BlameThePeacock

joined 2 years ago
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[–] BlameThePeacock 0 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

Why would China or Russia agree to an anti-ai treaty? Those technologies benefit their objectives quite heavily.

Even if they said they would, unlike military assets like missiles, hiding a datacenter's use case is trivial.

It's not like Russia(or the US) has been following existing treaty rules scrupulously even with the current stuff.

And no, you can't regulate bias. Deep fakes... Some of it, but definitely not all of it. Commercial stuff from Microsoft or meta may be able to he regulated, but if there's any benefit to not doing so customers will just purchase services from outside the country to accomplish that.

[–] BlameThePeacock 18 points 11 hours ago (5 children)

From a best friend, sure, I fully agree.

However do be careful when it comes to other relationships, it does have the potential to cause problems.

[–] BlameThePeacock -1 points 12 hours ago (3 children)

There's no stopping this now that the box is open, even the most draconian legislation wouldn't stop it and anything short of every single country agreeing all at the same time to execute anyone involved will just end up failing.

It's too useful to too many people, even in its current shitty form.

[–] BlameThePeacock 32 points 2 days ago (5 children)

I like the government to force companies to meet certain regulations for production of various food items so that they're safe for everyone, but then let me pick at the grocery store from what's then produced.

[–] BlameThePeacock 0 points 2 days ago (1 children)

If you buy guns based on looks, you shouldn't allowed to own a gun in my opinion.

Every gun should be legally required to be neon pink. If you're using it for sport shooting or hunting or even self defence it wouldn't matter.

[–] BlameThePeacock 23 points 2 days ago (4 children)

#Murica

Even without any insurance/coverage that specific medication (Adavair Diskus) is like $100 CDN ($70 USD) for 60 days where I live in Canada, and the generic is $20 cheaper than that.

[–] BlameThePeacock 1 points 3 days ago

That doesn't apply when the item has ongoing costs like a land value tax. People don't bid up items that return a negative value. This is why cars go down in value over time.

A high enough land value tax is the same as a government rent amount, but still allows for individual ownership and the benefits thereof (like being able to make changes to the property)

[–] BlameThePeacock 2 points 3 days ago

You're absolutely correct. People are yelling for change, but refuse to vote for that change.

[–] BlameThePeacock 2 points 3 days ago (2 children)

There are multiple ways to crash the value of housing.

One of the easiest would be a 100% capital gains tax on property values (not building value). You can no longer profit from simply holding onto land. You can develop it and earn a profit from the building work you do, but just holding it and doing nothing no longer generates any value. This profit motive is what's pushing the investment in property that drives up prices, and removing it would crash the value of land overnight.

Or, and this is my preferred option, a monthly land value tax (again not on buildings) that is set high enough to replace all of the income taxes, then drop income taxes to 0%. This way we tax people based on how much land they use (which includes how desirable that land is just based on the assessments) not based on how much work they accomplish. People who live in smaller amounts of land (like a condo) pay less tax, and people who want giant mansions near cities can pay the rest of us a bucket load of money that the rest of us workers now save on taxes. Instead of replacing income taxes, I also wouldn't mind seeing a similar universal basic income system.

[–] BlameThePeacock 1 points 3 days ago (2 children)

You handle it the same way we're handling the crazy high rents right now, by letting some people get hurt. It's just a matter of who.

In the current system we have, it's the non-homeowners that are getting fucked, and recent home purchasers too, but since new non-homeowners keep joining the population (kids grow up, and immigrants) that means continual pain for more and more people in a never ending pyramid scheme of sky high prices.

If we crash the market in the way I propose, current homeowners will get absolutely fucked (including me), but going forward the prices will now be affordable and controlled for everyone. It will also make for a much healthier overall economy.

[–] BlameThePeacock 7 points 3 days ago

I miss Costco having one-way aisles during COVID, it significantly improved the shopping experience.

[–] BlameThePeacock 2 points 3 days ago (8 children)

In the case of the housing crisis, it really isn't.

The longer we continue this pyramid scheme of propping up house prices the more people will be hurt by it.

We need to pass government policies that crash the value of housing by 50-80% instead of continuing to pretend that we can build our way to cheaper houses after the market has shown again and again it will not do that.

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submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by BlameThePeacock to c/[email protected]
 

MMO Game by one of the original creators of Star Wars Galaxies, game already playable for Alpha testers, Beta testing expected after Kickstarter for funders

 

A decent discussion to have.

 

Sizeable earthquake just off the coast.

 

The party of fiscal responsibility ya'll

They say it will be caught up to with growth, which they've predicted to be above 5% per year... no way that happens, major banks are predicting sub 2% growth.

 

He stands by the party member who made derogatory comments about indigenous and Muslim people.

Please judge him and find him wanting.

 

The title is a bit misleading and makes it sound like it's a one time payment. It's very different, he's promising to exempt up to $3000 a month towards your housing costs from income taxes. Starting at $1500 a month in 2026 and going up $500 a year for 3 more years. At the max, it would be a $36,000 a year tax deduction which is absolutely massive, that's half of the average family income.

Great idea? It's complicated, but probably not a good idea.

When you make something "cheaper" for everyone like this in a supply constrained market, all that does is drive up the prices of rents and housing sale prices since people can now use that freed up money to pay more for those.

Also, his plan to pay for this multi-billion dollar plan is:

“Obviously, we need to take a look at this reckless spending that David Eby has put in place in terms of how to sort of rein in some of that spending,” said Rustad.

So that's not really "fiscally conservative" at all.

 

This asshole is literally a conspiracy theorist. He says it was about controlling the population, not stopping the spread of the virus.

Which countries (and even provinces) had the fewest covid deaths per capita? Oh.. the ones with the highest vaccination rates.

Everyone with a brain knows vaccines reduce illness, that's why we have the fucking things.

 

Uber's reply to the new laws.

 

Surprise surprise, a Conservative who's got a past full of hate.

 

This is the true Canada, open to all ideas. Let's keep it this way.

 

Personally, it seems stupid not to have a liaison in high schools. This is where teens establish "bad" patterns, and every single one they manage to save early is one less problem for decades in the future.

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