Domain: nytimes.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to nytimes.com.
Comments · 17,660
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Re:Don't think I'd trust the software
https://www.nytimes.com/1992/1...
Yeah, sure. I was aware. I was pointing out that he was not "burned alive", and like Hitler, was not excommunicated. The NYTimes article does imply that being burned at the stake was one possible outcome, but does not mention excommunication at all.
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Re:Don't think I'd trust the software
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Re:yet, they work for China
Here is the most recent crap from MS.
He told the FT: “It is deeply disturbing that an American company would be actively working with the Chinese military to further build up the government’s surveillance network against its own people — an act that makes them complicit in aiding the Communist Chinese government’s totalitarian censorship apparatus and egregious human rights abuses.”
Google, Seeking a Return to China, Is Said to Be Building a Censored Search Engine Google is said to have teams of engineers working on a search app that restricts content banned by Beijing.
Plenty more from both of them. -
Re:Nope three war crimes
Then you do not understand international law.
Then your projected ignorance is noted, along with your lack of understanding of who was shot in the Collateral Murder video.
Men openly carrying cameras in an area of active combat are civilians.
FTFY. Those supposed weapons were actually cameras held by reporters, making up two of your three war crimes. But even if they were weapons, that doesn't make the people holding them not civilians. In the first place, you can't tell me with a straight face that you can illegally invade another country, blow the shit out of it's people, government and infrasturture, set off a sectarian civil war, and then call anyone who carries a weapon to defend themselves
Fuck that. Fuck it with a giant dick. Fuck any imperialist nazi sack of crap who says they can illegally invade and occupy a people for bullshit reasons and then police how people choose to defend themsleves.
Wearing civilian clothes does not make them civilians. In fact wearing civilian clothes may make them illegal combatants under international law. Making them legal targets, making them ineligible for treatment as POWs blah blah blah blah blah
Look, imperialist, the UK and the US explicitly allowed the subjects of their illegal, immoral invasion to keep weapons - where they not merciful?
Regarding first responders and journalists, none were identifying themselves as such with any sort of distinctive markings visible at a distance as required.
Fuck your requirements, it wasn't your fucking country, you fucking shit-for-brains. It was no more your business to gun down these people that it's the business of Russian gunships to gun down everyone from cops in Ferguson to the Bundy's in Oregon.
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Means the Trump Economy is Going Gangbusters
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Re:FD: Not an LBJ fan, but:
Percentiles by themselves don't tell the whole story, especially if you're dealing with something that has a lopsided distribution, and you can also improve even if you do no better simply because someone else has now done worse. However, I do believe that some progress is being made here.
Also, if the jump were much larger, it suggests an almost too good to be true situation. There was a case some years ago in Atlanta where test scores in some of the worst districts started shooting up in what seemed like a miracle. Turned out that several teachers and administrators were cheating and altering tests in order to bump up the standardized test scores.
If nothing else it's good to see that a sports star realize that being a pro athlete is not a path to success for most students and to invest in something that's going to improve more people's lives in a meaningful way, even if it doesn't catapult them to multi-millionaire status. -
Re:Data Breach ?
You got it mostly wrong. Dr Kogan collected the data for "academic" uses and sold it to CA.
Facebook and Cambridge Analytica: What You Need to Know as Fallout Widens
Data breach? That is stretching the truth. Many people lied about what they did, but stupid users on Facebook gave it willingly. And Facebook didn't really care until it was made public.
You need to pay attention.
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Re:He's a hero
You know, I was originally behind what he was trying to do, but now I just see the guy as a self-serving asshole. He shits on everybody with no apparent rhyme or reason: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/12/world/europe/ecuador-assange-wikileaks.html.
It looks a lot like a smear campaign.
I do think that getting government secrets out in the open is important, but there's a right way and a wrong way to do it. He's done it the wrong way.
According to who? Is there some "How to release Secret Military Databases for Dummies" book that I missed?
