I believe there's a language issue here. This article (and Lemmy in general) uses a more global definition of "Liberal" which is completely different from the meaning the word has in the US. After arriving here (Lemmy) I've learned that the meaning it has in the article is a specific political position which is distinct from "leftist" or "progressive" - it's based more on economic policy than social policy, and basically means something like "maybe slightly left of conservative capitalist" - which I now understand US Democrats pretty much are economically.
Before learning that, this article would have made zero sense, and sounded like it was written by an ally of Trump himself
Although I still don't know if that means 'I doubt anyone wants me' or 'I'm available if someone wants', or 'someone wants me but I don't know who', etc.
No, not the social network with my friend Tom, I mean the online file storage (would now be called 'cloud' storage) site that it was before it died and Tom bought the domain.
It had an astounding 300MB of space available for free, much more than the contemporary competition.
Of course now there's Google Drive, Dropbox, etc. Myspace was just too far ahead of their time.
No. A typical "supermarket" (grocery + clothes, housewares, etc.) does not, nor do smaller stores that are mostly just grocery. Walmart is an exception.
Costco has people who could be called greeters, but they are just checking that you, or someone you are with, has a paid membership. Some stores have security guards at the entrances, but that's a different thing.
I don't understand why they didn't all just abstain.
I get that it was a gotcha, like they were asked the classic "Have you stopped beating your wife?" But they not only failed to deny the form of the question, but also gave the worse of the two bad answers.
"Insurance battles lasted for years, the central point being the definition of the accident, i.e., whether it was a "flood" or a "leak". Leaks were covered by insurance, while floods were not. Eventually it was classified as a leak, which is why many residents still call it the "Great Chicago Leak"."
Tag.