Non-IT News Thread
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@Dashrender said in Non-IT News Thread:
whatever, this is really damning to the smaller businesses out there that pay those low wages.
No, it's not. Irrational people looking for scapegoats for their own problems blaming those that are not at fault is the issue.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
@Dashrender said in Non-IT News Thread:
whatever, this is really damning to the smaller businesses out there that pay those low wages.
No, it's not. Irrational people looking for scapegoats for their own problems blaming those that are not at fault is the issue.
Super sad that this is our president right now.
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NY has done sampling across the state and now shows a 14% infection rate among the living, which shows that the believed number of current survivors is at 2.71 million in one state alone (larger than the full global infection rate being reported by the WHO) and the state has said that the number dead from COVID are unknown as they haven't even started to try to count them yet! So the total number that are currently recorded is essentially just the currently infected and the recovered, the total number ever infected will need the dead count added in, once they know it. Putting NY quite a bit head of the supposed world numbers.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
NY has done sampling across the state and now shows a 14% infection rate among the living,
I saw the fine print of that. They sampled 1024 (it was 10XX, 24 stuck in my head) people. That means the margin of error is +/- 3% for a population the size of NY state. Assuming at 95% confidence level in the data.
But they used anti-body test kits for this which we also know are not fully accurate.
I did not see how much of NY was sampled, nor in what proportion (city vs rural) Because that will also make a large difference in the confidence level of the data..
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So Cuomo says 3000 tests collected and gave weighted states by region, so that part is nice. That test count drops the margin of error to 2%
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The Swedish Exception?
Sweden’s democratic system of government has a more pronounced epistocratic element than other comparable countries. The term means, roughly, rule by experts. By law and by tradition, Swedish politicians can’t tell the various government agencies what to do, and agencies count relatively few political appointees among their staff. This means that many of the day-to-day decisions relating to government business are made by staff hired on the basis of domain-relevant expertise, rather than political connections. “Ministerial rule” is expressly forbidden.
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Trump becomes the "tide pod" president after suggesting the possible efficacy of ingesting or injecting household cleaning products - copying the dangerous and laughable millenial trend that's so recently been big news.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
Trump becomes the "tide pod" president after suggesting the possible efficacy of ingesting or injecting household cleaning products - copying the dangerous and laughable millenial trend that's so recently been big news.
Everyone needs to stop telling the stupid people to not do this. Let nature take its course.
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@RojoLoco said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
Trump becomes the "tide pod" president after suggesting the possible efficacy of ingesting or injecting household cleaning products - copying the dangerous and laughable millenial trend that's so recently been big news.
Everyone needs to stop telling the stupid people to not do this. Let nature take its course.
I know, right? I've been on the fence about discouraging Trump from trying to thin his own herd. There's been way too much protection of the ultra-stupid. He's making quite the attempt to reduce their numbers voluntarily.
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@RojoLoco said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
Trump becomes the "tide pod" president after suggesting the possible efficacy of ingesting or injecting household cleaning products - copying the dangerous and laughable millenial trend that's so recently been big news.
Everyone needs to stop telling the stupid people to not do this. Let nature take its course.
Amen! Darwin is famous for a reason.
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@Dashrender said in Non-IT News Thread:
@RojoLoco said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
Trump becomes the "tide pod" president after suggesting the possible efficacy of ingesting or injecting household cleaning products - copying the dangerous and laughable millenial trend that's so recently been big news.
Everyone needs to stop telling the stupid people to not do this. Let nature take its course.
Amen! Darwin is famous for a reason.
Because his beard was almost as awesome as mine....
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@RojoLoco said in Non-IT News Thread:
@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
Trump becomes the "tide pod" president after suggesting the possible efficacy of ingesting or injecting household cleaning products - copying the dangerous and laughable millenial trend that's so recently been big news.
Everyone needs to stop telling the stupid people to not do this. Let nature take its course.
On the one hand, I want to see them do it so scump has fewer voters in November. On the other hand, I think the ERs have enough to deal with and don't need idiots taking up time. I also want to know how republicans can put up barriers to voting, as they do, and yet the bleach drinking idiots still manage to do it. There's something fucked up right there.
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Coronavirus recovery plan 'must tackle climate change'
Tackling climate change must be woven into the solution to the Covid-19 economic crisis, the UK will tell governments next week.