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Re:Good For Google, Bad For Everyone Else
Strike that, seems Canada is getting in on the act too.
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He's an asshole
You know, I was originally behind what he was trying to do, but now I just see the guy as a self-serving asshole. He shits on everybody with no apparent rhyme or reason: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/12/world/europe/ecuador-assange-wikileaks.html. I do think that getting government secrets out in the open is important, but there's a right way and a wrong way to do it. He's done it the wrong way.
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Re:This
Listen, my point is, if you really need a cop on every corner or a gun to feel safe do your family a favour and move to a safe country.
Look, in the US, likely as not, your chances of having a home invasion, or having to use a weapon to defend yourself, for most people not in a gang is VERY low.
Violent crime has been going down for decades.
HOWEVER, there is a chance. Even people in good neighborhoods get home invaded. Guess what, the criminals know the good houses have stuff in them that is valuable.
In the best of cities, the police response time for emergency is like 8 minutes.
A LOT can happen in 8 minutes.
It think it is a good thing in the US to have the choice to be able to defend yourself with firearms. Criminals have them, you should be able to have them too.
For the most part, the police are not there to prevent crimes, they are there to investigate crime scenes and find people to charge with crimes.
Hell, there are even court cases in the US that establish that the police actually aren't under obligation to protect you.
It's not the legal gun owners you have to worry about. Most gun crime in the US is by hand gun, rifles (even the "scary" semi-auto rifles like the AR or other models) account for a VERY small number of gun crimes.
And of the majority of gun deaths (let's remove suicides, that shouldn't be included)...are gang members shooting each other with stolen hand guns.
Yet...all the gun control being promoted, is not targeted at the largest problem. See this article The Assault Weapons Myth
.To me, it is like insurance, you likely won't need it, you hope you NEVER need it, but it is good to have around in case you do.
If you don't want a weapon in your house, fine...your decision.
If you don't want to carry concealed in your daily life, then don't.
But if "I" want to, and do so legally, then there is nothing that should prevent me from doing so, as insurance for my home, family and personal safety.
When seconds and minutes count, it is 100% up to YOU to protect and defend yourself, no one else is going to be there.
8 minutes is a lifetime when intruders are breaking into your home with you there.
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Re:Katie Bouman did jack shit
Well it was a team. I am sure it had women and men.
From How Katie Bouman Accidentally Became the Face of the Black Hole Project
As Dr. Bouman herself was quick to point out, she was by no means solely responsible for the discovery, which was a result of a worldwide collaboration among scientists who worked together to create the image from a network of radio antennas.
The project, led by Shep Doeleman, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, was the work of more than 200 researchers. About 40 of them were women, according to Harvard’s Black Hole Initiative.
Without knowing more about everyone on the team and who did what, etc... the rest of your speculations and commentary about "political science" in your post are pointless and/or counter-productive.
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Re:I wonder how much Bouman actually contributed.
She designed the algorithm.
The NY Times says it wasn't the algorithm used to make the final picture. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/0...
While she led the development of an algorithm to take a picture of a black hole, an effort that was the subject of a TED Talk she gave in 2016, her colleagues said that technique was not ultimately used to create this particular image.
But that doesn't diminish her contribution to the project or her skills. She is clearly a skilled scientist but you have to read her actual articles to see that. By misrepresenting her role in the project you miss an opportunity to give her credit for the cool things she actually did. Not to mention the other 39 women and 160 men who also worked on the project.
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Re:Or more accurately
Yes, this is the same Ford that bitterly fought adding seat belts and air bags to cars because they did not want to let government push them around.
Frankly, I would rather not see a Ford driving AI on the road, considering their past behavior
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Re:Highest funding, lowest results
Great talking point, but school spending does create better outcomes. The best US schools have excellent results. They have had excellent results for a long time. The students we are failing are mostly poor and non-white. This is probably by design, but has been improving slowly.
