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I’ve never been to Greenland or (to my knowledge) met anyone who has. What is/was your experience like?

I tried explaining in the other comment here. In summary, it's beautiful, raw nature, that's different from anything else I've seen. It takes some preparation, but I haven't experience any of these "sun will kill you and ice will kill you too" vibes that the article suggests. It felt like one of the last places on Earth not affected by humans (at least directly through resource exploitation, as it definitely is affected by the warming - but that's another discussion).

A little humility would be in order here. "I am not aware of this" is quite different than "there is no evidence whatsoever." The latter comment implies you are aware of the reporting and issues and have carefully weighed them.

This is something that has been discussed in major Israeli media publications.


> A little humility would be in order here.

You couldn't know (but you could have guessed) this but as an Israeli I'm well aware what appeared in major Israeli media publications and this didn't.


A fish in an aquarium doesn't see water.

How did you go from an argument for enforcing parking laws to infinite fees and imprisonment? Where is there such a parking law?

> there is no public good afforded by violating parking restrictions.

Apparently there must be some upside to allowing parking violations, if the perpetrator values it more than whatever low 'punishment' fee is set. Otherwise society would increase the fee to get the right behaviour.


When I hear "freelance journalists, adjunct professors, and anonymous posters" the first word I think of is "democracy", not "threat".

The idea that anybody gets to say whatever they want is how you have a free society. Treat those people like threats and you have authoritarianism. Whether the end result is left tyranny or right tyranny, I don't want it.


I like journalists and professors personally, much more than the avg HN poster. I'm being provocative: we edit our own feeds, and so our collection of follows threatens our sense of the world.


I used to think that when the internet wasn't what it is today. Now I hear 'unearned appeals to authority and randos whose opinion/thoughts I wouldn't care about in real life'.


Interesting that there roughly 700K daily posters but only 390K followers. I have no idea what other social media numbers are but having ~2x the posters as followers doesn't seem like a sign of health to me.


You are misinterpreting the statistics.

Having more people talk than follow is good thing and probably consistent across social media.

That's just saying the average person posts for 2 days and follows for 1. Which seems very typical if not heavy on the following.

Pointing at more people speaking than sheeping and calling that an ominous statistic seems off, don't you think?


I think I'm even more amazed that Walmart has almost as many employees as the DoD.


I've always liked the `select...from` order because it helps me understand the goal before reading the logic. In other words, I want to end up with this, and here's how I want to go about getting it.


Guessing you were not a 10-ish year old kid in the early 90s. I had the same experience as the OP and it was very common. I've talked to numerous parents my age who have lamented that we can't let our kids have the same childhood we enjoyed.


> Guessing you were not a 10-ish year old kid in the early 90s

As a matter a fact I was. It's not because I pointed out GP's (lack of) logic that I disagree with the conclusion.


“Give me liberty or give me death.”

The ultimate point of gun ownership isn’t sporting or even self defense, though they are useful for both. The real reason America is armed is so that if our government ever gets too tyrannical, we can do something about it.

Some people may not like that today but if you go back and read what people wrote circa 1775 and forward, this is the clear rationale.


Where is the line on tyranny?

Who decides? Someone who doesn't like how the last election turned out?

Some person who decides the police are being too tyrannical by asking them to turn down their stereo for neighbourhood peace?

Honestly, when does this go from "we're prepared" to "time to act"?

This has mess written all over it.

Also, it should be noted that the army and police are made up of humans too.

As has been pointed out in various war tribunals doing something under orders doesn't entirely absolve you from moral duty.


It's essentially a critical mass type of thing, no?

The military and police are human, but they're also the main path towards control. If you treat them good, they'll treat you good, likely until they slip too far and are unable to back down without facing consequences.

It's mostly a good way to avoid situations like Cambodia's killing fields since that was also done by humans.

It'll result in a mess, but a mess is better than torture-to-death camps and famine.


I understand that "there has to be a counter to dictatorship" and such actions are not without consequence.

But the words "critical mass" don't seem much more helpful than the definition of tyranny. The questionable boundaries apply, it's like a "you'll know it if you see it" thing.

The problem here is perception. Some people may "see" an outrage that causes them to act. While others don't. Jan 6 and George Floyd riots are two examples of people "seeing something" that caused them to act.

But if you are going up against the most well funded military in the world by some margin - well, whatever is seen had better motivate a LOT of people.


The questions here are very good.

I disagree with some of the implied answers, especially paragraph three, but:

> Where is the line on tyranny?

> Who decides?

> when does this go from "we're prepared" to "time to act"?

Like I said, these are excellent questions. An individual with a strong moral compass should have answers that differ from “not me” and “somebody else”.


One could make the exact same arguments in favor of monarchy.

In fact the loyalists did.

>This has mess written all over it

History doesn't come with nice tidy procedures and unanimous agreements on action.


Since you mentioned "moral duty", yeah, of course not, and it should not, IMO.


If the Second Amendment (2A) meant to preserve the ability to overthrow the government then why can we not have bombs and tanks?

And why does it mention the right within the context of a "well regulated militia"?

Could it be they feared having a permanent national army, so did the 2A instead? Only later to realize having a standing army were necessary after all?

No that couldn't be it. Because then there would be no rational reason for keeping 2A and flooding the country with deadly weapons.


"And why does it mention the right within the context of a "well regulated militia"?"

It doesn't, anymore than the freedom of speech is only in the context of one of the other rights mentioned in the 1st amendment.

"the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."


Did they fear a national army? Legitimately curious here. They certainly couldn't afford one, but military-lead coups weren't the problem then that they are today (or were during the Roman empire).

Sure, they chose to put a civilian in charge of the military, but I was always under the impression this was to keep the military from interfering with the normal process of government.


> The real reason America is armed is so that if our government ever gets too tyrannical

It’s been doing that for at least two decades, yet I’m still waiting for you people to get on with it.


I don’t know who the “you people” in that comment refers to. I actually hope we never have another civil war. Historically, you’re much more likely to end up with the French Revolution, the current situation in Syria, etc. than a fresh, bright future. Many would die and everyone would suffer. Those who long for war (foreign or domestic) are evil, foolish, or both.

But my opinion doesn’t change the rationale for the 2nd Amendment.


Another civil war? That’s not desirable, for obvious reasons. But another revolutionary war? That might be inevitable. Thomas Jefferson has an appropriate quote on such things.


An elected official doing things you don't like isn't a reason to kill them.

That way lies fascism and anarchotyrrany.


What if the elected official is a fascist? It happened in Germany.


"Elected" doesn't mean much if the system is rigged - starting from the choices you get, and how accountable they are to you. After a point it's just a charade.


If that were true there would never be a reason to kill anyone.


Yeah, they even threw in a thing about well regulated militias, but left in a comma that got interpreted as "any toon can own as many guns as they want."


> The real reason America is armed is so that if our government ever gets too tyrannical, we can do something about it.

The something is killing police and soldiers. That's the quiet part.

Unless the tyrannical government has presented itself at the compound in a force of plumbers and actuaries.


you say it as if it's inherently bad

historically, when a government became too tyranical, either the government went on and on, or people did the quiet part


> Which class comes first in the generated stylesheet is not predictable. Tailwind's recommendation is to, once again, ignore basic coding principles and recommend you duplicate your business logic…

Use tailwind-merge and never worry about this again. No affiliation, just a happy user.

https://www.npmjs.com/package/tailwind-merge


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