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00:22
Jun 8, 2021 at 13:51, by Robusto
Take some LSD and we'll talk.
@Cerberus Without them, who would invest in product development?
Granted, there are abuses. But development can cost a lot. And if someone else were to just take all your R&D for free and just start pumping out products, how is that an incentive to do anything?
@DannyuNDos: So what do you program with Haskell?
@Robusto Patents are an extremely crude and draconic type of government intervention.
Yes, for some research it is good for society if the government does something to ensure it can be funded, but not by the crude instrument of patents.
The university model is much better: create public research institutions that do the research, not artificial commercial monopolies that restrict who can use the medicine.
00:37
I'm trying to understand what you mean by crude and draconian. What would a delicate and benevolent alternative be?
And fund the research directly, rather than indirectly via patents.
See above.
@Robusto Mostly for theoretical stuffs or for practicing.
01:06
@DannyuNDos Are people using it for actual projects? I'd be curious about what kinds of things it's good for.
01:16
This night is the Night of Baptism in the Orthodox calendar, so lots of people went ice-dipping
The people in the photos don't look very inspired.. e1.ru/text/religion/2024/01/18/73135838
It has turned into a kind of yet another stuff for instagramming yourself
@Robusto Good for concise codes; so concise so that it would fry usual people's brain, especially the coder's own.
@DannyuNDos OK, but if code gets compiled to bitecode anyway, what use is concision for its own sake? Especially if it's difficult to work with? Look what happened with APL and Lisp, etc.
01:33
If one gets used to it, the particular kind of conciseness presented by Haskell will render rather "elegant".
@DannyuNDos You mean things like list comprehensions, etc.? Python has a lot of that already.
Monads; generalization of list comprehensions.
02:05
@Robusto just watched the final show
I will say nothing
bites tongue so hard
You can say if you liked it or not. I did.
It was ok
You're talking about the latest season, right?
Yes
Diff'rent strokes ...
02:06
I was employing north Midwest understatement
But you don't know which direction I meant
OIC. Well, you clearly aren't from the Midwest, because understatement ain't our strong suit.
Unless you meant that ironically.
Is that a British thing?
I'm trying to get my stereotypes.right
@Mitch Depends on the Brit.
That's no fun
Stick your neck out
Make an inappropriate suggestion about people from some location
@Mitch Heaven forfend.
02:13
@Robusto No, you go fend yourself
No, you fend for yourself.
I'm on my way to fridge right now
BBIAS
It's like two steps away
I'm back
Nothing there worth the trouble
Kind of a first world problem - eating a meal and then being hungry at the table and instead of seconds you just want... something else
Not dessert
I'm talking another kind of meal, but right then
Off to search for chocolate
@Robusto Yeah that's what I think.
@Vikas and a pundit is a smart guy
@Mitch That's what people think.
02:24
@Vikas who else is there? 🙂
@Mitch A pundit is like an influencer, only not on TikTok.
@Mitch I don't think pundits are smarter than any other ordinary person.
A public intellectual or a thought leader?
@Vikas Neither are influencers.
There are many kinds of pundits. Like a doctor.
02:27
You mean like Dr. Oz?
@Vikas in English, it refers to a
Pundits are people who pretend to know things about politics that we don't.
A smart person who tells you smart things? But is not necessarily a professor?
@Mitch That's one of them. I have heard it from Steve Jobs.
A maven?
02:28
@Mitch Yeah.
@Robusto oh on those political talk shows
@Vikas what is pandit/pundit in Hindi?
@Mitch Yes.
A guru could be a pundit and vice versa but not necessarily so
A maven is just an expert and doesn't have to be public about it
When Poe started writing "The Raven"
He developed a powerful cravin'
To prove he was smart
He developed his art
So that people started calling him "maven" ...
He was a poem maven, obviously.
Wait, that rings a Bell ...
An Annabelle ...
An Anna Belly ...
02:45
@Cerberus Universities are very poorly equipped to take on all the functions of a pharmaceutical company, which extend far beyond the sort of basic research done in this (university-run, government-funded) study.