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Re:You have that backwards
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Re:Pride of America
Well
.... I, for one, can't think of anything smarter than trying to supply the demand that's out there with a business. Do I think this is just insanity, trying to impose these artificial restrictions on carbon emissions? Why yes .... yes I do.I mean, this volcano in Mexico is suddenly erupting over and over after having been dormant for the last half century or more:
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/0...
That, alone, probably contributes more to emissions than all of the motor vehicles they're so concerned about. (Nobody's putting emissions control systems on volcanoes, folks!)
But humans are prone to knee-jerk reactions and illogical behavior, as well as mistakenly making big efforts at solving problems that just aren't effective. This is nothing new! If some of our world governments think the way forward is penalizing people for selling gasoline powered vehicles? Then yeah - it's GREAT that an American car maker (Tesla) was ready to sell an electric alternative that's actually a pretty nice car. I bought one myself, and that was WITHOUT getting a govt. tax credit for doing it, or because my U.S. government made the gasoline powered choices far more costly.... I just bought it because I liked the technology in it and loved the performance.
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Re:so let me get this straight...
I'm not getting where you think that terrorism is rare in the US. Are you one of these people who ignores terrorism when it's not being done by brown people?
https://www.theatlantic.com/id...
https://www.csis.org/analysis/...
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/1...Have you already forgotten about the massacres at the Orlando Yoga studio, the Tree of Life synagogue, Cesar Altieri Sayoc, Jr's attempts to bomb 13 Democratic politicians and CNN, Gregory Bush's murder at a Kroger grocery store of two black men following a failed attempt to shoot up a church, the murder of MeShon Cooper, the terrorist threats against the Jamaat ul Muttaqeen mosque in Pembroke Pines, Florida, the Waffle House restaurant killings, the Parkland shootings, and the murder of Blaze Bernstein (killed by a self-described Nazi because he was gay and Jewish)?
Because those were all LAST YEAR. I didn't even mention anything from this year.
You think America has "near zero" "attempted" terrorism in the US? Really?
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Re:Third-world country
Voter ID to do what? Give the GOP the opportunity to make voter ID's much more easily available in heavily Republican districts
...Not sure it's a good idea to let Republicans be in charge of elections... Like ‘Stepping on a Rake’: A Wave of Scandals Hits North Carolina Republicans
This week, federal prosecutors announced that the chairman of the state’s Republican Party, Robin Hayes, had been indicted on charges of bribery and other crimes related to a scheme they said was designed to aid a major donor, who was also charged.
The revelation came almost six weeks after Republicans faced the rare embarrassment of watching their seeming victory in a congressional race unravel after it became clear that their nominee had financed an illicit voter-turnout effort.
On the up side, Republicans *finally* found a case of massive voter fraud -- but it was perpetrated by Republicans.
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"High Road" my shiny metal ass
For 2.5 years, Snapchat foolishly tried to take the high road versus Facebook...
Snapchat is the only social media provider I've found to be even LESS careful with private data than Facebook.
They've disclosed their encryption key in source code.
They store user data in cleartext.
They didn't deploy end to end encryption until 2019.
It is hard to stumble over such as low bar as Facebook's "security", but Snapchat has done it.
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We've AVG +180K/mo in 2019!
The U.S. has averaged ADDING 180K jobs each month across 2019. In March along, +196K jobs were added. This isn't to say there will be transitions as some companies cut and others add, but TFS makes it sound like the sky is falling when it isn't. That isn't to say were aren't headed into a slowdown in the next ~18 months, but we sure as Hell aren't there yet. https://www.ibj.com/articles/7... https://www.nytimes.com/2019/0...
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Someone should downgrade this entire thread
196,000 jobs were added last month, a rebound from the February report. Economic analysts surveyed by FactSet had expected a gain of about 170,000 jobs in March. It was the 102nd straight month of job gains. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/0...
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Re:Well duh.
