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Fascism relies on politicisation of aesthetic

See V is for Vendetta, I would argue there is a sort of seduction in the Baudrillard sense involved.

How is that downvoted? You can’t seriously disagree?

Biden's choice of imposing a font therefore exposes that administration as fascist.

While you'll get no argument from me about the Biden government being fascist adjacent, no. The font was chosen by that government for accessibility reasons. The font has now been changed for purely aesthetic reasons, attaching the politics of anti-DEIA to a particular aesthetic (serifed fonts).

As for the politics of that government, a history lesson; In 1930s Germany, Liberals did nothing to abort the rise of NSDAP, seeing them as economic allies if not political allies. They sold out their country and turned a blind eye to genuine evil for profit and the reduction of the political influence of their workforce.


Nope. That choice wasn't for aesthetic reasons.

Nobody is forcing you to use facebook

Think how many tens of millions would have died in such a war. Just for some other evil to pop up anyway.

Definitely depends on the store in my experience (Aus), I think some may not maintain their machines as frequently/well, or maybe even deliberately watered down. Glass bottle Coke is the best coke imo.

In my experience people mostly become managers because that's the next step to more money and there is no other next step to more money. Nothing more nothing less. They certainly don't have a sophisticated philosophy on management and being the best manager they can be.

I’ve worked in places where it’s much easier to promote someone into the management track than it is to create a new IC role.

In plenty of places in London you’ll get to senior engineer and then that’s basically it.


I assume it's just how pfsense is using Kea, but moving to this has been a bit regretful. Since moving from the legacy one to Kea, my static reservations don't work first time. Clients get given an address from the pool and then some time later (hours) get their static reservation. No clue why, from reading doc it seems like this is intended behaviour and that static reservations are discouraged??

On isc-dhcp, clients got their static reservation straight up.


Do you mean "Static Mappings"? I have a couple dozen of those and had no issue during my pfSense upgrade. I also rely heavily on two settings in "Services > DHCP Server":

- [x] Enable DNS Registration (leases will auto-register with the DNS Resolver)

- [x] Enable Early DNS Registration (static mappings will auto-register with the DNS Resolver)

I do not use the "Create a static ARP table entry for this MAC & IP Address pair." option for individual static mappings.

Hopefully this helps you in your troubleshooting.


I’ve got 60+ static reservations across multiple VLANs and don’t see this behavior. I’m not sure where you read it’s expected behavior, but it isn’t.

I’m guessing it’s something in you’re config.


on pfsense?

> Clients get given an address from the pool and then some time later (hours) get their static reservation.

I'm still on isc-dhcp (and not pfsense either) but is there a chance you have two DHCP servers running?


Never seen roadkill? Or a bird pecked to death by other birds? Biology is brutal, reality is brutal, this is very mild.

Workplace injuries have never been swept under the rug, especially if those cleaners are non-persons in the eyes of the government.

That's a possibility. Google appears to be contracting out depot work to car rental companies because a Waymo depot is basically a car rental lot. They need three shifts for each depot. So there's probably a couple hundred people who would otherwise be cleaning out rental cars working the depots. At some point injuries would get hard to sweep under the rug.

Out of curiosity, for the AI inept, how does this work? I can just point firefox at "https://kagi.com/assistant" and it can use it? Is that using MCP or is there some other standard interface for this?

Most of these AI providers use a similar kind of common query structure. OpenWebUI is a mostly consistent copy of ChatGPT so that's what the browser seems to default to when you configure something custom.

All the AI toolbar really does is open http://ai.url.com/some-query?prompt=${formattedPrompt} and display it next to the web page you have open.

The formatted prompt is something like "The user is on the page 'Stories about Cats'. The user wants you to summarize the following text: <text you have selected goes here>". You can configure your own prompt in about:config if you want, there are a bunch of examples here: https://github.com/mozilla-l10n/firefox-l10n/blob/main/en-GB...

There are prompts optimised for specific AI providers but the generic ones should work with any provider your choose.

When the web page opens at that URL, you're either going to get redirected to login and then redirected back, or the AI frontend will start executing the prompt.


It's functions as a mini browser window without a URL bar

In Australia 5 out of 5 people are covered by Medicare, and 5 of them bear the burden. (at some point in their life. assuming they become a tax payer, which seems likely for most.)

On top of that, 53% pay for Private Health Care as well.

https://www.health.gov.au/topics/private-health-insurance/re...

