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Reason Roundup

Study: Around the World, Internet Use Linked to Greater Well-Being

Plus: Tennessee drag law halted, the FTC's proposed ban on negative option marketing, and more...

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 4.3.2023 9:54 AM

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two happy women on laptops | Bonninstudio/Westend61 GmbH/Newscom
(Bonninstudio/Westend61 GmbH/Newscom)

Research links internet use to global well-being. In a new paper, researchers from Tilburg University and the University of Oxford look at how internet access and use are linked to well-being in countries around the world. Overall, their results showed that across eight well-being outcomes, "individuals who had access to, or actively used the internet reported meaningfully greater well-being than those who did not," the authors wrote.

For the study, authors, Matti Vuorre and Andrew K. Przybylski examined measures of well-being across more than 2.4 million people for the time period of 2006 through 2021. Their data come from the Gallup World Poll, a nationally representative annual survey of about 1,000 people from each of 164 countries.

The key questions for the purposes of this research were whether respondents had home internet access (a question Gallup asked in the 2006 through 2015 surveys) or whether they had "access to the internet in any way, whether on a mobile phone, a computer, or some other device" (asked from 2016 onward). From 2017, Gallup also asked, "Can your mobile phone be used to access the Internet?" Additionally, later surveys looked at internet use by asking respondents if they had used the internet in the past seven days.

In all of the Gallup World Poll surveys, respondents were asked about life satisfaction, reports of daily negative and positive experiences, and two measures of social support ("someone in your life always encourages you to be healthy" and "your friends and family give you positive energy every day"). The researchers also used data from the Gallup-Sharecare Global Well-being Index taken in 2013–2015. These included questions related to purpose ("liking what one does each day and being motivated to achieve one's goals"), community well-being ("liking where one lives, feeling safe and having pride in one's community"), physical well-being ("having good health and enough energy to get things done daily"), and social well-being ("having supportive relationships and love in your life").

"The associations between internet access and well-being were consistently positive," reported Vuorre and Przybylski:

For the average country, individuals who had access to the internet reported on average approximately 0.08 units greater life satisfaction, positive experiences, and social life satisfaction, and 0.06 units lower negative experiences than individuals who did not have access. Results regarding the more temporally restricted (2013-2015) GWBI outcomes portrayed a similar picture: Individuals with internet access reported approximately 0.08 units greater experiences of purpose, 0.1 unit greater physical, 0.02 units greater community, and 0.08 units greater social well-being than individuals without access.

One big confounding factor here is obviously income—those with lower incomes may be less likely to have internet access and less likely to report positively on measures of well-being. For what it's worth, the authors attempted to adjust for income and other potentially confounding variables, including education status, work status, relationship status, whether they had health problems, and whether they were able to meet basic food and shelter needs.

The researchers also found strong links between active internet use and other measures of well-being. "Being an active internet user was associated with 0.03 to 0.08 unit increases in life satisfaction, positive experiences, social well-being and physical well-being, and with a 0.04 unit decrease in negative experiences," they reported.

The amount of internet use is less obviously linked to socioeconomic status, so these results may be more compelling.

The authors note that the magnitude of the difference between internet users and nonusers was not huge, but it was also "not negligible" ("e.g. the median life satisfaction difference was 0.36 standard deviations between individuals who had access to the internet and those who did not"). And the links held across different types of analyses ("in a multiverse of 33,792 analysis specifications. 84.9% of these resulted in positive and statistically significant associations between internet connectivity and well-being") and across demographic groups.

If nothing else, the results suggest that internet access doesn't cause an overall decrease in well-being.

The only "notable group of negative associations" between internet use and well-being was found in the category of community well-being ("liking where one lives, feeling safe and having pride in one's community"). Among 15-to-24-year-olds, and particularly women in this age group, the association between internet access or usage and perceptions of community well-being was negative.

The authors expressed caution about making too much of their results for several reasons, including the fact that self-reported technology usage isn't terribly reliable and the fact that "there are likely myriad other features about the human condition that are associated with both uptake of internet technologies and well-being in such a manner that they might cause positive associations to be observed." While a causal relationship between internet access or usage and well-being cannot be assumed, "we nevertheless remain hopeful that the clarity with which we hoped to address this issue will provide a solid foundation for future work on internet technologies causal effect," they wrote.


FREE MINDS 

Federal judge halts Tennessee drag law. Tennessee's anti–drag performance law has been temporarily halted. Judge Thomas L. Parker of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Tennessee ruled in favor of the LGBTQ theater group Friends of George's, which sought a temporary injunction against enforcement of the law as it challenges the law's constitutionality. "Drag is not a new art form; nor is it inherently – or even frequently – indecent," the group argued.

The new Tennessee law deems "male or female impersonators who provide entertainment that appeals to a prurient interest, or similar entertainers" to be adult cabaret performers, a category that also includes "topless dancers, go-go dancers, exotic dancers, [and] strippers." The law also bans "adult-oriented performances that are harmful to minors" from taking place on public property or in places where they may be viewed by kids. Violators are subject to misdemeanor charges on a first offense and felony charges for subsequent offenses.

"The inclusion of 'male and female impersonators' is intended to block children from attending drag performances, but the addition of the clause 'that appeals to a prurient interest' makes the meaning vague," noted Scott Shackford for Reason in March. The Volokh Conspiracy's Eugene Volokh has more on the legal issues pertaining to the law here.

"The Court can think of at least three scenarios in which Plaintiff is likely to succeed on the merits," wrote Parker in his decision. These include Friends of George's arguments that "the regulation here is content-based," which means it's presumptively unconstitutional unless "it is justified by a compelling government interest, and it is narrowly drawn to serve that interest."

"If Tennessee wishes to exercise its police power in restricting speech it considers obscene, it must do so within the constraints and framework of the United States Constitution," Parker wrote in his conclusion. "The Court finds that, as it stands, the record here suggests that when the legislature passed this Statute, it missed the mark."


FREE MARKETS 

More micromanaging business from Biden's FTC. Continuing President Joe Biden's fixation with managing the minutiae of the American consumer experience, his administration is now turning its attention to subscription services that are hard to cancel. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) wants "to penalize overly complicated subscription cancellations at $50,000 a pop," reports Reason's Matt Welch. A proposed FTC rule "requires negative-option sellers to provide, under maximum penalty of $50,120 per violation per day, a mechanism for cancellation that's 'at least as simple as the one used to initiate the charge,' via the same medium (app, website, phone, mail, etc.)."

Negative option marketing refers to transactions in which a failure to take proactive action represents consent to continue services or purchase an item, such as in the case where a free trial must be canceled within a given time frame or else a consumer will be charged.

"The click-to-cancel rule is guaranteed to jack up compliance costs (which hurt small entities hardest) and drive some current practitioners out of the negative-option market altogether," warns Welch. "No more easy-peasy renewals for your favorite poetry magazine or coffee roaster."

Christine Wilson, the FTC's only Republican appointee (who stepped down at the end of March), voted against the proposed rule, noting that it went way beyond the way FTC Chair Lina Khan and other proponents were portraying it:

The Notice explains that "the proposed Rule prohibits any person from misrepresenting, expressly or by implication, any material fact regarding the entire agreement—not just facts related to a negative option feature." It further explains that "[s]uch deceptive practices may involve misrepresentations related to costs, product efficacy, free trial claims, processing or shipping fees, billing information use, deadlines, consumer authorization, refunds, cancellation, or any other material representation."

