I'm opposed to this type of irrational emotional behaviour. It causes things like mob violence which I'm very familiar with.

So when someone can't articulate the opposing views then they need to be warned or directed to do so. If they refuse and run back to a strawmen then yes they are not honest and obviously not prepared.

uMkhonto we Sizwe was a terrorist organization. But they had a very strong argument for why terrorism was an appropriate action.

I don't say that I agree with their use of violence, but they had an argument that makes blanket statements like "terrorism is evil" harder to make.
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
It doesn't have to be no, but y s it should...

What is your proposal?
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
A company is not a government... Yes, someone who owns a company has the legal right to do whatever they want, as long as it's not criminal, with their property.

They have complete authority... They don't have to have someone else endow it to them or give it to them...

So yes, they are by definition authoritarian. That's one of the cornerstones of being able to own private property.
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
"Do my bidding" is different from "do my bidding being paid way below market rate" or "do my bidding and I don't care if that involves a high likelihood of losing a limb".

Also, "do my bidding" should be written as "do your job."

I'm from a country with strong labor protections (striking, 3 strike dismissal etc.), and you're moving the goalposts.
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
That's not what I asked. If you can't argue the counter of your own position in the most honest way possible then either you're not prepared or not honest.

It's called steel manning.
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
Really depends on your definition of right. Do you mean legally? Morally? Logically?

When it comes to who has the ability to steer subordinates, managers are always right. Except if their managers disagree...
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
That's not a strong argument. Can you come up with anything better?
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
What is the strongest argument that you can come up with? Not that's been presented.
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
No, this is not uniquely American. Which country are you from that doesn't require employees to act in a way as directed by the company that employs them?
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
> She merely states that there are various risks associated with processing large datasets.

What's the strongest argument against her "merely" doing this?
tertius
·6 lat temu·discuss
A boss controls the work that you, via a contract, agreed to do.

If you want out of the contract the boss cannot make you do the work. You have agency, they cannot threaten you with violence as a dictator could.
tertius
·9 lat temu·discuss
At least you think it's educational...

It depends on how you consume it. Often, very often, it's only infotainment.
tertius
·9 lat temu·discuss
Google has already started working on this to a degree.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jasper_Solar_Energy_Project
tertius
·9 lat temu·discuss
It doesn't really matter if 5Ghz gets crowded. Walls quickly get rid of that problem. 2.4Ghz crowding is much worse.

I can see about 10 other 5Ghz networks around me, but they only marginally interfere with mine compared to 2.4Ghz.