Don't forget that people have also applied most of those same fallacious beliefs to anyone with a different race, ethnicity or religion
...And in a related story, Brunei has just imposed laws based on Islamic sharia that makes homosexuality punishable with death by stoning.
You were saying something implying all religions are equal?
Go ahead - compare it to Christianity FROM A FUCKING THOUSAND YEARS AGO and help make my point.
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Lawsuits are not the problem.
Paying damages for the immediate accidents won't be a big problem. However, the prospect of losing thousands of future orders could be a significant blow to both Boeing and the US economy.
Japan Airlines Flight 123 - a boeing 747 that crashed killing 520 people - remains the deadliest single-aircraft accident in aviation history.
The official cause was botched maintenance by a team of technicians sent to Japan by Boeing.
JAL paid a total of $7.6 million to the victims' relatives in the form of "condolence money".
JAL president, Yasumoto Takagi, resigned.
A JAL maintenance manager and an engineer who had inspected and cleared the aircraft as flightworthy, both committed suicide.
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Re:Not like the Chinese build islands in the ocean
Hey, it's not like the Chinese do hyperagressive shit like build islands in the middle of the ocean and then claim international waters as Chinese territory!
Yeah, but 'Murrica something something something.
Can't win this one my friend, the shills will pounce on you like crocodiles on a wildebeest.
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Not like the Chinese build islands in the ocean...
Hey, it's not like the Chinese do hyperagressive shit like build islands in the middle of the ocean and then claim international waters as Chinese territory!
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Re: Something missing in the head
Waiting for people to die doesn't help either. See gun control.
OH please....the gun control measure being brough up now do virtually nothing but stop or hinder law abiding US gun owners that are of no threat to anyone.
If they were serious, they'd go after in full force the main source of gun deaths in the US...gang members using handguns, that are illegally obtained (ie stolen).
But no, they're going after semi-automatic rifles that are rarely used in gun violence deaths, I think last study was maybe 400/yr?
Read this interesting article from NY Times....
The gun control measures they're screaming about now largely are ineffective and the previous "assault weapons ban" did little to curb things (remember Columbine was during the first ban)...and once the ban was lifted, the crime rate due to semi-auto rifles, like the AR-15 never rose.
And to clarify...the US public does NOT have ready access to "Assault Weapons"...those are fully automatic fire select weapons. The AR-15 and other commonly possessed and used rifles in the US are semi-automatic, one bullet fired per trigger actuation, rather than fully automatic where the gun keeps firing with one trigger pull and doesn't stop till you either release the trigger or run out of ammo.
If you're going to scream for more gun control, at least do it with an educated insight as to what actually might help.
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Oh the ironyFrom the man who stated monopolies are fine as long as they do no wrong
How Trump’s Pick for Top Antitrust Cop May Shape Competition:[Makan Delrahim] emphasized that antitrust is intended to support free markets and that the government should intervene only when necessary. A monopoly is perfectly legal until it abuses its monopoly power, he said.
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Re:would never work in real life
it seems like it would work really well along hwy 1 here in CA. plus I don't think someone needs to be a hitman to try this. It just needs to be someone looking for a little anarchy who isn't thinking about consequences. Kids throw stuff off overpasses all the time just to see some shit happen.
https://www.nytimes.com/1994/0...
My mom's car was hit by a D battery thrown off an overpass once. She and her passenger saw the kids toss it. I don't think it was assassins.
I was once driving hwy 45 through northern wisconsin when some kids in the woods rolled a car wheel down a hill at me. again, probably not assassins. -
Re:Seems pretty smart
Interesting fun-fact - Carnitine can be "neutralized" by adding rosemary to the meat - also, cooking at a lower temperature produces less acrylamide/amines People who eat "well done" meat are killing themselves.
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"Jif", like the peanut butter"Jif" is how the inventor of of the format says it's pronounced. That's good enough for me. From: https://bits.blogs.nytimes.com...