Consequently, marketers using negative option features in conjunction with the sale of a good or service could be liable for civil penalties or redress under this Rule for product efficacy claims or any other material representation even if the negative option terms are clearly described, informed consent is obtained, and cancellation is simple.

The federal government getting overly involved in small details of consumer transactions may seem eyeroll-worthy but not much of a big deal. But it's a sign of a bigger problem, suggests Welch: "Governments that are big enough to police the language of magazine auto-renewals are guaranteed to intrude on personal consumption choices in ways that even corporationophobes find uncomfortable."

Welch points out that the Biden FTC has also been guilty of "asking Twitter to rat out the names of all journalists involved in working on the #TwitterFiles series of investigations," proposing a near-total ban on noncompete contracts in the workplace, "attempting (before being thwarted by a federal judge) to block Meta's acquisition of a virtual reality company on the legally adventurous grounds that in doing so the Facebook owner would prevent itself from innovating in the virtual reality space," and investigating Amazon for dubious reasons, among other overreach.


QUICK HITS

• A report released last Friday reveals that Social Security will be insolvent even sooner than was previously thought, "with automatic benefit cuts now projected to occur in 2033," notes Reason's Eric Boehm.

• Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson is running for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination.

• Reason's latest Peter Bagge comic deals with Maria Montessori and "the freedom to learn."

• On the same day that House members interrogated TikTok's CEO about whether the app and its parent company were a national security threat, the White House "embraced another popular app owned by the same Chinese company," reports NBC News. "Last week the White House's official Instagram account posted a flashy video of Biden and former President Barack Obama…created using the app CapCut, which, like TikTok, is owned by the Chinese company ByteDance."

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NEXT: The Morally Funky Math of Homeowner Handouts

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

Reason RoundupInternetTechnologyInformation TechnologyResearchHappinessPsychology/PsychiatryScience & Technology
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  1. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    Research links internet use to global well-being.

    Apparently they didn't research into the Elon Era!

    1. Sandra (formerly OBL)   2 years ago

      Further studies will have to account for Twitter's implosion and the movement of all the cool kids to Mastodon.

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    2. JoeJoetheIdiotCircusBoy   2 years ago

      wonder if they are going to have the guy that looked into the research behind "internet causes mental illness" argument look at this study. Appears to me to suffer from the same methodological problems that he highlighted.

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  2. Sandra (formerly OBL)   2 years ago

    "Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson is running for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination."

    I expect his support to skyrocket to levels not seen since Larry Hogan.

    1. Derp-o-Matic 6000   2 years ago

      JEB! Bush most affected.

      (Please clap)

      1. lexipa   2 years ago (edited)

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    2. JesseAz   2 years ago

      He may even match Liz Cheney.

    3. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

      He's hoping to ride on the wave of Former Arkansas Gov Bill Clinton.

  3. sarcasmic   2 years ago

    Research links internet use to global well-being.

    Tell that to the people who lose their minds screaming at Twatter every day. You know who you are.

    1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

      The mere fact that Zoomers are reporting record levels of mental illness while being the most online generation in American history--leading a sub-movement in the generation to emerge that actually promotes getting off your phone and getting outside to interact with real, actual people--would seem to refute this notion that internet access is correlated with increased well-being.

      1. Nelson   2 years ago

        Talking about two things that are happening at the same time and thinking they are connected is ... not strong reasoning.

        When I grew up, we had latchkey kids (remember that?). We were supposedly going to be damaged by all the TV we were watching. Then it was dirty lyrics in music. Then it was video games (and maybe still is?) that was going to damage us. Then it was computers. Then it was phones. Then it was the pandemic.

        It's all the same hysteria that boils down to the fact that each generation of kids grows up with different types of information gathering and social interaction than their parents and grandparents.

        None of those things destroyed Gen X or Millennials. They aren't going to destroy Gen Z, either. Humans are, by and large, social crratires who will always find ways to communicate and interact. It won't necessarily be the same way you did, but it will work for them.

        The fact that more people are reporting mental illness is due to the stigma slowly diminishing, which decreases the consequences of reporting issues both personally and professionally. That's a good thing for people's well-being.

        Look at how many soldiers came back from war with PTSD and were told to suck it up. How happy were they? One of my teammates from high school fought in Desert Storm and when he came back he couldn't hold down a job, turned to alcohol and drugs to numb the pain, and almost killed himself. Without a support network that never gave up on him, he would be dead today.

        Now it is treated as the serious condition that it is and those who seek treatment are happier. So increased reports of mental illness and increased feelings of well-being makes a lot of sense.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

          Talking about two things that are happening at the same time and thinking they are connected is … not strong reasoning.

          "Correlation does not equal causation" can be a logical fallacy, too, particularly in light of studies that show increased maladaptive behaviors corrlated with online screen time.

          It’s all the same hysteria that boils down to the fact that each generation of kids grows up with different types of information gathering and social interaction than their parents and grandparents.

          Except it's not hysteria--Zoomers, especially liberal Zoomers, have been diagnosed with record levels of mental illnesses.

          The fact that more people are reporting mental illness is due to the stigma slowly diminishing

          Or, that they think they have increased social clout, or they simply don't have the same coping skills as previous generations.

          Look at how many soldiers came back from war with PTSD and were told to suck it up. How happy were they?

          I realize there's been this pretense in the last 25 years or so that if you're not "happy", then there is something wrong. That doesn't make it so, and the expectation that you should be "happy" more often than not is just as damaging, if not more so, than telling people to "suck it up."

          Now it is treated as the serious condition that it is and those who seek treatment are happier.

          Talk about begging the question. If that was the case, the left wouldn't be so fucking miserable to the point that even goofs like Yglesias have noted that there's cachet on the left in being upset about shit all the time.

          1. Nelson   2 years ago

            "“Correlation does not equal causation” can be a logical fallacy, too"

            No, it isn't even related to a logical fallacy. It is a statement of fact.

            Correlation and causation are two separate things (and coincidence is a different thing altogether).

            If you want to say two things are happening at the same time, that's coincidence (literally co-, meaning together, -incidence, meaning occurance). You can just point out that they are contemporaneous events. That is what you did.

            Correlation is when you can show a connection between the two. Sure, reports of mental illness and Zoomers' screen time are both increasing, but so is inflation, the Fed rate, the number of people retiring, and dog ownership. Showing that one is related to the other by showing that both move together is how corrolation is established.

            Causation is when you can prove that one thing is the cause (hence the term) and one is the effect. Tuis requires evidence and some sort of quantifiable relationship between the two.

            Your inability to understand the difference between the three (and your weird opinion about what a logical fallacy is) doesn't speak well of your abilities in logical thinking.

            "Except it’s not hysteria–Zoomers, especially liberal Zoomers, have been diagnosed with record levels of mental illnesses."

            As I mentioned, there is more willingness to self-report and seek treatment for mental illness now than in the past. I'm Gen X and it wasn't acceptable when I was a kid. My father's generation was even worse.

