The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent was pretty damn good.
If you think the midterms are going to be democratic in nature, you've still got another 17 months of Trump's current bullshit to consider.
By the time he's done, those elections are going to be about as "fair and balanced" as a Fox News broadcast.
I'm more surprised at how heavily everyone in Boise and Dallas showed up.
India are also still doing business with Russia.
If Operation Spiders' Web is more than just an isolated attack on Russia's air bases and is continuing to strike deep into Russian soil, then this has serious potential to finally bring Putin to the negotiating table.
Other than that, I think this will be a bloody war of attrition that Zelenskyy has no chance of winning.
I thought the royals in mainland Europe were generally well-liked? I'm only basing this on the lack of negative attention they get compared to the British royal family.
When I first saw that Luigi Mangione photograph, I thought "damn, that guy's about to drop the hottest rap album of 2025."
Bernie is a whole lot more compos mentis than Biden ever was.
The right time to elect him would've been 2016...
He isn't wrong. If they hadn't pushed a senile 81 year old incumbent leader upon us as their candidate, in a blatant attempt to parachute an unpopular vice president into power once the 25th Amendment had to inevitably be invoked, then we would never have had a second Trump term.
Biden should never have ran for a second term, and allowed time for the Democrats to field a decent candidate for the White House. The fact that Harris literally lost to somebody who tried to stir up an insurrection against Congress four years ago says it all.
Another big problem is that we've been collectively trying to shoehorn everybody into programming careers for the better part of two decades. In fact, "just learn to code" is often thrown around by people in response to the prospect of AI automating and taking over everybody's jobs.
What they don't understand is that coding is actually very difficult, especially for people who are bad at math, which is a significant portion of the population if you look at statistics, grades, test scores, etc. Expecting a lowly paid call center worker who lost their job to AI to suddenly open up Visual Studio and write any code is a fools errand.
I bring this up because I think there's a correllation between people asking low-quality questions and people being pushed into making a career move into tech.
Lemmy is full of tankies and Linux nerds. It's a different kind of toxic to what you'd experience over on Reddit.