"The debate over how to pronounce GIF, which stands for Graphics Interchange Format, re-emerged this week when Steve Wilhite, the inventor of the widely used Web illustration, declared it should be pronounced “jif,” like the brand of peanut butter, rather than with a hard G sound."
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Re: not related to GW????
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Re:I don't like him because he's dabbling
The "Southern Strategy" is a typical Democrat myth - as even the New York Times admits.
Just look at the fact that the South continued to be run by Democrats for almost 40 years after your supposed switch by racist voters. It must have been one hell of a strategy if it took more than an entire generation to work...
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Sounds like a great idea
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Re:You know it's funny
Election integrity is the single most important aspect of a democracy, and the fact that apparently only Democrats seem concerned with the fact that so many of our elections can be easily and invisibly rigged should be deeply disturbing.
Democrats are only concerned with election integrity in Republican held districts, for obvious reasons. You don't get to grandstand about the how much the Dems care about integrity of elections, when they are actively involved in censorship on social media, obstructing voter ID laws, and smearing Republican opponents as being supported by Russian trolls when they themselves are the Russian trolls.
Does Republican states need to be held accountable for voting integrity? Absolutely. But let's not forget for one moment the Dem's tendency for projection.
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Re:Fiduciary duties
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its a big world
Americans are buying SUV's over cars and SUV's get much worse MPG. It's the reason Ford will no longer make sedans.
https://www.nbcnews.com/busine...
That's why emissions are up in the US.
Secondly, the US isn't the top carbon emitter enymore either: China emits more carbon then the US and Europe combined:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/0...
Third, the US has a president that denies global warming is real and is doing everything he can to eradicate any "Obama era" policy that might require reduced emissions, more efficiency vehicles or the pushing of renewables. The republican mantra of "remove those horrible job killing regulations " is in full force. -
Consistent pattern
1988 James Hansen New York will be Under Water in 20-30 years
https://www.salon.com/2001/10/...
1989 UN we have 12 years to save the planet
https://www.apnews.com/bd45c37...
1989 New York Times NOAA (No warming trend over the past 100 years )
https://www.nytimes.com/1989/0...
2000 Snowfalls are a thing of the past
https://wattsupwiththat.com/wp...
2005 UN we will have 50 million climate refugees by 2010
http://www.spiegel.de/internat...
2009 James Hansen, Obama Has 4 years to save the planet
https://www.theguardian.com/en...
2018 UN Only 12 years left to save the planet
https://www.cnn.com/2018/10/07...
2019 Greenland Glacier Reverses Decline.
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Re:A corporation cutting corners...
It's funny how silly your arguments are getting, especially in light of the news that the disagree indicator light will now be made standard.
By silly, I mean, how can MCAS possibly operate correctly when it has only two identical sensors to work with and they disagree. The system has no way to determine which one, if either, is right.
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Re:Trump's campaign manager and personal lawyer...
How this got turned into a massive conspiracy and fantasy about Trump conspiring with Putin says a lot about the effectiveness of brainwashing by propaganda. Unplug yourself.
Russia also started trying to hack Clinton's office the same day.
Yeah, it sounds like a joke, but that's a pretty big coincidence.
It's also evidence that Trump, who famously blurts out incriminating things, had some knowledge or influence over Russia's attacks. Maybe he was giving them a poke to get started, maybe he knew they were starting and was thinking about it so much that it came out in a joke.
Yeah Mueller didn't find evidence of collusion. But all you need is a couple senior people using WhatsApp who know how to delete chat history and you wouldn't have any evidence.
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Re:Trump's campaign manager and personal lawyer...
But we have the AG's summary.
Which is inadequate. We need to see the full report. And congress agreed unanimously.
It's pretty clear from the summary, nobody in Trump's campaign was colluding with the Russians. This clearly includes the Trump Tower meeting.
Then why did Trump and his associates keep lying about it? That certainly didn't help him look innocent.
I'll accept what Mueller found out. But we need to see the full report.