@Mitch Shamus?
@alphabet You would either create medicine-testing institutions, or you award money to companies to do the development and testing. They come up with a plan, and you reward them with money during the process, and an extra pile of money if they succeed.
Or something.
@tchrist I think there was only one
There are many ways to fund the development of medicines.
So sad
02:49
Patents are one of the worst ways.
@Mitch I thought you were going to Shamus for this.
@Robusto with her brother Jelly
@Cerberus I keep reading that as 'Parents'
If only!
Parent is from pario, to bring forth. Patent is from pateo, to be open.
I mean for funding of medical innovation, parents are probably not optimal
You could use them as guinea pigs.
02:54
@Cerberus I think you'd need a few more subjects
Step parents?
Sure.
@tchrist I have no plans of ever stepping foot there
I mean, if Guinea is too far away to get real ones.
@Cerberus like the Holy Roman Empire, Guinea pigs are neither
Hah!
02:58
@Cerberus Parió is heard in vile fighting words in Spanish, nasty things about the puta madre que te parió. That's preterite.
Preterite? I barely knew her!
> parir: (transitive, intransitive, vulgar in some areas) to give birth
Synonym: dar a luz
It's used for animals more than for people.
Which is part of the meanness.
> 1. intr. Dicho de una hembra vivípara: Expulsar naturalmente el hijo o los hijos que tiene en su vientre. A las tres de la tarde ya había parido. U. t. c. tr. Isabel ha parido una niña. La perra parió tres cachorros.
I can't believe they expect people to know what viviparous means. :)
But that's another word that traces back to the same etymon, eventually.
R.I.P Peter Schickele.
@Mitch It's same.
03:21
@tchrist Ah, yes, the funny o past.
I wonder whence it came.
Does Italian have it, too?
Or only Iberian?
Yes, Italian has it, too.
In theory it came from the perfect active, but of course you can't see that, mostly. The future of course draws on a reflex of habere added to the infinitive, as does the conditional but backshifted.
The stress suggested the same sort of thing.
IT: pènso      pensài
    pènsi      pensàsti
    pènsa      pensò
    pensiàmo   pensàmmo
    pensàte    pensàste
    pènsano    pensàrono

ES: pienso     pensé
    piensas    pensaste
    piensa     pensó
    pensamos   pensamos
    pensáis    pensasteis
    piensan    pensaron
I wonder how they came up with that o.
A common ancestor?
CA: penso      pensí
    penses     pensares
    pensa      pensà
    pensem     pensàrem
    penseu     pensàreu
    pensen     pensaren

PT: penso      pensei
    pensas     pensaste
    pensa      pensou
    pensamos   pensámos
    pensais    pensastes
    pensam     pensaram
Catalan differs. It has stressed /a/ at the end.
I can almost "see" (hear) -avi becoming -é over millennia.
Hmm.
But I can't figure out how they got to stressed /o/.
03:35
How is it with non-a-verbs?
@Cerberus Development and running trials are only about 20% of what a drug company does.
At most.
@alphabet See above.
@Cerberus You never answered me.
comer: comió, parir: parió, beber: bebió;
vivir: vivió, pedir: pidió, sonreir: sonrió, morir: murió; ser: fue; ir: fue
decir: dijo
There are all the strong ones that don't take ultimate stress.
Here's an example: who does the process chemistry to figure out how to actually make the drug in large quantities and sets up the manufacturing facilities? Even to do a large-scale, Phase III clinical trial, you need to have this in place. Universities are not well-suited to become manufacturing plants.
03:37
saber: supo, caber: cupo
Yes, you could have publicly-funded institutions do this. That would just be a publicly-owned drug company.
They have unstressed /e/ in the first person and unstressed /o/ in third.
@alphabet Nobody said universities had to do it, straw man.
One could argue for that, but it's more like nationalizing an entire industry than just figuring out how to do developing and testing.
@alphabet That is not "just".
And I mentioned other options.
And there are more options.