            "Or, that they think they have increased social clout"

            Yes, because a history of anxiety and depression is so good for your prospects in life.

            "simply don’t have the same coping skills as previous generations"

            By 'coping skills', do you mean funtional alcoholism?

            "I realize there’s been this pretense in the last 25 years or so that if you’re not “happy”, then there is something wrong."

            That's not even close to what PTSD is. Soldiers aren't complaining that they aren't happy, they're killing themselves in despair or self-medicating with intoxicants. Minimizing mental illness is abhorrent.

            "there’s cachet on the left in being upset about shit all the time."

            Says the guy who wants to marginalize gay and trans people, slanders teachers,
            calls moderates 'leftists' and 'socialists', opposes parental control of medical decisions, supports abortion bans, and believes Trump won the 2020 election. I'd say that cultural conservatives place a great deal of value on grievance.

    2. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

      I was dubious that the Internet really enhances well-being, but then Bing AI told me it does, so I believe it now.

  4. JesseAz   2 years ago

    Trump's legal team is hearing rumors a judge may issue a gap order today to disallow Trump to defend himself in public.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11930577/Trumps-legal-team-believes-judge-impose-GAG-order-gears-Amendment-battle.html

    1. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

      public discourse is for saying Trump is guilty, or going on the news as a jury member telling stories about how he is guilty, or having show trials about how dangerous he is, or publicizing frivolous raids (read: fishing expeditions) and theorizing about what kind of nuke secrets he was selling and to whom.

      It is certainly NOT for Trump to try and, as Nancy said, 'prove his innocence'

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        Ironially leaking details of a grand jury indictment is a felony yet all the news agencies seemed to have those details Thursday.

      2. sarcasmic   2 years ago

        I still haven't figured out how conservatives get news with every single media outlet, from cable to internet, being run by leftist leftists.

        1. JesseAz   2 years ago

          Another strawman adopted from Mike. It is contagious.

          And not even responsive to the actual comment.

          Good work dummy.

          1. lexipa   2 years ago (edited)

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        2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

          Sarcasmic doesn't think that the most of the major media properties in the US have a Democratic Party bias. He's very observant like that.

        3. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

          I think they have to mimeograph underground newsletters and sneak them to each other.

          1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

            Sad.

          2. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago

            Right. Not like these folks.

            https://twitter.com/tphilip631/status/1642623288143650818

            1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

              What am I supposed to be looking at? You linked into the middle of some Twitter conversation. There’s Greenwald reacting to some news story. There’s some link to a YouTube video.

              Some respect for my time, please.

        4. DesigNate   2 years ago

          They get it from places that everyone derides as conspiracy theorist, at least until the evidence can’t be ignored anymore?

          1. JesseAz   2 years ago

            Sarc would never admit he is too stupid to see the information was always there. Youre just a conspiracy theorist.

          2. sarcasmic   2 years ago

            Infowars is legitimate news! What are you talking about?

            1. JesseAz   2 years ago

              Man. Doubled down on retard. Not a good look buddy.

      3. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

        The gag order is the best gift the judge could give to Trump’s attorneys. Imagine how much it must suck to represent a client who just won’t keep blabbing publicly.

        1. JesseAz   2 years ago

          Imagine calling yourself a libertarian and talking about the benefits of a gag order.

          1. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

            Here is the reason a gag order seems appropriate. The former President will talk about the case and present his side in public but will not do so in court. He will say things in public he will not say under oath. That bothers me because it is this continuation of the undermining our democratic system of government without rebuttal. We saw this in the Fox attack on Dominion and we are only now learning the truth. If the former President wants to give his side let him do it in the court room.

            1. damikesc   2 years ago

              "The former President will talk about the case and present his side in public but will not do so in court."

              And?

              He is more than permitted to defend himself in the court of public opinion.

              "He will say things in public he will not say under oath. That bothers me because it is this continuation of the undermining our democratic system of government without rebuttal."

              Indicting on a charge that has passed the statute of limitations via a dubious legal theory does not do that?
              '
              Well, look forward to conservative DA's going after Hunter for the rest of his life. The Rubicon was crossed.

              "If the former President wants to give his side let him do it in the court room."

              Should other defendants be gagged before trials...or ONLY Trump? I've never seen you advocate for this before.

            2. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

              I fail to see the problem with the hypothetical actions you accused trump of planning. 1a, 5a are both applicable to him. No matter how much you dislike him.

              We saw this in the Fox attack on Dominion and we are only now learning the truth.

              What truth? That they had guests om they disagreed with? The horror.

            3. A Thinking Mind   2 years ago

              He will say things in public he will not say under oath.

              That's something the prosecution absolutely should bring up, if he's contradicting himself. It may make the case against him stronger if he's shown to be lying. And it should be easy gold for any news organization who wants to portray his inconsistent statements to show he's lying to the public about what's happening. That's why we have public hearings and public trials.

            4. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

              "The former President will talk about the case and present his side in public"

              Apparently Fascism4ever thinks this is a bad thing.

              1. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

                As I noted I have no problem if he presents his case on the witness stand when he is under oath. Let me ask why should he be allowed to make a case if he will not allow it to be challenged.

                1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                  So your problem is defending himself in public? No 1a issues there i guess.

                  1. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

                    My problem is that his defense will mostly be a bunch of lies that he is allowed to spout in public but will not say in court. Let us comprise let's agree that everything he says will be his opinion and it may or may not have anything to do with reality.

                    1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

                      "My problem is that his defense will mostly be a bunch of lies that he is allowed to spout in public but will not say in court."

                      Do you even listen to yourself!?
                      You're straight out arguing against free speech. No ands, ifs or buts.

                      And, not just that, but the sheer hypocrisy of your statement is dumbfounding. You flat out said yesterday that you intended to keep believing and advancing a lie that was incontrovertibly demonstrated to you to be a lie, and yet here you're pretending to fret that Trump might do the same?

                      You're utterly fucking evil. There's no other way to describe you. You're no moderate, you're an active threat to speech and freedom akin to Stalin or Pol Pot.

        2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

          Good ol' Mike, always finding the silver lining in fascism's dark cloud.

    2. damikesc   2 years ago

      I would wonder how that's remotely legal? Why should a DEFENDANT ever be gagged?

      1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

        Because FYTW

      2. A Thinking Mind   2 years ago

        Gag orders can happen if both the prosecution and defense agree. I don’t know if I’ve ever heard of a gag order imposed solely to prevent the defense from speaking out. Though I suppose you might have no-contact orders in place for, like, a mafia boss if you’re concerned about him putting out a hit on the witnesses against him.

        1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

          The gag order is a rumor at this point. Perhaps, if there is going to be a gag order, it will be imposed on both prosecution and defense.

          1. damikesc   2 years ago

            WHY on the DEFENSE is the question.

            Why would you ever gag the defendant in a case?

            1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

              I don’t know. It hasn’t happened yet.

              Let’s wait and see if it happens, and what reasoning the judge gives.

              1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                So no opinion on it in general. Until you get your rationalization.

                1. Super Scary   2 years ago

                  He hasn't received his talking points yet.

          2. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

            Prosecution already leaked grand jury details moron.