On top of that many things that are 'not urgent' you have to pay for yourself.

I have recently paid over 20K for back surgery. Prior to the back surgery I could barely walk. This was deemed 'not urgent' and had I would have had to have waited at least 18 months for surgery via Medicare.

I also have private health cover.

So, it's important for non-Australians to understand, our health system is far from a panacea where taxes pay for everything.

Currently 778 K Australians are waiting for 'elective surgery' .

https://www.aihw.gov.au/hospitals/topics/elective-surgery


What percentage of Australian society is net-positive tax payer? That’s your real number, not this pretend 5 out of 5 as you claim.

If everyone costs the system $10, and the five people pay $8, $9, $10, $11, and $12, respectively, I think it’s a mistake to say only the last two net-positive taxpayers are paying for the system.

Agreed. It is a small proportion of people who do not contribute to their own healthcare in this way.

More info on Australia from a quick search.

  - Public hospital birth is about $0-1k USD.
  - Private hospital with health insurance: $2-3k USD
  - Private without insurance: typically up to $13k USD
Private health insurance is nowhere near $40k here. Can be down around US$100/mo for a single or US$300ish/mo for a family, depending on inclusions.

The burden of this isn't a big one to bear. I just compared tax rates for a $65k USD income in Australia vs the US. You'd be taxed ~$800 less in Australia.

There's no way that's true - include the employer side payroll taxes. Whether PPP or nominal my napkin math gives me 40% more tax payable in Australia

Edit: I'm too dumb to know whether to include superannuation as a tax or not so I'm not sure if I'm right or not.


Superannuation is not a tax. It’s a compulsory retirement saving/investment scheme.

However to calculate total income taxes you do need to include the 15% tax on superannuation contributions.

If your pre-tax take home salary is $100k AUD, then your total salary package is 111.5k including the 11.5% compulsory employer superannuation contribution.

You’ll pay regular income taxes + 2% Medicare levy on $100k and your $11.5k super contribution will be taxed at 15%.

So your total income tax including the Medicare levy (but assuming you don’t pay the Medicare surcharge or claim any deductions) will be $24,513. Giving an effective tax rate of 20.2%

There are no state or local income taxes in Australia so that’s it for personal income taxes. However states do charge payroll tax on most companies payroll (e.g. 4.85% on annual payroll over $1M in the state of Victoria for companies in the Melbourne metro area).


Pointing out the myth of "socialism just means higher taxes and less freedom" will only draw the pitchforks to your door.

I guess your health industry is not raping you with outrageous costs?

From the top:

  Health spending in 2023–24

  In 2023–24, Australia spent an estimated $270.5 billion on health goods and services– an average of approximately $10,037 per person. In real terms (adjusted for inflation), health spending increased by 1.1%, or $2.8 billion more than spending from 2022–23. 

  In 2023–24, health spending accounted for 10.1% of the gross domestic product (GDP) in Australia, approximately 0.2 percentage points higher than in 2022–23.
~ https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/health-welfare-expenditure/h...

From the bottom:

  In Australia, 15% of all expenditure on health care comes directly from individuals in the form of out‐of‐pocket fees — this is almost double the amount contributed by private health insurers.

  There is concern that vulnerable groups — socio‐economically disadvantaged people and older Australians in particular, who also have higher health care needs — are spending larger proportions of their incomes on out‐of‐pocket fees for health care. 

  A 2019 study identified that one in three low income households are spending more than 10% of their income on health care. 
~ https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10953298/

There's little to no public advertising of prescription drugs, cheap generics are widely available from federal scale bulk negotiation deals.

Health outcomes are greater life expectancy than the US, national scale cancer survuival rates are better by a few percentage points (IIRC - they are close but higher).

Australia has long had an innate "we're all in this together" society built on individualism. It's not great, it's not perfect, but the first instinct is generally to look after our own - across the board.


When I was in the USA just paying for things like a GP and a single specialist didn't seem outrageous coming from Australia.

If I worked in the US, I would have health insurance and would be paying lower out of pocket costs than I would in Australia. Combined with the higher salary and cheaper housing that's a pretty good deal.

Edit:

We allegedly have universal healthcare but that doesn't cover any actually competent specialist (need private healthcare for this) so paying $400 for 25 minutes of a psychiatrist every 2 months and $95 for 7 minutes of a GP is common.


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