03:39
> The endings shown above were contracted in spoken Latin, usually through elision of the perfective marker -v-, which occurred between the stem vowel and the remainder of the ending. In the first person singular in both conjugations, loss of -v- yields -āī and -īī respectively. The latter was probably pronounced [i] as soon as the element -v- was lost and continues into modern Spanish as -í, e.g. in dormí ‘I slept’. The former, pronounced [aj], reduced naturally to /e/ (compare bāsium > [bajso] > beso ‘kiss’), whence the modern ending -é, as in hablé ‘I spoke’.
> You would either create medicine-testing institutions, or you award money to companies to do the development and testing.
> In the third person plural, the dissimilated ending [-jeɾon(t)] (> modern ­ieron) appears to have ousted [-iɾon(t)] before Spanish came to be written down, but competition between assimilated and dissimilated endings in the second person (singular and plural) as well as in the first person plural continued into the High Middle Ages. Thus, as late as the thirteenth century, forms with dissimilated endings, such as dixiemos ‘we said’ and recibiestes ‘you [plural] received’, co-existed with forms that had assimilated endings, such as sobimos ‘we climbed’ and salistes ‘you [plural] left’. Eve
My point is that this wouldn't work.
Very typical, people think better solutions "won't work". Well, the current system doesn't work at all, it is a disaster.
I don't dispute that.
03:43
So the third paragraph explains that -avi /awi/ had /aw/ go to /o/ per usual.
Other explanations apply in the other conjugations under yod.
But it retained stress even after fusing.
It wasn't reanalysed.
@tchrist OK makes sense.
That said, our current system, despite its flaws, has done quite a good job at producing valuable new medicine.
@Cerberus Notice how French is no different. But with the loss of lexical stress, things because troublesome.
pense      pensai
penses     pensas
pense      pensa
pensons    pensâmes
pensez     pensâtes
pensent    pensèrent
Also with the "loss" of mute e. So they lost being a pro-drop tongue.
When French still enjoyed lexical stress, those will surely have sounded much more like the rest of Western Romance.
So French pensa would have been more like Catalan pensà.
@alphabet There would be more, better, and far cheaper medicines without it.
Just as Germany was a powerhouse of technology before it introduced patents.
Or so I read.
Around 1900 or so.
@Cerberus My point is that the existing system has had a large number of successes. Perhaps another system would work better. Perhaps not.
03:50
@tchrist So French didn't do aw → o, nor v → u → o.
@alphabet That is a platitude, sorry.
I don't doubt the "cheaper" part. I'm very skeptical of the "more" and "better" parts.
Well, it got to -à somehow, like Catalan.
In the third person.
In first, it simply lost /w/.
I can't say how that worked with -avit, but it must have. Somehow.
The new system was partially demonstrated in the creation of the Corona vaccines.
Governments paid a bunch of money before hand, to fund development. And the medicines were sold at around cost price.
They were developed in record time.
And their preterite pensas might even have been some reänalysis for all I know. It's hard to file down -avistis far enough.
I dunno, ask the Frenchman. :)
@Cerberus Who performed the trials? And who got the patents?
03:56
See above.
Incidentally, some of them actually decided not to patent their vaccines, because they knew that they were the only ones with the technology to properly manufacture them.
In the US, the Covid vaccines were largely funded by injecting money into the existing system and fast-tracking the approval process.
See above.
I did see above and it didn't answer me.
The point is that, if you give the drug companies tons of money, and still let them patent their medications, then they develop medications very rapidly and they won't charge as much. But I'm not sure how that really presents an alternative system.
Ad astra per aspera.
> Governments paid a bunch of money before hand, to fund development.
> And the medicines were sold at around cost price.
Exactly as I said it. This is how it should be.
04:04
@Cerberus You mean the government should continually give tons of money to existing large pharmaceutical companies, with relatively few strings attached? While keeping the patent system in place?
> And the medicines were sold at around cost price.
No patent system.
Out the door it goes.