            1. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

              What have they leaked. Everything I have seen is based on witnesses they have interviewed. In some cases those witnesses have spoken out but I don't recall anything from the prosecutors.

              1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                They never said witnesses. They stated anonymous sources. If witnesses leaked they are also committing a felony.

                1. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

                  Please cite.

                  Also, Robert Costello gave and public interview following his testimony. I also have seen Micael Cohen has been making the talk show rounds.

        2. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

          Lawyer arguing in the case before the public is a time-honored tradition and I suspect that Trump's lawyers could do a good job. The concern here is the defendant. Just as with the mafia boss, there is a concern that this defendant may try to take advantage of the weak minded and have them riot. A number of the J6 defenses have been predicated on the belief that Trump wanted them to attack the capital.

          While there may not be a gag order, I could see the judge telling the defendant that he will be watching what is said and may take action if necessary.

      3. Idaho Bob   2 years ago

        Why would defendants be held for two years without charges?

        This politically one-sided trend only ends in bloodshed.

        1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago (edited)

          Cite, please, on any January 6th protestor being held for two years without any charges.

          1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

            Unfortunately, there is a conflation between "without charges" and "without bail". I believe that pretty much everyone arrested for Jan 6 has been charged, however, there are numerous being held without bail. And it has now been two years to be held in prison pending trial for breaking a window or scuffling with capital security guards. Considering that zero people were killed on January 6, except for the rioters themselves, this is excessive and indefensible.

            1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

              Nope. There was a case of a man in Texas they utilized shifting his case around to keep him without even a charge for over a 100 days.

              I’ve given Mike the links prior. DoJ kept refusing to charge him and missed key deadlines.

              Link: https://redstate.com/leslie-mcadoo-gordon/2022/03/07/january-6-defendant-being-illegally-detained-locked-up-more-than-80-days-with-no-indictment-n532662

              1. Nelson   2 years ago

                100 days is two years? What?

                It is a little over 3 months, but I have no idea if that is a long time or not in a prosecution like this.

                If they didn't want to go to jail, they shouldn't have broken the law.

            2. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

              "without bail"

              I was wondering if that's what Idaho Bob actually meant. Of course, it wasn't what he said.

              1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                And now your figuring out a way to defend no bail before you comment further.

              2. Idaho Bob   2 years ago

                "Without charges for months and without bail for years."

                My statement is now accurate, and your beloved government's behavior remains typically heinous how it persecutes the right-leaning citizens of this country.

                1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

                  My “beloved government”.

                  Whatever. When you make claims that are factually incorrect, I’m going to call you out on it. Especially, when it was in service to the conservative victimhood narrative.

                  1. JesseAz   2 years ago

                    Lol.

                    Wow Mike. You get facts wrong all the time. See trans surgery. Always in allegiance with the left. Keep defending the prosecution including against non violent actors.

                  2. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 years ago

                    Fuck you laursen. The progressive victimhood narrative creates Audrey hale.

      4. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

        "I would wonder how that’s remotely legal?"

        None of this has been remotely legal, but you forget the US is now a banana republic.

        1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

          And Mike is happy giddy about it.

      5. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

        The gag order is a rumor at this point, so perhaps it would be a gag order on both parties in the trial.

    3. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

      I'm just disappointed that no one has made an oral sex joke about the term "gag order".

  5. JesseAz   2 years ago

    GOP is pushing to remove QI from overzealous DAs like Bragg.

    https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/hldhouse-gop-looking-punish-politicized-prosecutors-taking-away-protections

    Wonder how this one will get spun here.

    1. Bill Dalasio   2 years ago

      I wish I could say I had much confidence they'd be supportive. But, honestly, I wouldn't be at all surprised to see them take a position that QI is entirely appropriate for white collar agents of the state with enlightened ideals. It's only wrong to extend it to those icky blue collar police types with retrograde attitudes.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

        Most likely they ignore it despite it being a hobby horse, or blame it good but done for partisan reasons.

        They did similar for the First Step Act and now always forget about it.

      2. Zeb   2 years ago

        I would be really surprised if they did that. QI is something they are pretty consistent on and I haven't seen anything positive about the Trump indictment from them either.

        1. JesseAz   2 years ago

          There has been a split in the GOP for years.

          https://www.nationalreview.com/news/qualified-immunity-reform-divides-senate-gop/

    2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

      While this is a good move optically, I don't know if prosecutors enjoy "Qualified Immunity" or of they have yet a different kind of immunity. However, removing civil immunity from lawsuits for all public officials would be awesome, yet I submit we won't see it, because as I've posited before, and have yet to be refuted, there are more liberal-left-aligned groups who enjoy "qualified immunity" than the sacred cows usually lionized by the right. And so ultimately you won't see any broad cultural push to end it.

      1. Zeb   2 years ago

        I think prosecutors do enjoy something stronger than QI.

    3. rev-arthur-l-kuckland   2 years ago

      Bragg is complicit in abetting criminals. He should be personally libel for the crimes people he let's go commit

    4. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

      How many members of Congress have the job of prosecutor in their pedigree? Opening up Bragg open them up as well. So I think not.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        Did this make sense to you?

    5. Nelson   2 years ago

      "Wonder how this one will get spun here."

      Anything that eliminates Qualified Immunity is a good thing. 100% in favor.

      That spin-y enough for you?

  6. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    If Tennessee wishes to exercise its police power in restricting speech it considers obscene, it must do so within the constraints and framework of the United States Constitution...

    I hate to make this joke, but...

    THE CONSTITUTION ISN'T A GROOMING PACT.

    1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 years ago

      There is nothing vague about the law, only intentionally obtuse groomers who pretend they don’t know how commas work would think it vague

    2. perlmonger   2 years ago

      Government is the children we groom together.

      1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

        *Shrike with a tear in his eye*
        "That's so beautiful"

  7. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    ...his administration is now turning its attention to subscription services that are hard to cancel.

    Biden's handlers like things that are easy to cancel.

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

      If you can cancel your gym membership you won’t complain as much about canceling increased taxes and audits.

    2. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      Christine Wilson, the FTC's only Republican appointee (who stepped down at the end of March)
      When the going gets tough the republicans run away.

  8. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    A report released last Friday reveals that Social Security will be insolvent even sooner than was previously thought...

    They just want to groom the serfs into extending their utility into their 70's!

    1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

      It’s only because all the big problems have been solved already.

      1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

        Wrong spot.

  9. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Misogyny the Woke and the Mullahs have in common.

    https://www.spiked-online.com/2023/04/03/what-the-woke-west-has-learned-from-iran/

    So now we know the difference between the woke West and theocratic Iran. Between our own cultural elites that are in the grip of the religion of ‘social justice’ and Iran’s religious elites that believe they’re doing Allah’s bidding. It’s a difference in liquids. Over here, women who step out of line are doused in tomato soup; over there, they’re doused in yoghurt. Here, their hair is turned orange as they are ritualistically humiliated with soup by fuming sexist mobs. There, their hair is turned white as they are punished with yoghurt by angry men for the crime of being unveiled in public.

  10. Derp-o-Matic 6000   2 years ago

    Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson is running for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination.

    Oh no! He'll draw away all the Hogan, Romney, and Christie voters!

