I’m saying these tradesmen don’t stop to think that they’re voting against their best interest every time they suffer a major setback from a union busting Republican.
What exactly do you mean by "these tradesman", though? I'm trying to determine if I correctly understood the intent behind your wording as being condescending towards tradesmen.
I'm not sure I understand your point exactly. What exactly does the libertarian philosophy say about unions? A union is essentially just people who choose to associate with eachother and act as a single entity under an employer; in a free market, their bargaining power would be proportional to their size — its growth would impact the pool of potential employees that could be hired outside of the union. There could be, for example, laws in place which prevent a company from firing a union, which a libertarian would generally oppose, but a libertarian needn't necessarily oppose the concept of unions, imo.
[…] they’re tradesmen and not necessarily critical thinkers.
Are you saying that tradesmen aren't capable of being critical thinkers? Or are you saying that they aren't critical thinkers in spite of being tradesmen?
I'll be honest, I don't really understand this one. I'd guess that this is likely some hold over grudge from COVID, but I don't really understand why it's still a concern to get, presumably, more open access to those drugs. Aren't we long past that conversation? Feels like beating a dead horse.
I'd support raw milk being legal for consumers to purchase so long as the manufacturers of said raw milk could be held to account for harm caused to a consumer who purchased it under the belief that it was safe — likely, this would also mean that, if it isn't safe, the product containing raw milk must otherwise display explicit warnings. I think a person should be allowed to take take their own risks.
From what I can see, "Hot" seems like a boosted "New" — it favors new posts, and ranks them by activity [1.1], whereas, from what I understand, "Active", is more like the classic forum format where a comment bumps it back up to the top, but ranked also based on score [1.2].
[…] that flag has lost its original meaning as a revolutionary symbol and has been fully co-opted by libertarians. […]
Now that's an interesting take! Why do you think that its symbolism doesn't align with libertarianism (I assume that's what you meant when you said "co-opted by libertarians")?
Would you mind explaining the how the presence of the Gadsden flag on its own shows that "the Democratic Party has failed the working class"? I just don't exactly understand your comparison.
Hm, are you using that to mock the Gadsden flag in general [1], or are you using that to poke fun at the, imo, "cognitive-dissonant" mixture of the MAGA symbol and the Gadsden flag?
Personally, I see it as a good way to passively protest or spread awareness. One downside, imo, is that it potentially paints one as a target or makes it easier to identify a car.
As far as I understand it, a client app using UP to recieve push notifications does perform a registration step with the UP gateway (via the distributor app which communicates with the gateway via its own transport), which sets up and responds with the api endpoint details, which the client app relays to its servers, which can then send UP notifications via the specified gateway.
So, if there was to be encryption done by UP, it would be handled by the gateway? For example, for Matrix, it would then be handled by the Matrix gateway in Ntfy [1]?
At least with Windows, most people know what its normally like at home, but thats less true for Linux.
Yeah, that's a fair point that they wouldn't have a comparison, so they wouldn't know if it's always like that. One could perhaps make an educated guess, depending on circumstance, but, without any first-hand experience or exposure, it would be just that: a guess.
Are you saying that all people who display Gadsden flag are "resistant to learning"? If so, what is your rationale?