A similar concept has been proposed on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Delegable_proxy
benjaminikuta
Found it.
https://www.census.gov/dmd/www/pdf/afs38.txt
“1980: Armed with a search warrant authorizing them to seize census documents, four FBI agents enter the Census Bureau’s Colorado Springs office. No confidential information is ever released because a census worker holds off the agents until her superiors resolve the issue with the FBI.”
Just wanted to register my complaint that I find it somewhat annoying to be rate limited, and somewhat surprising this wasn’t targeted more specifically at new users, which was the impression I got from earlier posts. Also I would have commented earlier, but each time I thought to do it was when I was rate limited, lol.
How can you tell he’s sad?
Oh, I meant through a brokerage. Simply both trading the same strike and expiration so as to avoid paying the spread to the market maker.
Hi, I’m new here. Thanks for doing this.
First of all, what are your rules? I notice it says here, “Norm Enforcing—I try to enforce particular rules”, but with no elaboration.
Anyway, I was wondering about rapid testing. Isn’t it rather inaccurate?
These posts are so very wholesome and I enjoy them thoroughly.
“Can anyone think of an example of where such information was created, and the government was respectful of our rights and didn’t check it whenever they felt like it? Anyone?”
I’m not sure if this is exactly the sort of example you’re looking for, but if I recall, the Census Bureau refused to divulge personal information to the President, even when federal agents showed up at their office and threatened to arrest them. I may be misremembering though, because now I can’t find the story with a quick search. Perhaps someone else knows what I’m talking about.
How often do scholars of such prominence promote dangerous pseudoscience?
How do you know this is safe?
Did you ever find an answer to this?
Plenty more examples. Toiletries for an overnight bag, for one.
High income rats are presumably disproportiatly likely to want a passport.
Backup citizenship! There were some posts about it here I think.
What’s your portfolio, and how can you so confidently beat both the market and bitcoin?
The main thing I care about, as a reader, is getting the full text of your posts in my email inbox. It seems WordPress and Substack both offer that functionality, but LessWrong doesn’t, for some reason.
This doesn’t exactly answer your question, but from personal experience, when I got my jabs from Walmart, the website didn’t seem to differentiate from first and second doses. That is, from the perspective of the appointment scheduling system, I seemed to get two “first” doses. And I didn’t even get a vaccination card until I specifically asked for one and they went out of their way to look me up in the system. So I don’t think there’s anything stopping me from getting another jab if I wanted it, in practice.
>The charity that there is room for is along the lines of “Maybe the line about misinformation was an uncharitable paraphrase rather than a direct quote”
For what it’s worth, it was a direct quote, and the entirety of the ban message, other than a link to the comment.
Thanks, I enjoyed reading this. I’m half Japanese, so this might explain why I don’t enjoy drinking so much. But I wonder, could we do the opposite, in order to make drinking more enjoyable?
I was banned from r/neoliberal for sharing this.
“Spreading dangerous medical information”