    1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

      Any GOP candidate that won't engage in the culture war is dead in the water with the party's voters. The neocon candidates know this, which is why Haley is awkwardly trying to lean into it (and failing miserably because she's not used to it), while Hogan realized that all he'd do is draw votes away from a stronger Trump challenger. Christie might be able to call back to his tussles with the New Jersey school unions and pull off a combined platform, but the only potential candidates who really have any credibility here are DeSantis and Youngkin.

      If neither of those two run, Trump will likely be the nominee again, barring his trial getting railroaded through in record time so he can't actually run. Which would be stupid, frankly, because leaving aside whatever platform considerations he might push, 1) he's older than dirt, 2) he already lost once, and 3) him running again shows he didn't learn a damn thing from what the cabal did to him in 2020 to get him out of office. The party needs someone younger who can actually engage the culture war on the policy front, not someone who's already lost and is tard-raging on social media all day.

      1. Sandra (formerly OBL)   2 years ago

        Careful!

        Mentioning facts like "Trump is old" and "Trump already lost to Biden" will get you diagnosed with TDS around here. 🙁

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

          LOL, sure, but like I've ever given a shit when people decide to get into it with me here. One of my proudest achievements in the decade-plus I've been commenting here is being numbered on Hihn's Enemies List more than any other HnR commenter, and I like to think my bullying was the reason that Laursen got his precious Mute button so he wouldn't have to see me throw his stupidity back in his face.

          1. JesseAz   2 years ago

            But where are you on sarcs list?

            1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

              That’s the important list.

              1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

                He ranted about me the other day, I was touched. I still get a smile when I see him screaming about "That moose-fucking Canadian cunt!"

                1. perlmonger   2 years ago

                  How culturally insensitive of him!

            2. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

              No idea. He still doesn't post the list.

      2. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

        "Which would be stupid, frankly, because leaving aside whatever platform considerations he might push, 1) he’s older than dirt, 2) he already lost once, and 3) him running again shows he didn’t learn a damn thing from what the cabal did to him in 2020 to get him out of office. "

        I dont know what the end game is for him running (for the right), but I would guess its mostly assuming #3 will happen again, and that Trump being enraged at his prior treatment that he would do something more extreme, or actually drain the swamp, or piss off enough people to stir up a revolution.

        I personally think their (the lefts) calculus is that he is amazing for ratings, for stirring up controversy, and for getting people on the fence to swing democrat, and that he already lost. He is best case scenario for them, they get to claw some rating back from their dying business model, and they are pretty sure they get to keep a D in the white house. If he managed to win, they'll have the FBI/CIA take him out next time.

        But for the right, I think a lot of them assume their choice is going to be a Jeb/Mcmuffin/Romney/McCain neocon, vs Trump creating a revolution, nothing in between. I dont see a world where Trump runs, wins, and then happily goes forward as President, signing legislation/EO's and going about his day.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

          and that Trump being enraged at his prior treatment that he would do something more extreme, or actually drain the swamp, or piss off enough people to stir up a revolution.

          Sure. The problem with Trump's reasoning, if that's the case, is that he completely underestimated how deep the swamp actually is, and he simply isn't going to actually start a revolution after Jan. 6. A revolution comes about when people think they don't have anything left to lose, and we're not at that point yet.

          Honestly, the only politician who might actually provoke the right into starting a revolution is Gavin Newsom, for a multitude of reasons, but mostly because he's a pretentious California Democrat who can't keep his nose out of other states' business.

      3. mamabug   2 years ago

        Vaguely recalling my decades-old high school civics class - I didn't think there was anything in the constitution prohibiting a felon from holding a national elected office so he could still run.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

          IIRC, that was the whole point of the second impeachment, to try and ensure that he could never hold federal office again.

        2. Nelson   2 years ago

          I believe that is part of the impeachment trial. If found guilty by the Senate the defendant can be banned from holding public office. But it isn't automatic, if I remember correctly.

      4. Think It Through   2 years ago

        "Any GOP candidate that won’t engage in the culture war is pointless, because that is literally the point of a Republican politician at this point in history. If you don't do that, go sit down while someone else who will, takes the seat."

        Fixed.

  11. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson is running for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination.

    Thinking the indictment will tie Trump up from giving him a nickname.

    1. Anomalous   2 years ago

      I'm pretty sure whatever gag order gets issued won't cover that.

      1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

        It might cover giving Alvin Bragg a nickname. Trump’s probably already done that, though.

        1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 years ago

          Fat Alvin

    2. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

      Hutchinson isn't visible enough to rate a Trump nickname.

    3. Think It Through   2 years ago

      Putting Asa Hutchinson into the Trump nickname generator comes up with......."Who?"

  12. Bill Dalasio   2 years ago

    One big confounding factor here is obviously income—those with lower incomes may be less likely to have internet access and less likely to report positively on measures of well-being.

    Wait, you mean to tell me Starvin' Marvin's biggest plight in life might not be that he lacks access to broadband?

  13. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    The black face of white supremacy.

    https://www.spiked-online.com/2023/04/03/the-curious-rise-of-the-black-white-supremacist/

    Take the case of right-wing, African American pundit Larry Elder. While running for the California governorship in 2021, Elder was infamously dubbed the ‘black face of white supremacy’ by the Los Angeles Times. Again, this was because he is opposed to modern racial dogmas like critical race theory and slavery reparations.

    1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

      Skin color is the most important thing

    2. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

      a deranged left-wing activist dressed up in a gorilla mask and through a banana at him.

      1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

        if this had been done to a Dem black candidate by a crazed right winger I think we'd still be reading think pieces about the even in WAPO

  14. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    On the same day that House members interrogated TikTok's CEO about whether the app and its parent company were a national security threat, the White House "embraced another popular app owned by the same Chinese company..."

    Not beholden to all of China, is it then?

    1. Bill Dalasio   2 years ago

      And it gives you a sense of just how little the RESTRICT Act is about TikTok.

    2. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      The White House “embraced another popular app owned by the same Chinese company

      Is that the GoFundJoe app?

  15. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

    "Federal judge halts Tennessee drag law. Tennessee's anti–drag performance law"

    I guess that is the main thing happening in TN involving drag, children, and mentally ill people.

    Simping for the tranny cult counter: Day 7

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

      I can't even tell if the most important thing is skin color or lady dick anymore.

      1. Moonrocks   2 years ago

        If I got this right: lady dick > skin color > exotic religions > privacy of one's bedroom > other genitalia

        1. Derp-o-Matic 6000   2 years ago (edited)

          Abortion fits in there somewhere. It's our most sacred institution.

          1. Moonrocks   2 years ago

            Updated: 4th trimester choice > lady dick > skin color > exotic religions > bedroom > misc. genitalia

      2. perlmonger   2 years ago

        Both, of course. Intersectionality. Black lady dick hardest hit. (Ouch!)

    2. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      Could have been worse. The judge could have ordered the Covenant Presbyterian church to host a drag queen show.

      1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

        That's for next year. If the deplorables still haven't taken the bait and done something insurrectiony by then.

    3. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

      We should have the right to choose the color of our dicks.

    4. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

      Straight repetition of what’s going on in current events is “simping”?

