Fyi: people often take out more than one loan, and leave the lowest interest federal loans for last…
Fyi: people often take out more than one loan, and leave the lowest interest federal loans for last…
The Court has to know that ruling a former President immune for breaking the law isn’t a viable decision.
Like, it would immediately make any sitting President a king, and supercede the Court’s power.
Which is why they’ll wait, but rule he isn’t immune. Not because it’s the right thing, but because doing otherwise would make the Court less, and they’re selfish fucks that want to be on top.
That’s all well and good, but remember,
concurring opinion
…is what matters at the end of the day.
Standing up in the face of oppression and bigotry is the point.
Because Trump pardoned him.
https://www.npr.org/2020/12/23/949820820/trump-pardons-roger-stone-paul-manafort-and-charles-kushner
I think an “arms race” that forever expands the court – and thus dilutes the individual relevance of a single Justice – is a good thing.
A single Justice dying or retiring should not be the sort of thing to reshape the entire country.
In this case, remembering standing means they don’t have to double down and rule on abortion itself again.
The answer to, “How do I delete someone else’s comment?” turned out to be, “$44 billion.”
my mom mostly stays downstairs and her friend mostly stays upstairs
So you’re saying your mom is a bottom? /s
“Training data”
I have frequently complained that the cat doesn’t do anything useful except generate poo, and what can I do with that?
My demands to get a job are met with disdain.
History will forget her.
How many people remember stupid congresspeople from 30 years ago?
Imhofe bringing a snowball to the Senate floor, this disproving climate change, for example. You and i and historians might, but average Joe on the street?
I’d look to a show like The Good Place for a perfect balance.
It absolutely matters if you haven’t seen previous episodes, but each episode is still, on it’s own, great.
Preachin to the choir, friend. I’d get worked up about it but I’m paid the same regardless of how upset I get.
I do one, the other senior dev does the other. We fight about it in pull requests.
And now, he’s changed his stance in response to a changing society and pressure from voters.
Isn’t that a good thing? Don’t we want politicians who are demonstrably responsive to voters?
Fun.
From the article, the linked Swagger docs : https://web.archive.org/web/20240120071238/https://mycscgo.com/api/v1/docs/static/index.html#/
And a little more detailed account : https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/technology/tech-news/how-this-security-bug-in-washing-machines-can-help-college-students-in-the-us-do-free-laundry/articleshow/110277923.cms
It looks like these laundry machines are controlled by a mobile app, and requests are routed through The Internet™. The flaw appears to be the web service presumes a user is only able to gain access to their API endpoints via the mobile app, which only exposes certain functions to a user.
Once authorized, though, there’s no further checks like oauth scopes or even user roles, to prevent someone from doing a little bit of lateral movement to admin-style endpoints.
Lazy. The machine makers should be ashamed.
I don’t have the name handy, but there’s at least one plugin for vim that shows buffer previews in a popup. I’ve got it mapped to leader-sb (for “show buffer”).
I’ve been using it a lot lately in the day job.
My experience has been it’s close but wrong often.
It shines when I am doing the same thing for 20 variables, but then I should be using a loop instead and copilot won’t go there.
Biden could trot out as a half-rotten corpse and I’d still vote for him over a serial liar and traitor to our nation.