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 Re: Yah as shitty an idea as Ikea fucking furniture Quote: 
 If I were a contractor, I’d start specializing in those “all year” rooms with sliding or folding glass doors. I think another long term trend may be restaurants locating in areas with space, so they can adjust. It’s not like this’ll be the last pandemic. It’s warm here now until December anyway, so it’ll be like rustic fall novelty dining and drinking going forward. January and February will suck. But they always do. Natural gas could jump from this. Cleanest way to run all the heat I’m describing. | 
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 Chain of Fools? https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/10/22...krugman-china/ Right, so now Krugman is admitting what Ross Perot said in 1992 -- that globalization allowed to run unfettered would slam lower end US jobs. It's hardly surprising that Perot, who ran a business, would grasp this while Krugman, who has never made a payroll, would not. But aside from that, a chain of responsibility emerges. It starts with the Powell Doctrine, which demanded relaxation of all govt involvement in regulation generally, then Reaganism, which put the concept on steroids while championing old school GOP free trade policies, peaked in the 90s with economists like Krugman making the argument globalization's harms were overhyped and washed by its benefits (rather than unevenly distributed, with some suffering horribly while others benefit terrifically), and crested and broke in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis, which led to Trumpism -- a wrecking ball aimed into "neoliberal" trade policies. In the end, it looks like the GOP was both the cause and later undoing of a liberalization of what used to be a central pillar of its platform: Free trade. Lots of people decry the Clintons and Obama for economic centrism which sold out the old core of the Democratic Party. But it appears the GOP blew up its own good thing... By co-opting the moderate Clintonite Democrats and making neoliberal policy appear to be an inevitability and necessity rather than a choice, it left the voters who had been savaged by globalization out in the cold, with no choice but to vote for a protest candidate like Trump, who then made a mess of free trade. Where lunchbox Joe goes with it no one knows. | 
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 Re: Objectively intelligent. Just another case of media bias: NYT pulls a piece about Georgia voters after two ordinary Georgia voters quoted turn out to be Republican operatives. Apropos of which, this was the best thing I've read about the political media in a while. | 
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 This is a legitimate email I just received from a coworker It was sent by a lawyer who has been doing this for, 20 or so years.  >>I’m told [Company G] is the successor to [Company B] . . . Can anyone tell me/figure out in what state it is incorporated? Please don’t reply to all. | 
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 Re: Objectively intelligent. Quote: 
 The other answer is darker because I think this is where we are going. The Republican Party has become a counter-majoritarian party. It can only win elections by making it harder to vote, and by making it harder to understand what the party is all about. The conflict with honest journalism is structural, not just a matter of broken practices or bad actors. And I believe the people who report on politics in the United States are going to have to confront that reality, whether Trump wins or loses. Translation: Majority makes right. This is a mere repackaging of Trump's view that the only law is the law of power. Because the majority of this country wants X, to be in the minority and want Y means one is a bad actor? The majority of Ohio will likely vote for Trump this fall. Does that mean that the minority that seeks a different result are bad actors? | 
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 But, yeah, if you're approach to winning an election is to try to skew the results or bar people from voting, you're an asshole and in the wrong. | 
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 Re: Objectively intelligent. Quote: 
 More than once a few of us hung out with some combination of beer, caffeine, and delivered food to bang out the core of an article that showed up under some reporter's byline, even though he really just edited our work, or even put together a proposed editorial that ran with minimal change in a major newspaper. Assume a sizable amount of what we all read on politics was written by an operative not a reporter. Especially true of places like Fox that are pretty explicitly just a wing of the Republican party. | 
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 They have consciously chosen to be radical right assholes. | 
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 Re: Yah as shitty an idea as Ikea fucking furniture Quote: 
 But it's been slowly creeping up, and everyone is getting nervous. I think Republicans are going to suddenly care about it (so they can blame Democrats) after the election. But I'm beginning to thing the summer wave will be a mere hiccup compared to what's coming. | 
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