  16. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Tomorrow, Chicago goes to vote for a liberal Democrat or a Marxist as mayor.

    https://johnkassnews.com/chicago-mayoral-election-2023-the-self-preservation-election/

    Chicago is in a tight mayoral election centering on uncontrolled violent street crime and progressive Democratic Party resistance to upholding the law, I half expected raw and ugly race rhetoric from the candidate underperforming and under pressure.

    And because this is Chicago, the city of tribes and unforgiven sins, the race rhetoric spewed out. But it didn’t come from some angry pink fellow.

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

      Which one is which?

      1. Longtobefree   2 years ago

        What difference, at this point, does it make?

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          Exactly. Chicago is screwed 10 ways to Sunday anyway. It's a matter of if they go under faster or slower.

  17. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Puberty blockers and whistleblowers.

    https://www.thefp.com/p/i-felt-bullied-mother-of-child-treated

    When he was 14 years old, Caroline’s son got a pharmaceutical implant in his arm that was supposed to help relieve his psychological distress. It was a puberty blocker called Supprelin, and it would continuously release a drug for about the next two years that would arrest further sexual development. Caroline, 43, had been queasy about approving this, but she was assured by the psychologist at the The Washington University Transgender Center at St. Louis Children’s Hospital that this was what her son needed—that it was the standard treatment for young patients experiencing discomfort with their sex.

    1. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

      Hospitals do this for the money as much as anything else. Detransitioners should sue them until it's no longer worth it.

      1. Nelson   2 years ago

        There aren't enough detransitioners to make a single hospital even slightly uncomfortable. Regret rate is 1%, detransitioning is even less common.

        1. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

          Rates of detransition were higher in transgender women (11%) than transgender men (4%)

          1% indeed.

          1. Nelson   2 years ago (edited)

            “Roberts et al examined rates of continuation of gender-affirming hormones among TGD adolescents and adults in the U.S. Military Healthcare System (1). The study sample included 627 transmasculine and 325 transfeminine individuals who were children or spouses of active-duty, retired, or deceased military members.”

            Roughly 1000 kids or spouses of military members were the entirety of this study. So a small, self-selecting group in a dominantly-conservative cohort. That doesn’t mean that it isn’t significant, but projecting it as indicative of the general public would be faulty.

            “From 1972-2015, 6793 people sought gender-affirming services at the multidisciplinary gender identity clinic at the VU Medical Center in Amsterdam … Among those that underwent gonadectomy, rates of regret were 0.6% for transwomen and 0.3% for transmen with an average time to regret of 10.8 years.”

            This is from your study.

            “The reasons for regret were true regret (n = 7), social acceptance (n = 5), and feeling nonbinary (n = 2)”

            An observation that true regret isn’t the only cause of regret. It’s also from your study.

            “The largest study to look at detransition was the U.S. Transgender Survey from 2015 which was a cross-sectional nonprobability study of 27 715 TGD adults … The survey found that 8% of respondents had detransitioned temporarily or permanently at some point and that the majority did so only temporarily”

            Then they cite the 11%/4% number you posted, followed by:

            “The most common reasons cited were pressure from a parent (36%), transitioning was too hard (33%), too much harassment or discrimination (31%), and trouble getting a job (29%)”

            Notably absent from that list is “I’m not transgender”. The most common were social, not mental, reasons.

            So not only does that study not say what you claim it does, it is very specific about what ways it doesn’t say what you claim it does.

            Would you like to try again? For exame, here is a study of 8,000 that shows a 1% regret rate; https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8099405/

            When you cherry-pick data, especially when it is specifically moderated by the previous and following sentences in the study you are trying to use as evidence, it damages your credibility.

    2. Illocust   2 years ago

      That's terrifying. It really emphasizes how much you need to keep a strong relationship with your kids. You need your kid to talk to you about these things before they spend months convincing themselves is true. You especially need them to tell you if teachers are trying to keep secrets.

      1. Nelson   2 years ago

        What do teachers have to do with it?

  18. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/ConceptualJames/status/1642877305298059266?t=j_1PvXCFzwfmh82IE1Sf4w&s=19

    These people say they care about your kids' education, but they believe the only true education is political education, i.e., brainwashing.

    [Link]

  19. sarcasmic   2 years ago

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11931823/Bud-Light-sparks-backlash-partnering-trans-poster-girl-Dylan-Mulvaney.html

    'The weirdest thing I've ever seen': Bud Light sparks backlash after partnering with controversial trans poster girl Dylan Mulvaney - and even prints her face on a beer can

    As if anyone needed an excuse to not drink Bud Light. Well, here you go.

    1. Zeb   2 years ago

      So, when is this all going to be revealed as a giant practical joke?

    2. mad.casual   2 years ago (edited)

      Yeah, I think the real problem is Bud Light - “The Dylan Mulvaney of Beers” is too on-the-nose.

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

        "365 Days of Being a Beer"

        1. Mickey Rat   2 years ago

          "...(but not really)."

        2. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 years ago

          The Bee has the same idea

          https://babylonbee.com/news/beverage-pretending-to-be-beer-features-man-pretending-to-be-woman

    3. Derp-o-Matic 6000   2 years ago

      Bud Lite already makes me sick to my stomach enough without this.

      1. Kungpowderfinger   2 years ago

        Who would’ve guessed Budweiser would find something more disgusting to team up with than Clamato?

        1. Zeb   2 years ago

          Clamato is the only thing that makes it drinkable.

          1. Zeb   2 years ago

            Actually, Clamato is gross. Real tomato juice and clam juice is much better.

    4. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

      To be fair, they're two of a kind--Dylan pretends to be a woman, while Bud Light pretends to be a beer.

      1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

        Transbeer?

    5. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

      That's pretty fucked up.

      And if I'm going to drink a beer that has rice in it, I'm sure there's plenty of good ones from Japan.

    6. Ronbback   2 years ago

      companies sure do stupid lately. I will give up Budweiser and corona and any other brand owned by that company. they own a lot of beer companies may have to quite drinking beer and stick to just whisky

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

        Shit, you don't even need to do that. True and Honest Libertarians brew their own beer.

        1. sarcasmic   2 years ago

          True. However if you like the American lager style, good luck making it at home. It's actually the most difficult kind to make. Being that there is so little flavor, even the slightest imbalance sticks out like a sore thumb.

      2. Nelson   2 years ago

        "they own a lot of beer companies may have to quite drinking beer and stick to just whisky"

        Anheuser-Busch was purchased by InBev years ago. They own a shitton of brands.

    7. Nelson   2 years ago

      "As if anyone needed an excuse to not drink Bud Light. Well, here you go."

      The list of reasons not to drink Bud Light is so long no one will notice a new one.

  20. Jefferson's Ghost   2 years ago

    .... "in a multiverse of 33,792 analysis specifications. 84.9% of these resulted in positive and statistically significant associations between internet connectivity and well-being"....

    Well, of course. The world be much less fun without the Reason comment section!

    1. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      Just what ENB hopes for.

  21. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://nypost.com/2023/03/26/who-funds-antifa-protests-we-all-do/

    Who ends up paying far-left rioters like Antifa? Too often, taxpayers like you and me.

