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6
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574
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • It's a complicated issue.

    I live in an area with an outdoor cat ban, but some people in my neighborhood still let their cats out. Nobody in the local government does anything about it.

    Look up local cat rescues. Ask them about "Trap, Neuter, Release" - it's a type of program to help curb feral cat populations. They can also help you find ways to assist the cats without attracting more or increasing the population.

    Cats won't generally mess with skunks or raccoons. The injuries you describe could be from fights with other animals, or could has been caused by other things. Also, cats are resourceful and will find ways to stay warm in the cold.

    You're right, it's heartbreaking. But I've done some rescuing, and I've had to accept that I can't save them all. But you might be able to help them somewhat.

  • Make sure everybody owns a a Nintendo DS, then load up Pictochat.

  • My cat. He has no qualms about interrupting my sleep if he wants to play or cuddle.

  • Keep the toilet, ditch the wife.

  • Which business model are they going for - screwing over their former employees? Or selling access to something that doesn't belong to them? Or are they going to try to combine them both this time?

  • Sure! Might be a few weeks, since I'm waiting for the part to come in.

  • Thanks! It's really satisfying to get it done and see these things work. And I kind of like the cobbled-together look of things like this.

    I don't know of any DIY communities, but I also haven't looked really hard, to be honest.

  • Do a little more digging on non-Nintendo pages and you'll learn more about console modding.

  • That actually depends on whether it is, technically, the same company. Often, an American company will have a subsidiary, a partner company, or joint venture co-owned by a local company. Especially in the insurance industry, there's a lot of financial regulation that requires how a company operates.

    Edit to add: If you're at Allstate Canada, I believe it's technically a different company than the U.S. one, due to how each country's insurance rules work. I'm not sure if one owns the other, or if the Canadian one is an independent licensee of the brand.

  • Yup. That's the short answer. I hope the context made it easier to understand why.

  • There's a lot of gray area in software development. Depending on a lot of variables, you MAY be "providing a service" to do custom work, or you MAY be "exporting intangible goods" (software).

    So it's a huge maybe. A lot of it depends on how the tariff rules are written and put into effect.

    The rules can get VERY complex. The U.S. has a variety of offices related to different aspects of international trade. For example, the Office of the U.S Trade Representative reports directly to the president and is responsible for advising on trade. The International Trade Administration is (a bureau within the U.S. Department of Commerce) works to ensure American businesses have access the global markets without unfair foreign government business practices. And that doesn't even get into the U.S. Department of State's international interests, or private lobbyists such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

    There will be no easy answers. Even when rules come out, the various agencies will take weeks or months to figure out how to interpret and enact the rules. Sometimes, clear sounding things end up having a ton of nuance. If anyone offers you an easy answer, don't listen to them.

    (Source: I spent years working at the Department of Commerce.)

  • No, we are still years off from it being mundane.

    In order for it to be mundane, people need to stop caring about it. But it's still a hotbed issue, complex and full of nuance. Nobody agrees whether it's good or bad. The reality is probably somewhere in between.

    Mundane doesn't just mean commonplace, it needs to be non-controversial. Like how rock and roll music was controversial even through the 1960s and 1970s, but (as a whole) isn't now.

  • It's certainly feasible that, as with other technology, it starts out controversial but then becomes mundane and overdone. It's not exactly the same as how people have started collecting records again, but records might be a decent metaphor for it.

    But, no guarantees. Not every piece of disruptive technology ultimately catches on. (Smellovision, for example.)

  • That doesn't take into account the mass famines we are likely to have, as arable surface disappears.

  • Technically, the same amount of water, but much less of it frozen.

  • That seems like an AWFULLY BIG assumption right now.

  • Soylent, Huel, and other meal replacement drinks.

    Modern meal replacements aren't like slimfast or ensure. They are designed using more modern nutrition science.

    It's available and ready to drink bottles, or in powders you mix.

    Baked beans might also work. If you cook them long enough they get super tender. But that might not be good if you're not allowed to put any pressure at all on your gums.

  • I agree that your version is superior.

  • What a waste of chips.

  • Why are you so upset? They're saying that most men like all breasts.