I suppose you could invent a wild conspiracy theory to explain Mueller's report... After all it seems this whole thing was based on a conspiracy theory, so why not go whole hog?
Trump has himself to blame for the conspiracy theories. See above.
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Re:Trump's campaign manager and personal lawyer...
His businesses have been performing less since he has been in office
It's not since he's been in office. His businesses have always not performed. Back in the 80s, he floated his company on the public market (i.e stock exchange). For the ten years he personally ran that company, it never turned a profit even though at the exact same time, everyone around him was making money hand over fist. However, while this was happening, he bled his casinos dry and was proud of it.
In fact, a careful investigation of his businesses show they either fail outright (over one dozen and counting), or simply never turn a profit. Look at his golf courses in Scotland and Ireland. To date, none of them has earned money for him. The have lost money year after year. Even more interesting is he is pouring tens of millions more into his Scotland courses using cash, but no one knows where that cash if coming from since he is already so highly in debt.
Here's something else to consider. Several court cases have held the purpose of a business it to make a profit. Yet, none of the con artist's businesses turn a profit. One has to wonder if the investigations (yes, plural) by the Southern District of New York will find anything about his interesting note.
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Re:Penchant for the obvious, much
For every day use the manual will win, especially in fuel mileage, which is the whole point. No matter what automatic you drive, you still have to wait for the "spin up" until it gets whatever gear it thinks it needs to be in. Not to mention except for starting and cruising, an automatic is rarely in the correct geat.
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Re:Facing irrelevancy
Uh, yeah. Does Trump sleep on the left side of your bed or the right?
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/0... -
'Memba when?
'Memba when Glenn Thrush of Politico was exposed seeking Podesta's approval of articles about Clinton. Even Thrush wrote "please don't tell anyone" and "I'm such a hack". The consequences for Thrush? He was hired by the New York Times after the election.
'Memba when a New York Times reporter called Melania a hooker and they wouldn't even release the name of the reporter that said it, let alone fire her.
'Memba when The New York Times used eliminationist rhetoric as the lead sentence of an article on the op-ed page in December 2009: "A message to progressives: By all means, hang Senator Joe Lieberman in effigy." Burning an effigy, like burning an American flag, is constitutionally protected symbolic speech. It is also about as eliminationist as speech can get, short of a true threat or incitement.
'Memba when New York Times advocated for authoritarian China-style government?
'Memba when NYT journalist Ali Watkins blamed Trump lawyers for leaks, while she was fucking a Senate committee staffer twice her age who was leaking her classified info? Her punishment? The journalist was reassigned and given a "mentor" instead of being fired for breaking one of the most basic rules of journalism.
'Memba when the New York Times praised a coup in Venezuela? And stated in print, falsely, "With yesterday's resignation of President Hugo ChÃvez, Venezuelan democracy is no longer threatened by a would-be dictator. Mr. ChÃvez, a ruinous demagogue, stepped down after the military intervened and handed power to a respected business leader, Pedro Carmona."
'Memba when the New York Times finally admitted in print to being a liberal newspaper?
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'Memba when?
'Memba when Glenn Thrush of Politico was exposed seeking Podesta's approval of articles about Clinton. Even Thrush wrote "please don't tell anyone" and "I'm such a hack". The consequences for Thrush? He was hired by the New York Times after the election.
'Memba when a New York Times reporter called Melania a hooker and they wouldn't even release the name of the reporter that said it, let alone fire her.
'Memba when The New York Times used eliminationist rhetoric as the lead sentence of an article on the op-ed page in December 2009: "A message to progressives: By all means, hang Senator Joe Lieberman in effigy." Burning an effigy, like burning an American flag, is constitutionally protected symbolic speech. It is also about as eliminationist as speech can get, short of a true threat or incitement.
'Memba when New York Times advocated for authoritarian China-style government?