    1. Jerry B.   2 years ago

      I expect there’s collusion between the cities and the “protesters” to achieve this result.

      1. Derp-o-Matic 6000   2 years ago

        Soros-fund "protest" groups negotiating with Soros-funded city-attorney offices.

  22. mad.casual   2 years ago

    "The inclusion of 'male and female impersonators' is intended to block children from attending drag performances, but the addition of the clause 'that appeals to a prurient interest' makes the meaning vague," noted Scott Shackford for Reason in March. The Volokh Conspiracy's Eugene Volokh has more on the legal issues pertaining to the law here.

    Wow. BOAF-SIDEZing! Your own content in your own link.
    Scott Shackford - Lawyer, Constitutional Scholar, 1A Expert, Mathematician, Computer Programmer Grooming Retard: MUH "PRURIENCE" IS VAGUE!
    Eugene Volokh - Actual Lawyer, Actual Constitutional Scholar, Actual 1A Expert, Actual Mathematician, Actual Computer Programmer: Bans on distributing "harmful to minors" material to minors have been upheld (see Ginsberg v. N.Y. (1968), which used the then-existing definition, but which has been understood to justify the more modern definition used by the Tennessee statute). Likewise, courts have generally upheld restrictions on displaying such materials where minors can see them. So the law may well be consistent with the First Amendment, but precisely because it narrowly focuses on essentially pornographic material (in the sense of requiring depiction of nudity or sex in an erotic way that appeals to minors' interest in sex).

    Good God, you've got an intelligent opinion right there to copy and you can't even quit trying to sexualize kids long enough to plagiarize reword it or run it through ChagGPT.

    1. Derp-o-Matic 6000   2 years ago

      Child access to hardcore pornography and kiddie drag shows are the hill that Reason intends to die on, apparently.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        It is a problem with libirtines and liberaltarians where they think condemning an action is the same as advocating for government to disallow it. Reason will never admit the trana movement is harmful to minors and often used as a form of grooming, despite all the evidence. They ignore this and have to pretend it is moral to only focus on government rules.

        Libertarianism is not about only condemning government power. It is also responsibility and noting bad things utilizing information, even if not calling for government action.

        1. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

          I guess a very simple diagram showing

          "X lifestyle ----> 400% increase in suicidality"

          is not enough to make them think, "huh, maybe we shouldnt let schools push this on kids"

          If schools were giving out tyde pods I would assume parents would object.

          1. damikesc   2 years ago

            I find the whole "If you do not accept a man is a woman, their suicide is your fault" undertone of the entire religion.

  23. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/lndian_Bronson/status/1642713549632929793?t=0p4T8gQRNVQCbqtuLWJLTQ&s=19

    Still astonishing how this is taken for granted and presumed completely normal in Western countries.

    Would China, Saudi Arabia, or Bangladesh desire that their national population should go from being over 90% to only 60% themselves in just two generations? Wouldn't that be odd?

    Those under 50, and especially under 25, given reasonable health and planning, stand to live to about 100, even with just present advances - let alone what medicine and science may come.

    Another 50 years will see the English become minoritized *in England*.

    Isn't that WEIRD?

    [Link]

  24. Moonrocks   2 years ago

    What ever happened to the RESTRICT act?

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

      Soros called Koch?

      1. Moonrocks   2 years ago

        I'm surprised that Reason isn't writing more about it. Raising awareness of what's in the bill could help build the momentum needed to kill it, there's no shortage of awful Republicans to blame for it, and it would nominally protect the Editors' favorite app. This should be a slam dunk.

    2. Zeb   2 years ago

      They wrote about it this morning.

  25. mad.casual   2 years ago

    Among 15-to-24-year-olds, and particularly women in this age group, the association between internet access or usage and perceptions of community well-being was negative.

    Alternate Title: Around the World, Internet Use Linked to Greater Well-Being: Women and Children Hardest Hit

  26. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Motion for IL SC judge recusal.

    https://www.thecentersquare.com/illinois/article_9e17d63a-cff2-11ed-a7bc-7b96223555b7.html

    Because of “unreasonably large campaign contributions” to then-candidates and now sitting justices on the Illinois Supreme Court from lead defendants in the case challenging the state’s gun ban, plaintiffs are seeking two judges recusal.

    Before they were elected to the state’s high court, then-justice candidates Mary O’Brien and Elizabeth Rochford received $1 million each from Gov. J.B. Pritzker before the November 2022 election. They also each received six-figure donations from Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside

    1. Sevo   2 years ago

      Why would a House member donate to a judge-candidate unless their views were similar and the member hoped the judge-elect would support the members views in court cases?
      IOWs, why did the member blow two 6-figure donations?

      1. lexipa   2 years ago (edited)

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  27. Ajsloss   2 years ago

    "Last week the White House's official Instagram account posted a flashy video of Biden and former President Barack Obama…created using the app CapCut, which, like TikTok, is owned by the Chinese company ByteDance."

    All apps look the same to those bigots.

    1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

      Obama’s like, “No, Joe, don’t give them your real email address… make a gmail account…”

      And Biden’s like, “What’s a gmail account?”

      And Obama has to explain it’s kind of like AOL.

  28. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/INVESTMENTSHULK/status/1642772932454645761?t=3juoZo7BXBAznAsdUJDtJg&s=19

    IMAGINE LIVING IN THE SOCIETY THAT PRODUCED THIS RAZOR COMMERCIAL.

    [Link]

    1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

      That commercial unironically made me a Gillette customer for close to 20 years (the two-blade Sensor Excel was their best product). I'd already abandoned it well before their dumb "toxic masculinity" commercial came out, but that was because I was spending so much on blades that I switched over to double-blade safety razors and tub shaving creams. I can get a year's worth of blades for about $15-20, while a $15 tub lasts me for two years. Gillette was getting about $250 a year from me prior to that.

      You can still find vintage Gillette Super Speeds for sale at a reasonable price from various outlets if you don't want to buy a modern brand like Merkur or Vikings Blade.

      1. mad.casual   2 years ago

        Same story with Gillette except I switched to double-edge safety razors. Still working on the box of Derby blades I bought for $8, 2.5 yrs. ago.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

          I tried several types of blades before settling on Astras. I have pretty dense facial hair that softens a bit after about 4 days and is easier to cut at that point, and Astras provide the best bang for the buck for me in that regard. Most aren't aggressive enough, while the real sharp ones like Feathers are too aggressive and I look like a chicken pox patient after using them.

          For creams, I use Proraso or Taylor of Old Bond Street. I know some people like the soap pucks, but they're not really my thing.

          1. DesigNate   2 years ago

            You guys shave? What kind of libertarians are you?

            1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

              The "Personal Hygiene" faction is, to be sure, a niche branch of the movement.

              1. DesigNate   2 years ago

                Look, we can't all have perfectly quoffed hair and baby smooth faces like Robby.

                1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

                  In chasing perfection, we hope to catch excellence.

            2. perlmonger   2 years ago

              It's kinda weird. I'm going for the "Gimli" look, myself.

              1. DesigNate   2 years ago

                I let my beard go for a while and started looking like a homeless dude so my wife made me trim it down. I just use whatever cheap razors and shaving cream she buys for the bits I like to keep smooth.