@Cerberus Moderna and Pfizer are currently embroiled in a massive patent dispute over mRNA vaccines.
Read with the principle of charity in mind.
Besides, patenting them wasn't necessary, since no other companies had the expertise to manufacture them, at least in the short term.
I'm not going to explain every little detail.
04:08
I won't expect you to.
04:19
good morning
good evening!
It's 11:20pm for me, 9:20am for you, and 5:20am for Cerberus?
Yes
Cerberus lives on Enceladus, and time count is different there
> One day on Enceladus is equal to 1.37 Earth days, or one day, 8 hours, and 53 minutes.
I wish!
Did you stay up late, or wake up early?
I woke up at 02:40, then drank some tea till 04:00, then slept til 09:00
04:25
Or do your three heads sleep in shifts?
@CowperKettle I meant Cerberus
As a raccoon, I am naturally nocturnal. Unfortunately I need to work during the day. It is not optimal.
Starting September 2024, all Internet providers in Russia may be obligated to track the geolocation of each IP address belonging to them e1.ru/text/world/2024/01/19/73136009
A unified system will be maintained by the state, called GeoIP
Scary.
Use a VPN always?
Yes, probably
Better - have a friend abroad set up a VPN pretending to be a website
And "use this website always" :)
04:32
Also sounds good.
Does ToR work well?
It worked fine when I tried it out, probably it was in the summer
Good.
Tails, or "The Amnesic Incognito Live System", is a security-focused Debian-based Linux distribution aimed at preserving Internet privacy and anonymity. It connects to the Internet exclusively through the anonymity network Tor. The system is designed to be booted as a live DVD or live USB and never writes to the hard drive or SSD, leaving no digital footprint on the machine unless explicitly told to do so. It can also be run as a virtual machine, with some additional security risks.The Tor Project provided financial support for Tails' development in the beginnings of the project, and continues...
An OS recommended by Snowden
Even here the police can usually get your ISP to figure out what subscriber used a particular IP address; if you're really worried about government surveillance you should already be using a VPN/proxy/Tor/etc.
Qubes OS is a security-focused desktop operating system that aims to provide security through isolation. Isolation is provided through the use of virtualization technology. This allows the segmentation of applications into secure virtual machines called qubes. Virtualization services in Qubes OS are provided by the Xen hypervisor. The runtimes of individual qubes are generally based on a unique system of underlying operating system templates. Templates provide a single, immutable root file system which can be shared by multiple qubes. This approach has two major benefits. First, updates to a given...
And I should look for some program for a smartphone that would pretend to be the whole operating system with innocently-looking apps and innocently-looking Telegram chats
04:41
Of course, this only applies if the police know that your IP address was the source of some sort of offensive traffic.
@CowperKettle Can't you simply use a work profile for that?
Android allows that.
@Cerberus Thanks! I'll read up on that
And a non-technical user shouldn't be able to notice.
Often finding the IP address associated with an online account, for instance, would require the cooperation of the site you're visiting.
@CowperKettle Maybe use Shelter or Island. I haven't used them, but they should be able to isolate applications using the work profile in the background.
Not 100% sure how it all works.
@alphabet If the site uses https, probably.
04:56
An honest person wouldn't have to use VPN/proxy/Tor/whatever suspicious.
@Cerberus Exactly. As most sites do nowadays.
@DannyuNDos Maybe in your country.
That said... Are "suspicious" and "doubtful" synonyms?
@DannyuNDos No. They mean very different things.
Too sadge "suspicive" isn't a word.
'Cause I once sought for appropriate names for 3-valued unary logic gates.
From Cambridge Dictionary:
suspicious: making you feel that something illegal is happening or that something is wrong
doubtful: If you are doubtful about something, you are uncertain about it
(Among other senses.)
Grr SE chat screws up my formatting attempts.
05:01
@DannyuNDos That is ridiculous, sorry.
For suppose that, in addition to False and True, Unknown is the third truth value. If a gate changes U to T, that's assumption. If a gate changes T to U, that's suspicion. That's my thought.
