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7 votes
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How smart TVs in millions of US homes track more than what’s on tonight
17 votes -
The similarities between Soviet Union and Silicon Valley
link to the source Tweet Things that happen in Silicon Valley and also the Soviet Union: waiting years to receive a car you ordered, to find that it's of poor workmanship and quality promises of...
Things that happen in Silicon Valley and also the Soviet Union:
- waiting years to receive a car you ordered, to find that it's of poor workmanship and quality
- promises of colonizing the solar system while you toil in drudgery day in, day out
- living five adults to a two room apartment - being told you are constructing utopia while the system crumbles around you
- 'totally not illegal taxi' taxis by private citizens moonlighting to make ends meet - everything slaved to the needs of the military-industrial complex
- mandatory workplace political education - productivity largely falsified to satisfy appearance of sponsoring elites
- deviation from mainstream narrative carries heavy social and political consequences - networked computers exist but they're really bad
- Henry Kissinger visits sometimes for some reason
- elite power struggles result in massive collateral damage, sometimes purges - failures are bizarrely upheld as triumphs
- otherwise extremely intelligent people just turning the crank because it's the only way to get ahead
- the plight of the working class is discussed mainly by people who do no work
- the United States as a whole is depicted as evil by default
- the currency most people are talking about is fake and worthless
- the economy is centrally planned, using opaque algorithms not fully understood by their users
18 votes -
Letter from a Birmingham museum
2 votes -
The tunnel that could break New York
13 votes -
Northrop Grumman employee who allegedly attended violent white-supremacist rally is no longer employed at the company
10 votes -
The fallout in commodities from the US-China Trade war: what's at stake
6 votes -
Sky-high deductibles broke the US health insurance system
13 votes -
Kamasi Washington - Street Fighter Mas (2018)
5 votes -
Fifty years on, The Band's 'Music From Big Pink' haunts us still
4 votes -
These eleven companies control everything about the Fourth of July
7 votes -
The amount of neighborhood fireworks this year in Las Vegas is much less than in years past
Used to sound like a war zone from the end of June on. Now almost nothing until the the 4th, and even then nothing like in the past years. Rents have been slowly climbing, maybe that has pushed...
Used to sound like a war zone from the end of June on. Now almost nothing until the the 4th, and even then nothing like in the past years. Rents have been slowly climbing, maybe that has pushed out the young and reckless. Maybe it is facebook. How about your neck of the woods?
5 votes -
AJR - "Sober Up" | Black Box Sessions (2018)
4 votes -
Is Facebook a publisher? In public it says no, but in court it says yes
6 votes -
Dawn spacecraft buzzes largest asteroid - final orbits
4 votes -
US loses at world cup and it’s not even playing
7 votes -
Can Andy Byford save the subways?
9 votes -
Comcast starts throttling mobile video, will charge extra for HD streams and full-speed tethering
33 votes -
Elon Musk ordered Tesla engineers to stop doing a critical brake test on Model 3s
11 votes -
Data suggest that gentrifying neighborhoods powered Ocasio-Cortez's victory
6 votes -
New Orleans piano genius Henry Butler dead at age 68
5 votes -
Americans Seek to Escape News
19 votes -
Canada tariffs on US goods from ketchup to lawn mowers begin
24 votes -
It Is Happening Here, Trump Is Already Early-Stage Mussolini
23 votes -
LeBron James signing with Los Angeles Lakers in $154M bombshell
12 votes -
Tesla hits Model 3 manufacturing milestone, hours after deadline
23 votes -
Susan Collins, pivotal US moderate, says ‘hostility’ to Roe would sway her vote
13 votes -
A better reason to delay Kennedy’s replacement (People under the cloud of investigation do not get to pick the judges who may preside over their cases.)
14 votes -
A spymaster steps out of the shadows
7 votes -
Supreme Court Justice Kennedy is retiring
@kimberlyrobinsn: Justice Kennedy is retiring. #SCOTUS
63 votes -
European Central Bank president Mario Draghi warns risks from trade war may be understated
6 votes -
Wild Wild Country: A Netflix documentary about the free love cult that took over an Oregon town in the 80s
9 votes -
Facebook chats from planning session of Unite The Right 2 have been leaked
17 votes -
Residents of the Bay Area, CA, how do we address the homeless camps littering the streets of Oakland and surrounding towns?
Before we get started, PLEASE, no political agenda harping, shit posting, trolling, etc. This is something that is on a sharp increase right now in the Bay Area and I'm genuinely wanting to hear...
