Thanks, this sounds like the most accurate and precise answer to the question.
Thanks, this sounds like the most accurate and precise answer to the question.
I’m pretty sure it does. It won’t happen, but a president could pardon someone from federal crimes.
Haha, or a Hitchcock Presents episode.
She lost the first only primary.
She lost the first only primary.
Huh, what are the chances that his son pushed him off to get the inheritance?
One major difference, however, is greater concentration of wealth and news outlets.
Yes. There’s exponentially higher levels of exposure to brainwashing propaganda in 2024 vs. 1920, to unsafe levels of consumption.
It sounds like you lean anarchist? If so, I believe that https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/ is an anarchist instance?
You can easily sign up at another instance and export / import your subscriptions and settings. The only thing you can’t transfer is your old posts, afaik.
This one is fake. The (supposedly) real one has now been published by Ken Klippenstein, and is linked in another comment on this thread.
If you trust them after having enforced an unwritten policy and still not allowing discussion of something that’s perfectly legal.
It seems that it was never written in their terms before and had been inconsistently applied, but just in case you hadn’t seen these:
Careful, in case you haven’t heard, discussing jury nullification is apparently against the rules of lemmy.world. SMH (at lemmy.world admins).
Google trends in US for jury nullification over last 30 days…
Exactly this. Another factor in choosing TLDs is that they have different rules. Read those rules closely. Some of them make it much easier for them to take the domain names away from you, for things like copyright infringement, for example. .COM/.NET/.ORG have the strongest rules protecting your ownership, as far as I can recall. This is one of the reasons I stick to those old 3 rather than using newer gTLDs like .INFO, .BIZ, etc.
Just wanted to add something for future reference of anyone reading your post: after Canonical did this, LXD was forked by Linux Containers into a new project named Incus.
It’s crazy that they didn’t include all the “should” items in that list. If you read the entire section, there’s a critical element that’s missing in the list, which is that new passwords should be checked against blocklists. Otherwise, if you combine 1, 5, and 6, you end up with people using “password” as their password, and keeping that forever. Really, really poor organization on their part. I’m already fighting this at work.
I don’t believe that the USB-C ports can take video input, so you would most likely need to use either and HDMI to DP or USB-C to DP adapter.
Right, but we’re discussing the new federal charges that have been added, as reported in the OP story.