• 0 Posts
  • 1.78K Comments
Joined 3 年前
cake
Cake day: 2023年6月21日

help-circle
  • And he downplayed the urgency felt by some of his GOP colleagues that airports will suffer in the meantime: “The president has already said he’s going to fund TSA out of funds he has.”

    So uh let’s look past the constitutionality of Trump funding the TSA through an executive order because anyone challenging it would be committing political suicide.

    How, exactly, does that help the GOP? If the TSA is being funded anyway, doesn’t it benefit Senate Dems to just not accept any bill that they don’t like? GOP is basically throwing away one of their biggest levers to try to force Dems to compromise.

    And look, I’m all for that. Dems should just reject bills they don’t like if there’s nothing for them in the bills. Fuck funding DHS/ICE. Fuck the Voter ID stuff. Just keep saying “no” until you get some wins because Trump seems to want to just hand you them on a silver platter anyway.


  • What I usually push for is that every CI task either sets up the environment or executes that one command™ for that task. For example, that command can be uv run ruff check or cargo fmt --all -- --check or whatever.

    Where the CI-runs-one-script-only (or no-CI) approach falls apart for me is when you want to have a deployment pipeline. It’s usually best not to have deployment secrets stored in any dev machine, so a good place to keep them is in your CI configs (and all major platforms support secrets stored with an environment, variable groups, etc). Of course, I’m referring here to work on a larger team, where permission to deploy needs to be transferrable, but you don’t really want to be rotating deployment secrets all the time either. This means you’re running code in the pipeline that you can’t run locally in order to deploy it.

    It also doesn’t work well when you build for multiple platforms. For example, I have Rust projects that build and test on Windows, MacOS, and Linux which is only possible by running those on multiple runners (each on a different OS and, in MacOS’s case, CPU architecture).

    The compromise of one-script-per-task can usually work even in these situations, from my experience. You still get to use things like GitHub’s matrix, for example, to run multiple runners in parallel. It just means you have different commands for different things now.



  • The “then what” seems to be to show people that the current administration isn’t working, at least from what I can see. And, weirdly enough, it has sort of worked so far. Democrats have flipped a lot of Republican-held seats in special elections up until now, and they even have a real chance of flipping a senate seat in Texas, of all states.

    Assuming we have a fair election (or as fair of one as we can) in November, there is an opportunity to at least severely limit Trump’s power. This, of course, is predicated on a lot, including Schumer giving two shits about the people for once (which is a stretch), but it’s not nothing.

    Worst case? You’ve already mobilized millions. Getting them to start rioting doesn’t take much once there’s a spark.

    How else do you plan to mobilize millions of people? Telling them “ok we’ll protest for two years then start guillotining the bourgeoisie” is going to turn away most people. Saying “show up here and chant your lungs out” is much more palatable, and at least has a chance to accomplish something, even if relatively small.


  • It advises parents to steer clear of fast-paced videos and use screens together where possible. The guidance also suggests “screen swaps” - taking screens away to read stories together or playing simple games at mealtimes.

    Putting a tablet with Cocomelon in front of your kid for hours has always been about not dealing with the kid. It’s a means to not actually raise the child.

    This approach of screen time is interesting to me. Using screens at all isn’t necessarily a bad thing - it’s a major part of the world we live in, after all. But “screen swaps” can help break any unhealthy habits with screen use.

    She says she found some swaps very time-consuming - especially in the morning and right after school when she needed to get things done.

    “I need that time, so I’m not going to swap it to sit down and read a book because it’s not realistic,” she says.

    This, in my opinion, is at the core of the issue with Cocomelon parenting. While there do exist awful people who should never become parents, the current world gives people no time to spend with their families, unfortunately. I’m no expert in UK life, but at least for what I understand of London (where I’ve looked at prices before), I can only imagine the stress of both parents working to barely afford rent and still get food. This is true as well here in the US across the country.


  • The stolen emails appear to date from around 2011 to 2022 and appear to include personal, business and travel correspondence that Patel had with various contacts, according to a preliminary CNN review of the files with the help of an independent cybersecurity researcher.

    Basically, nothing of value was stolen supposedly. The email appears, based on the article anyway, to be a personal email unrelated to work.

    Honestly, I’m shocked nothing government related ended up in that account, at least for that time period. Nothing says government official more than confidential information existing where it shouldn’t be (insecure personal email servers, in boxes at home in Florida, in the White House on Trump’s desk, etc).








  • His efforts drew praise from Republican U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson in 2022, who called Wait a “white hat hacker.”

    This is textbook black hat. White hat hackers are usually pen testers hired by the company in question. Black hat does it to seek some kind of gain or do some kind of harm. The goal here was obvious, especially since he literally stated a “black hat” goal.

    His conviction comes after a jury in 2024 found a former Milwaukee election official guilty of misconduct in office after she obtained three military absentee ballots using fake names and Social Security numbers in 2022. Like Wait, Kimberly Zapata argued that she was trying to expose vulnerabilities in the state’s election system

    And I was testing the system when I stole all that jewelery at the store, officer! See? Clearly the system failed.

    It’s sad that some people definitely believe this.