Before we get started, PLEASE, no political agenda harping, shit posting, trolling, etc. This is something that is on a sharp increase right now in the Bay Area and I'm genuinely wanting to hear other people's thoughts and opinions on this.
The homeless camps have officially reached an out of control level. There is no denying this. Trash and used hypodermic needles litter the streets. Drug use and sales is seen on street corners near the camps. I personally have seen residents of the camps painting graffiti in broad day light. There are unsafe cooking set ups causing explosions and fires putting residents at risk and leaving charred remains for weeks at a time. Cite: https://evilleeye.com/news-commentary/public-safety/explosion-home-depot-homeless-encampment-rattles-emeryville-west-oakland-neighbors/
What is going on here? How come cities are not cleaning this stuff up? I realize that if the city did conduct some massive eviction/clean up, the residents would just move somewhere else. But what about the trash? Can't that be cleaned up? In many places, I've seen it up to the ankles of people walking around in the camps.
I truly don't know what the non-camp residents are suppose to do? Do we just turn a blind eye and let the trash pile up? Or do we demand action to keep our streets clean and safe?
16 votes -
A political scientist argues that the Democratic Party must play "procedural hardball" too: The Republicans aren’t engaged in a policy fight. instead, they’re waging a “procedural war.”
13 votes -
The National Security Agency said it collected more domestic call records than allowed, and as a result has been mass-deleting call records
9 votes -
If you could scrap and rewrite the Constitution, what would you do differently? What would you change, add, or remove?
[Serious]
25 votes -
Varroa mite detected at Port of Melbourne on a ship from United States
10 votes -
A debate on NSA spying "Spy On Me, I'd Rather Be Safe". Very civil, structured debate between four experts in their fields.
10 votes -
OPECs agreement to increase oil production by reducing over-compliance with 2017 deal is a drop in the barrel
An agreement on Friday June 22nd caused oil prices to increase by the largest one-day jump since OPEC agreed to reduce output at the start of 2017. At the beginning of 2017 OPEC and 10 other...
An agreement on Friday June 22nd caused oil prices to increase by the largest one-day jump since OPEC agreed to reduce output at the start of 2017. At the beginning of 2017 OPEC and 10 other oil-producing countries agreed to reduce their combined output by 1.8 million barrels a day, roughly 2% of global output. The 2017 deal was a reaction to the massive over-supply that brought prices down significantly since late 2014 when Saudi Arabia led the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to allow market prices to dictate their output. While the 2017 deal called for a reduction of only 1.8 million barrels a day, many countries reduced output even further resulting in 150% compliance of the planned quotas, or nearly 3 million fewer barrels of oil a day. Some members of OPEC had faced unexpected production outages whereas others simply chose to withhold their stockpile but the result was the same: oil prices were rising and global stockpiles were being used up to avoid a dangerous price spike.
The new agreement, taking effect in early July, aims to reign in the over-compliance of the 2017 deal and add more barrels of oil to the global market by returning to 100% compliance. To go from 150% compliance to 100% compliance, roughly 1 million barrels a day of crude oil would be added to the global market. However, some producers may be unable to increase their output for various reasons resulting in an expected increase of only 600,000 barrels a day. Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak claims the $80 a barrel threshold hit in May of 2018 reflects the global inventory of surplus crude oil being reduced to a point where the oil market can rebalance itself. Saudi Arabia's Oil minister Khalid al-Falih promises his country will increase oil sales gradually starting in July. Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh had reservations about any deal because economic sanctions from the US put them in a position whereby the increased output of others may take over Iran’s market share. Oil producing countries have to weigh the risk that big consumers may invest in renewables as well as produce their own oil, when available, if prices rise too quickly.