@DannyuNDos If you're inventing terminology, you can use whichever terms you want.
Though eventually, I scrapped that idea and chose NOT, AND, OR, COMParison, and PRIority as the gates.
That happened in 2017, when I participated in an academy contest held by the department in my univ.
05:17
*Sigh* Someone needs a new word.
Too sadge "untrue" is a word but "unfalse" isn't.
05:54
New word for me: narco-submarine. “A narco-submarine (also called a drug sub or narco-sub) is a type of custom ocean-going, self-propelled, semi-submersible or fully-submersible vessel built by (or for) drug smugglers.[2][3][4]”
 
2 hours later…
07:27
The use of feminitives in Russian, like psychologess (психологиня) etc. may be considered a sign of association of a person with the extremist organization LGBT, says a multipage statement issued by the Supreme Court rbc.ru/politics/19/01/2024/65a988199a79479c5a19e963
 
4 hours later…
10:59
@Vikas that's not a definition of "pundit" I'm familiar with
@Cerberus isn't a government's budget way more strictly managed than an R&D's in a Pharma company? My experience is, if the company will need an extra billion because of a hitch in the process, extra funding will be delayed and lost in bureaucracy
@Cerberus um, the reasons Covid vaccines were out so soon was 1) Adenovirus vectors 2) accelerated FDA approval
This accelerated approval was basically allowing companies to work on the next phase before FDA had reviewed the results of the previous one
I think that, without patents, we may end up with better drugs, and they will be cheaper too, and more accessible, but there would be far fewer truly novel drugs.
Once we know a drug molecule works, it's very possible that slightly modifying its chemistry to come up with a new molecule, you would end up with one that's also therapeutic. Companies patent all of these very similar molecules. If they won't, you would end up with, say, dozens of ACE inhibitors instead of 3.
Now, the upside would be that they would be more readily available to the public. You'd save many more lives than if you had to wait until Pfizer's 20-year patent expired. OTOH, the company that invested an extra couple billion on finding the new drug will have the same profits as the ones who made similar molecules without investing anything.
(Except for the trials, formulation, scale-up etc.)
To be honest I haven't spent much thought on possible alternatives to strict patenting. It never crossed my mind that I would be able to contribute to anything with such thoughts.
12:11
32 Prospekt Lenina, Samara maps.app.goo.gl/8ff4KCNi6zMFDVpVA
12:22
> Probiotics were superior to brexpiprazole, cariprazine, citalopram, duloxetine, desvenlafaxine, ketamine, venlafaxine, vilazodone, vortioxetine, and placebo, and were noninferior to other antidepressants. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38219239
Sauerkraut beats SSRI
 
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14:17
Wordle 944 4/6

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14:35
Daily Octordle #725
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Score: 59
#Worldle #728 1/6 (100%)
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https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
@Vikas Tough one, huh?
#Worldle #728 1/6 (100%)
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https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
I don't understand. If India is 3214 Kms long and 2933 Kms wide, how come we have area 3.2 Km^2?
@Vikas Uh, because India is not a rectangle?
It has to be like a rectangle to occupy that much area. But we are not a rectangle.
@Robusto Exactly.
That's why I find it hard to believe and that's why I underestimated our area. And consequently, underestimated today's Worldle area.
14:40
@Vikas 3.2 km^2 would be a very small country. Are you sure you did your math right?
Oops
Replace that with 3.2 million Km^2
Better.
India would easily fit into the sub-equatorial part of Africa, I think.
in This Is Fine, Jan 15 at 11:18, by Wipqozn
The wealth of the world’s five richest men more than doubled since 2020 https://www.cnn.com/2024/01/14/economy/oxfam-report-wealth-davos-forum/index.html
@Robusto Dammit all doubts cleared right now. I don't know how I calculated something wrong today afternoon. Right now everything seems normal. I had most probably confused 9000000 with 900K. Afterall I was calculating everything in my mind.
@user85795 Even worse, to be in what used to be called the middle class, you have to be in the top 10% in wealth.