Environment ministers from 30 countries are meeting in a two-day online conference in a bid to make progress on cutting greenhouse gas emissions. The gathering is called the "Petersberg Climate Dialogue". It will focus on how to organise a "green" economic recovery after the acute phase of the pandemic is over. The other aim is to forge international agreement on ambitious carbon cuts despite the postponement of the key conference COP26 - previously scheduled for Glasgow in November (now without a date). Alok Sharma, the UK Climate Secretary and president of COP26, said: "I am committed to increasing global climate ambition so that we deliver on the Paris Agreement (to stabilise temperature rise well below 2C). -
Coronavirus: New Zealand claims no community cases as lockdown eases
New Zealand says it has stopped community transmission of Covid-19, effectively eliminating the virus.
With new cases in single figures for several days - one on Sunday - Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said the virus was "currently" eliminated. But officials have warned against complacency, saying it does not mean a total end to new coronavirus cases. The news came hours before New Zealand moved out of its toughest level of social restrictions. From Tuesday, some non-essential business, healthcare and education activity will be able to resume. Most people will still be required to remain at home at all times and avoid all social interactions. -
Pentagon releases UFO videos for the record
The US Department of Defense has released three declassified videos of "unexplained aerial phenomena".
The Pentagon said it wanted to "clear up any misconceptions by the public on whether or not the footage that has been circulating was real". The videos had already been leaked in 2007 and 2017. Two were published by the New York Times, while the third was leaked by an organisation co-founded by former Blink-182 singer Tom DeLonge. After they were first leaked, some people claimed the videos showed alien unidentified flying objects (UFOs). -
Coronavirus: US economy sinks 4.8% amid pandemic shutdowns
The US economy suffered its most severe contraction in more than a decade in the first quarter of the year, as the country introduced lockdowns to slow the spread of coronavirus.
The world's largest economy sank at an annual rate of 4.8%, according to official figures released on Wednesday. It marked the first contraction since 2014, ending a record expansion. The figures do not reflect the full crisis, since many of the restrictions were not put in place until March. Sine then, more than 26 million people in the US have filed for unemployment, and the US has seen historic declines in business activity and consumer confidence. Forecasters expect growth to contract 30% or more in the three months to June. -
Coronavirus: 'Missing link' species may never be found
An "intermediate host" animal passed the coronavirus from wild bats to humans, evidence suggests.
But while the World Health Organization says that the research points to the virus's "natural origin", some scientists say it might never be known how the first person was infected. It remains unclear whether this host animal was sold in the now infamous Wuhan wildlife market in China. But the wildlife trade is seen as a potential source of this "spillover". Researchers say the trade provides a source of species-to-species disease transmission, which caused previous outbreaks and has been blamed for this pandemic. The WHO's technical lead on Covid-19, Dr Maria Van Kerkhove, told the BBC's Andrew Marr show: "We were preparing for something like this as it's not a matter of if, it is a matter of when." -
Japan's child population falls for 39th straight year to record low
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- The estimated child population in Japan has dropped for the 39th consecutive year to a record low, government data showed Monday, despite efforts to tackle the long-standing issue of a declining birthrate.
The number of children aged 14 or younger stood at 15.12 million as of April 1, down 200,000 from a year earlier and the lowest figure since comparable data became available in 1950, according to the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications.
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@JaredBusch said in Non-IT News Thread:
Japan's child population falls for 39th straight year to record low
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- The estimated child population in Japan has dropped for the 39th consecutive year to a record low, government data showed Monday, despite efforts to tackle the long-standing issue of a declining birthrate.
The number of children aged 14 or younger stood at 15.12 million as of April 1, down 200,000 from a year earlier and the lowest figure since comparable data became available in 1950, according to the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications.
Damn, that's crazy.
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Coronavirus: How will you commute to work after lockdown?
The traditional commute may never be the same again once people return to work after lockdown in what is likely to be an era of social distancing.
t's a particularly big problem for workers in the UK's largest cities. One recent report warned that maintaining a 2m (6ft 6in) distance between Tube passengers in London, for example, would reduce its capacity to 15% of normal levels, and buses to 12%. But if more people take to the streets, will the road network cope? "If in big cities we are to have a radical shift to bicycles, scooters, other ways of getting about, that would require a sudden and radical change in road use," said Prof Tony Travers from the London School of Economics.