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New Bill Could Pave the Way Toward Banning Student Debt Cancellation
  • As to the auto industry bailout, would you rather have had a major American industry simply collapse?!

    There's allegedly 94 American automobile manufacturers, per Wikipedia. If there's a disruption that would collapse all of them, that would be extremely serious - something which should be handled by making sure the industry is not at the whims of the economy.

    The simplest quick-fix is having the company give partial ownership to the government in exchange for a bailout, and the alternatives involve arguing about what color to use on the bike shed.

  • Grocery code of conduct ‘will not work’ without Loblaw and Walmart, MPs told
  • A surprise only to those who think it's a good idea to allow large companies to corner the market.

    Plus there are already existing concepts that prevent this. Simply tax massive profits made from the labour of others, having a non-profit competitor, laws against profiteering during a crises, a maximum CEO/worker pay ratio, etc. Actually applying those concepts ahead of time would help a lot more than a reactive code of conduct.

    But that's Communism™.

  • Had this conversation with someone who chose to no longer be at my table after meeting a blind NPC
  • I've seen them somewhat often in RPGs and related material. There's those who are blind, frail, deaf, weak or lacking a skill to do something necessary. Even Basic D&D had notable penalties for rolling INT 3-5, being illiterate to start with.

    NPCs in fantasy settings still have hinderances, and they're expected. Maybe they can be neutralized by healing magic in D&D, or there may be equipment that works around them. The wrong part is shutting down the concept, as that's contempt for the weak (technically a symptom of fascism.)

  • Deleted
    I left Reddit several months ago because of the way they handled API changes/fees, 3rd party apps, and mods/volunteers who disagreed with the changes. I was a big fan of the Apollo app ([@apolloapp](h
  • I still check reddit, only due to habit. But since then, I've went to a few other social network sites that seem to at least be a bit more distributed.

    Some of them are still in control of rich people (e.g. Nextdoor), some are open (e.g. Mastodon), but the usable variety seems to be much better than sticking with things that are receiving #enshittification.

  • Ask Lemmy: Traditional vs natural mouse scrolling; which do you use?
  • I noticed this in video games rather than on-screen text scrolling. Some of them had a weapon selection, but instead had mouse-wheel-down "decrease" the weapon slot, and mouse-wheel-up "increase" it. However, the game also used the mouse wheel for other things, thus changing it to my preference had some unexpected side effect.

    In any case, mouse-wheel to scroll view works because of the mouse-pointer paradigm. Move both mouse-wheel and mouse in the same direction, and the pointer is further along the content. Move them in opposite directions, and the pointer tends to hold position relative to content.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BE
    BewitchedBargain @reddthat.com
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