Leading up to this decision, the price of oil steadily fell from the $80 tipping point in late May with the expectation that OPEC and affiliated oil-producing countries would flood the
market similar to the 2014 decision. While supply will increase due to this new deal it is a far cry from the amount many investors had feared - and consumers had hoped for - therefore the price of crude saw a 3% increase due to the news instead of decreasing further. The month-long anticipation of increased supply lowered the price of crude oil but the end-result of the deal caused a market correction as speculation was replaced by the true figure. While the agreed-upon figure is an additional 1 million barrels a day, the expectation is that only 600,000 barrels will be added a day however some countries wish to produce an even greater amount of oil to take advantage of the high prices while they last. Such an over-correction could still happen in the coming weeks leading to a drop in oil prices but investors believe their fears of another 2014 crash is averted.Without this boost to supply, OPEC feared prices could spike to surpass $100 a barrel which would drastically reduce global demand and severely cut into the profit of oil-producing
countries who rely on the revenue from companies exporting oil. Many worried the supply increase would cause American oil prices to drop below $30 a barrel again, which caused
massive unemployment in the industry and a huge loss of revenue. From 2014 to 2016, as much as $4 billion in American employee wages was lost in the oil industry.Countries like Saudi Arabia and Russia have the ability to produce oil at a far lower opportunity cost than most other countries, giving them a comparative advantage in the global oil
market. During the 2014-2016 period of oil surplus that brought US prices below $30 a barrel, American producers had to develop the technology to continue production despite the nearly 200,000 oil workers who lost their jobs in the shale industry. US producers made good on that pressure and were able to maintain production gains through more efficient extraction and refining methods. The relatively loose regulations on hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, provided a much needed advantage to US producers who were able to leverage that technology and avoid Saudi Arabia's attempt in 2014 to shut small firms out of the market.Avoiding a spike in oil prices in excess of $100 a barrel is beneficial to producers and consumers as demand would quickly plummet despite the short-term gains by companies such as Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp as well as countries such as Russia hoping to capitalize on the high prices. Spikes in oil prices turn consumers away from their unhealthy dependence on oil in favor of renewables and alternatives to plastics; invites pressure from big consumers such as the United States who aren’t afraid of imposing reactionary economic sanctions; and benefits countries such as Russia whose major exports are oil. Massive increases in supply have the effect of hurting the governments who rely heavily on high oil prices to make their profit as well as hurting the small oil producers that struggle to produce efficiently when oil prices drop. With oil prices rising by over 40% since early 2017 due to geopolitical risks to supply causing unexpected shortages and the increasing demand matching increased economic growth, the global oil supply needed a moderate boost.
The United States exported a record high of 3 million barrels a day during the week of the Friday June 22nd deal - producing 10.9 million barrels a day. Progressing from exporting no oil to exporting more oil than all but three OPEC countries pump out of the earth is not solely the result of US efficiency - some analysts say a portion of the record-breaking exports was sourced from US stockpiles. Maintaining this level of oil exporting is not only unsustainable, it is hitting US consumers in the wallet at a time where oil prices are on the risk of surging to a new high for 2018 - perhaps even surpassing the triple digits per barrel. This may be viewed as the United States attempting to force smaller members of OPEC and most non-OPEC producers out of the world market for oil as this export record comes at a time when most countries have finally expended the last dregs of their stockpiles. Countries that can afford to increase output considerably include the United States, Russia, and Saudi Arabia - and the former two appear very eager to commit to flooding the market without a care for the resulting over-corrections of the market which would send the pendulum of oil prices swinging back and forth causing international uncertainty especially for countries heavily dependent on the oil industry.
Sources
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2016/12/03/opec-reaches-a-deal-to-cutproduction
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2016/12/03/opec-reaches-a-deal-to-cutproduction
https://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/18/business/worldbusiness/18opec.html
https://www.iea.org/oilmarketreport/omrpublic/
4 votes -
John Bolton just did a complete 180 on his Russia stance after meeting with Putin
7 votes -
Tips for staying civil while debating child prisons
23 votes -
Shooting reported at Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis
21 votes -
How come seven people (the supreme court) can have so much power?
I am not American but it seems to me that it is an incredibly broken system that 7 judges can essentially halt an entire country's progress. They decided that corporations have rights like a...
I am not American but it seems to me that it is an incredibly broken system that 7 judges can essentially halt an entire country's progress. They decided that corporations have rights like a person, they can decide if gay marriage is legal, they can decide basically anything if they wanted as I understand it.
So why does this even exist? Surely such gigantic decisions should be left to a parliament or something.
19 votes -
Newborn screening urged for fatal neurological disorder, spinal muscular atrophy (SMA)
6 votes -
This mine threatens America’s largest wild salmon run
2 votes -
Inside the White House’s quiet campaign to create a Supreme Court opening
9 votes -
Democrats are wrong about Republicans. Republicans are wrong about Democrats.
27 votes -
It turns out all kinds of tech companies are working with ICE
7 votes -
Reality Winner, liberty loser: NSA leaker faces sixty-three months in the cooler
9 votes