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> If you want something to be treated as neutral, it needs to act with neutrality.

What constitutes "neutrality" is constantly changing. In order to remain politically neutral, in recent years, one would need to increasingly censor themselves.

For example, in 2019, wearing N95s during wildfire season to avoid inhaling smoke wasn't politically charged. Some people would wear them when outside and others didn't--nobody cared. This month, with wildfire smoke in the air, it has now become political (and decidedly not neutral) to say what was said in 2019--that N95s can help protect you from wildfire smoke.


Well, they can. You’ll notice the smoke when you take it off. Now, if you virtuously don one at the first faint hint of smoke, be my guest. But, don’t give me the stink eye, if I don’t.


I'm very confused. What does this mean?


> Broken gadgets usually make it clear how they’re supposed to work, just by the nature of their parts and assembly.

You're assuming most people have strong reverse engineering skills, but really only a small fraction of the general population has them. sigstoat implies the high IQ people are more likely to have this skill as raw IQ allows them to quickly learn the skill on the job.


IIRC (tho I could be making this up), scrollbars became overlay because most mice have a scroll wheel and most trackpads have gesture scrolling support. These are faster than a scroll bar, because you don't need to move your mouse to the side of the screen to use them.


Try to scroll a 1500 pages PDF with the mouse.


Btw, the study looked at both human and mice brains.


Ok, we've put humans in there too. Thanks!


> relied on studies of mice with mild SARS-CoV-2 infection and postmortem human brain tissue collected early in the pandemic.

The study looked at both mice and human brains, and observed similar effects in both.


From the linked article

> those with COVID-19 had greater microglial reactivity than those in the control group, in a pattern that matched what was found in the mice.

This is evidence that brain fog isn't just "a culturally-conditioned response." Rather, we can physically measure an impact of covid on the brain.


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