America fought for independence from Britain because the wealth of the nation was being sucked away and spent for the whims of a handful of wealthy people, and because the people were powerless to chose who the government was. If you factor in the insane number of insanely Gerrymandered districts and significant quantities of votes going through Musk's servers with no external scrutiny, a broken electoral college and a supreme court intent on deleting the constitution starting with section 3 of the 14th amendment (and now moving on to the rest of it), removing religious freedom, I see everything that the founding fathers fought for and everything that the civil war was fought for being stamped on by one deluded racist moron and his crazy sycophants and enablers. It was never really freedom from slavery anyway when you have such vast numbers of black men working for no wage in profiteering private prisons for decades just for smoking some pot or stealing some groceries while rich men who do drugs or steal tens of thousands get a slap on the wrist.
davidagain
....wade in and look you in the eye and say "This. Feels. Right."....
Superb, absolutely superb.
Thanks dude, glad someone appreciates it.
Thank you so much for taking the time to summarise and explain all this. I have really enjoyed having a little window into your remarkable world.
Thank you, that was very interesting. I was surprised at the definition of the basic open sets because they felt quite closed to my intuition, so the topology feels discrete to me. It's definitely Hausdorff, I guess, but that's no big deal. I'm guessing if you're saying it uses a lot of the axioms, it uses the axiom of choice. It feels like that kind of arena, but I'm no set theorist. Having been taught by ring theorists, I always found the axiom of choice no big deal and totally uncontroversial, but I'm aware of the existence of mathematicians who feel otherwise, intuitionists (confusing name) and constructivists and the like. Do set theorists have a lot of debate about axioms, is it largely led by consensus, or deeply controversial, or just a case of making clear which you're using and no one gets excited about it?
Let's assume I can prove the countability and non countability of various famous sets and, for example, that (a^b)^c = a^bc for cardinalities. What's determinacy?
Lots of office buildings in the UK have air con, but I agree that it would be difficult to find a tradesman to install one unless your brother in law works at Wates or something.
It could be a barn conversion air bnb, because what idiot in the UK would put that on a roof they were planning on living under? But the contract looks way too urban for that. Makes no sense.
I had the exact same reaction.
If that is a dick, it looks like it has some very serious STDs.
First time they did that for us, they put it in the paper recycling wheelie bin, which was definitely the cleanest bin, and the easiest to get it out of because it was 3/4 full, but it was in the run up to Christmas and it was very camouflaged amongst all the other already opened amazon packages. No note, of course.
Yes, and that's not even under the table.
Yeah, but your problem there is that trump has no values other than "tell me I'm great and get me more money", and his supporters have no values other than "fuck people that were born with darker skin than me".
You can't rescue democracy by trying to big tent with these haters.