14:53
@user85795 Yeah I remember many brands got more wealth after pandemic.
> At the same time, nearly 5 billion people globally have become poorer, as they contend with inflation, war and the climate crisis. It would take nearly 230 years to eliminate poverty based on the current trajectory.
This is the post-pandemic world we're left with.
re: Oxfam
@user85795 True
15:38
> External research has pegged Meta’s H100 shipments for 2023 at 150,000, a number that is tied only with Microsoft’s shipments and at least three times larger than everyone else’s. When its Nvidia A100s and other AI chips are accounted for, Meta will have a stockpile of almost 600,000 GPUs by the end of 2024, according to Zuckerberg.
They are really addicted to video games
I hope it doesn't cause chip shortage again.
GPUs are already expensive.
15:53
Another year of all fish, no chips
16:13
> aggressive behavior by youth with profound autism can be predicted 3 minutes in advance and with 80% accuracy using biosensor data and machine learning
16:32
@CowperKettle yay, a 30% chance that in five tries, it won't get any of them wrong.
 
3 hours later…
19:26
@Vikas For almost two Indias to fit in one Gibraltar ;-)
19:41
Hello, everyone. I am back after a long time.
I miss Fumble Fingers and Mars. They were my friends when I was 16 years old. I don't know where they are. Can anyone help me to reach them?
@Robusto Can you help me to reach Fumble finger?
19:56
@ThomasMarkov. Hi, there.
@Idon'tknowwhoIam. So close yet so far:
XD
@FumbleFingers You're being paged by someone in chat (see above)
Wordle 944 5/6

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20:18
@Idon'tknowwhoIam. I don't know him personally, sorry.
20:36
@alphabet sure, but SO was specifically designed to sit behind Google search. To the extent they got it right, it's the same thing
20:50
The Atlantic wins the coveted most confusing negative scope of the year award:
> Israel did not send a team of government attorneys to put up a defense in The Hague, or hire one of the leading members of the ICJ bar, merely because of politics.
So did they send the lawyers, or did they not send them?
I think they did send them, and that "not" is only negating "merely because of politics." But it took me a while to figure out what it was trying to say.
Should this be merged into the other question? english.stackexchange.com/q/145097/191178 (I reversed the duplicate direction because I think the other question is better)
21:07
@Laurel don't worry about it... user247's answer is the best - the rest, in as much as they say true things but it's harder to extract what explains things.
21:23
From Save the Children:
> Since 7 October, more than 1,000 children have had one or both legs amputated, according to UNICEF. Many of these operations on children were done without anaesthetic, with the healthcare system in Gaza crippled by the conflict
Such wonderful things Biden is supporting.
@alphabet Yeah, Trump would never do anything like that.
Oh wait, he would.
I just discovered the name "Firth of Forth" and it looks so weird because it's like a near miss for two ordinals
21:38
@Laurel And the Firth of Clyde is unordinal.
22:21
@Robusto Does that somehow make it better?
Or make Biden any less worthy of condemnation?
@jlliagre Haha
@alphabet That's not the point. Did Biden cause those children to be injured? Did he make Israel commit war crimes? Did he make Hamas commit war crimes? It's fine to lay blame where it is due, but let's not pretend that democracy in this country isn't hanging by a thread, and Biden looks like our only hope to avoid its passing.
22:43
@Laurel Or you can go into a British pub and order a fifth of sixth
@Mitch Or you can go into any elementary school and get a fifth disease
@MetaEd Nice
or rather, not so nice
now you'll give me the nth degree
@alphabet I kinda don't get why people think Biden is an awful person because he sorta supports Israel. A rational leader in the rational international (European) law system (with all sorts of treaties and alliances and such) would just by following the rules, would support Israel in its defense against terrorists (which is what happened on Oct 7). Of course Israel's response is multiplying by many orders of magnitude the level of atrocities, but the target of those atrocities is not in that sys
Word of the morn: chuckmuck
tem
condemn Hamas, condemn Israel even more, but is Biden really that bad? I don't know all the details.