'Memba when NYT journalist Ali Watkins blamed Trump lawyers for leaks, while she was fucking a Senate committee staffer twice her age who was leaking her classified info? Her punishment? The journalist was reassigned and given a "mentor" instead of being fired for breaking one of the most basic rules of journalism.
'Memba when the New York Times praised a coup in Venezuela? And stated in print, falsely, "With yesterday's resignation of President Hugo ChÃvez, Venezuelan democracy is no longer threatened by a would-be dictator. Mr. ChÃvez, a ruinous demagogue, stepped down after the military intervened and handed power to a respected business leader, Pedro Carmona."
'Memba when the New York Times finally admitted in print to being a liberal newspaper?
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'Memba when?
'Memba when Glenn Thrush of Politico was exposed seeking Podesta's approval of articles about Clinton. Even Thrush wrote "please don't tell anyone" and "I'm such a hack". The consequences for Thrush? He was hired by the New York Times after the election.
'Memba when a New York Times reporter called Melania a hooker and they wouldn't even release the name of the reporter that said it, let alone fire her.
'Memba when The New York Times used eliminationist rhetoric as the lead sentence of an article on the op-ed page in December 2009: "A message to progressives: By all means, hang Senator Joe Lieberman in effigy." Burning an effigy, like burning an American flag, is constitutionally protected symbolic speech. It is also about as eliminationist as speech can get, short of a true threat or incitement.
'Memba when New York Times advocated for authoritarian China-style government?
'Memba when NYT journalist Ali Watkins blamed Trump lawyers for leaks, while she was fucking a Senate committee staffer twice her age who was leaking her classified info? Her punishment? The journalist was reassigned and given a "mentor" instead of being fired for breaking one of the most basic rules of journalism.
'Memba when the New York Times praised a coup in Venezuela? And stated in print, falsely, "With yesterday's resignation of President Hugo ChÃvez, Venezuelan democracy is no longer threatened by a would-be dictator. Mr. ChÃvez, a ruinous demagogue, stepped down after the military intervened and handed power to a respected business leader, Pedro Carmona."
'Memba when the New York Times finally admitted in print to being a liberal newspaper?
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'Memba when?
'Memba when Glenn Thrush of Politico was exposed seeking Podesta's approval of articles about Clinton. Even Thrush wrote "please don't tell anyone" and "I'm such a hack". The consequences for Thrush? He was hired by the New York Times after the election.
'Memba when a New York Times reporter called Melania a hooker and they wouldn't even release the name of the reporter that said it, let alone fire her.
'Memba when The New York Times used eliminationist rhetoric as the lead sentence of an article on the op-ed page in December 2009: "A message to progressives: By all means, hang Senator Joe Lieberman in effigy." Burning an effigy, like burning an American flag, is constitutionally protected symbolic speech. It is also about as eliminationist as speech can get, short of a true threat or incitement.
'Memba when New York Times advocated for authoritarian China-style government?
'Memba when NYT journalist Ali Watkins blamed Trump lawyers for leaks, while she was fucking a Senate committee staffer twice her age who was leaking her classified info? Her punishment? The journalist was reassigned and given a "mentor" instead of being fired for breaking one of the most basic rules of journalism.
'Memba when the New York Times praised a coup in Venezuela? And stated in print, falsely, "With yesterday's resignation of President Hugo ChÃvez, Venezuelan democracy is no longer threatened by a would-be dictator. Mr. ChÃvez, a ruinous demagogue, stepped down after the military intervened and handed power to a respected business leader, Pedro Carmona."
'Memba when the New York Times finally admitted in print to being a liberal newspaper?
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Another possible treatment: clicks & flashes
This other potential treatment sounds interesting:
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/14/health/alzheimers-memory.html
And it sounds like it may even be made available in a home setting.
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Another prediction bites the dust.
LOS ANGELES — With California entering its fifth year of a statewide drought, Gov. Jerry Brown moved on Monday to impose permanent water conservation measures and called on water suppliers to prepare for a future made drier by climate change.
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/0...
Oh well.