@Robusto I don't know what that guy would do. We're all wringing our hands, worried about what the right thing to do would be, aghast at the consequences we can imagine, hating every choice but still trying to think through what would stop the worst, and TFG would have no thoughts other than 'I wonder if I could be king'
@Mitch Exactly. This is an existential political crisis we are facing.
22:58
Neither side on the Israel-Hamas conflict is acting respectably
I'm reminded of the story of King Solomon where he threatens to cut a baby in half, except in this case neither woman is conceding and I have no idea who "wise" King Solomon with his cleaving sword would be in the metaphor
Itamar Ben-Gvir (Hebrew: אִיתָמָר בֶּן גְּבִיר; born 6 May 1976) is an Israeli lawyer and far-right politician who has served as the Minister of National Security since 2022. He is a member of the Knesset and leader of Otzma Yehudit.Ben-Gvir, a settler in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, has faced charges of hate speech against Arabs and was known to have a portrait in his living room of Israeli-American mass murderer and Jewish extremist Baruch Goldstein, who massacred 29 Palestinian Muslim worshipers and wounded 125 others in Hebron, in the 1994 Cave of the Patriarchs massacre. He removed the...
> was known to have a portrait in his living room of Israeli-American mass murderer and Jewish extremist Baruch Goldstein, who massacred 29 Palestinian Muslim worshipers and wounded 125 others in Hebron, in the 1994 Cave of the Patriarchs massacre. He removed the portrait after he entered politics.[6]
As a coincidence, Vladimir Lenin's office in the Kremlin was decorated with two haut-reliefs, one of Karl Marx and the other of Khalturin - also a terrorist
But Khalturin did not massacre worshippers, he went for the Tsar
@Laurel every path out of that metaphor is horrific
the mothers the baby everybody
@Laurel everybody involved has justifiable anguish
@CowperKettle I don't know what that is
@Mitch I mean, King Solomon could just not
He doesn't have to threaten babies
23:14
Chuckmuck is a pouch with tinder and an attached firesteel
For starting fires
"Come on along, we're not going very far, to the east, to meet the Tsar" (Napoleon to his troops on crossing the Niemen, 1812)
@Laurel Hopefully it was just a made up story
@CowperKettle What is its provenance?
I'm a thoroughly modern person meaning I don't know anything about starting a fire from scratch, but I think it's normally called a 'tinder box' in English?
@CowperKettle Well, where did you see the word in the wild? It sounds very... Native American to me.
23:21
@Mitch wikisurfing
I woke up at 03:00 am
The ideal time for random wikisurfing
@CowperKettle I have a hard time thinking of a situation surfing the internet where you'd need a tinder box.
At 03:00 am, I have a hard time thinking
@Robusto Nowhere did I disagree with any of those claims.
@Mitch I'm gonna stop before this turns into a long, counterproductive political debate.
@alphabet Everything is simple, except when it's not.
@alphabet We should move on to whether a semivowel is really a vowel or a consonant.
Or 'Is English really a creole?'
Or 'The Chinese government just tear off the band aid and switch to pinyin'
Or 'What if we implemented laws as computer programs and they were all executed as written?"
@Mitch If @alphabet had posted a quote with a weird resumptive pronoun in the first quote (which I thought he did and spent several seconds looking for), the transition would have been even smoother lol
2
A: UK vs USA grammar, past tense usage of "were stood" and "found…stood" that jars my American mind

Edwin Ashworth It's misleading to present this as AmE and BrE "alternatives". The PP form is extremely informal / dialectal in 'BrE'. But I also have the impression that Brits today are in general less concerned about "correct" grammar than Americans. It's probably relevant that British TV features ever more p...

> I also have the impression that Brits today are in general less concerned about "correct" grammar than Americans.
If this weren't coming from someone British, I might've flagged it.
> there [has] been a huge increase in glottal stops from people telling us the news and weather, in recent years. They'd never have been hired at all a few decades ago
Whatever shall Britain become without all those [t]s?
Bri'n.

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