            3. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

              I thought it was Progs who didn't shave.

  29. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Deja vu all over again.

    https://nypost.com/2023/04/02/trump-can-be-deja-vu-of-case-that-fizzled-against-john-edwards/

    But the legal foundations of the case are reminiscent of the crash-and-burn prosecution of John Edwards, the former US senator and 2004 Democratic candidate for vice president who was indicted in 2011 on six felony charges.

    Those charges included four counts of collecting illegal campaign contributions, one count of conspiracy and one count of making false statements.

    Today, even Michael Avenatti, the former lawyer for Stormy Daniels who won liberal acclaim for forcing her charges into the national limelight in 2018, when Trump was president, has strong doubts about the Bragg indictment.

    Lots of Democrats are puzzled by Bragg’s decision to muddy the waters in his pursuit of Trump. “We were able to score points in the Bill Clinton impeachment by saying it was all about sex rather than lying,” one top Democratic consultant told me. “Now Bragg is stepping into . . . a case that makes it look as if Trump’s enemies are pursuing him the way Clinton was hounded. Hysteria may be about to repeat itself.”

  30. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/ConceptualJames/status/1642891533224476678?t=lrA5qEgQVvHa-Ph1ixFYtg&s=19

    Leftism today is, as they would define it, structural or systemic pedophilia and child abuse. It's also institutional pedophilia and child abuse. The Democratic Party is fully complicit. @RepMTG is right about this.

    [Link]

    1. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      The democrat party is the teachers union and the MSM and both of them are pro-pedo. McAuliffe gave the game away when he declared parents haven't a right to interfere in the public education of their child. The dems have since declared parents as terrorists and violent trannies as American soul shapers. The rot in this country goes all the way to the bone.

      1. perlmonger   2 years ago

        Cultural marrow cancer.

    2. Cronut   2 years ago

      https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/25/us/unaccompanied-migrant-child-workers-exploitation.html

      This is what's happening under the Biden administration. These children have all been sacrificed on the altar of politics. Systemic child abuse.

      1. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

        Waiting for the demand for free gender-affirming care for illegal immigrant children.

        1. Cronut   2 years ago

          They wouldnhave to stop trying to hide the illegal immigrant children first.

  31. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    A lack of interest and tone deaf.

    https://nypost.com/2023/04/02/the-biden-white-house-is-uninterested-in-honoring-the-nashville-shooting-victims/

    On Friday, four days after the massacre at the Covenant Christian school, he issued a proclamation declaring March 31 as “Transgender Day of Visibility” and railed against “MAGA extremists [who] are advancing hundreds of hateful and extreme state laws that target transgender kids and their families … These attacks are un-American and must end.”

    Who is standing up for the victims of last week’s horror?

    Certainly not the media, which has decided that the real victims are the transgender community, in anticipation of some imaginary backlash from Christians.

    You can see that from the sociopathic lack of empathy exhibited by the White House as it plowed ahead with its transgender talking points, effectively valorizing the cause of the Nashville killer.

    1. Moonrocks   2 years ago

      Reminiscent of how religions will mark their martial victories as holidays.

      1. lexipa   2 years ago (edited)

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    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago (edited)

      I remember the shitshow that ensued right after Columbine when someone put up two crosses for Harris and Klebold at the school memorial along with the ones for the 13 kids they killed, as if they were victims, too. And of course, the media at the time ran with the false bullying narrative because Columbine was a jock/prep-dominated school during that period.

      It’s telling that we have the President and his political allies in the media defending a mass shooter and child-killer simply because she was a tranny who killed Christians.

      1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

        "President and his political allies in the media defending a mass shooter and child-killer simply because she was a tranny who killed Christians"

        She died doing their lord's work. Pretty much a martyr.

      2. Nelson   2 years ago

        "defending a mass shooter"

        No one is defending the shooter.

    3. Jerry B.   2 years ago

      Still waiting for the manifest. Probably in vain.

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

        The longer they hold off on it, the more it appears that either 1) the FBI are simply making one up that will be pawned off as the actual manifesto, or 2) the manifesto is a full "Kill Christians for Transgenderism" screed that will put a bullseye right back on the militant tranny movement.

    4. Nelson   2 years ago

      "in anticipation of some imaginary backlash from Christians."

      Backlash? Cultural conservatives have been on the attack against trans people and drag queens for years. Oh, and teachers. None of it based in reality.

  32. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/Spriter99880/status/1642866326254362625?t=-DSyp4mIVTTcmI8hYssMWw&s=19

    US President Biden: “We need more money to plan for a second pandemic. There will be another pandemic. We must think ahead."

    [Video]

    1. mad.casual   2 years ago

      A handful of Ukrainians who own a yacht must be up to something that we, the US, the UN, will have no interest in investigating.

    2. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

      We need more money to plan for a second pandemic

      Because we did so well on the last one.

      1. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

        The last one, where the majority of *correct* medical advice was to do nothing and focus on better health (eating / exercise / vitamins), all of which should have cost the govt 0$

  33. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    How's that economy looking now?

    https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/mcdonalds-temporarily-shutters-offices-ahead-layoff-notices

    Over the past year, big tech companies have been reducing their workforce, and now this trend extends to the US food sector. According to a Wall Street Journal report on Sunday evening, fast-food giant McDonald's Corp. is preparing to notify its corporate staff about layoffs early this week in an extensive organizational overhaul.

    Last week, the Chicago-based fast-food chain sent an internal memo to its US employees, informing them that corporate offices would be temporarily shut down during the first half of this week. The email instructed staff to work remotely, allowing management teams to communicate layoff decisions virtually.

    1. perlmonger   2 years ago

      > The email instructed staff to work remotely, allowing management teams to communicate layoff decisions virtually.

      How cowardly.

      1. Ska   2 years ago

        Considering that most of my professional staff don't think it's worth being in the office once a week to actually work, I find it hard to believe they'd want to come into the office one last time to get fired.

    2. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      The CEO of McDonalds moved corporate headquarters from nice quiet low tax Oakbrook Illinois to the west side of Chicago. He wanted to be hip woke. Then the George Floyd/BLM/antifa riots hit the fan and they're stuck. The CEO's head should be the first on the chopping block.

  34. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Election interference.

    https://summit.news/2023/04/03/jim-jordan-trump-indictment-is-about-going-after-anyone-who-opposes-the-lefts-agenda-the-establishments-agenda/

    Jordan emphasised that this is bigger than Trump, noting “This involves all of us. I don’t think it’s an accident that the same week we learned that the IRS knocked on Matt Taibbi’s door while he’s testifying in Congress. That same week is when we learned a district attorney, a left-wing district attorney, a Soros-backed district attorney is going to go after the former President of the United States.”

    1. lexipa   2 years ago (edited)

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  35. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Maybe MTG is saner than you think.

    https://www.foxnews.com/media/marjorie-taylor-greene-stuns-60-minutes-host-lesley-stahl-pedophiles-attack-democrats-wow

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., shocked "60 Minutes" host Lesley Stahl into momentary silence in an interview Sunday after she doubled down on calling Democrats the party of "pedophiles."

    "The Democrats are a party of pedophiles," Stahl said, repeating one of many claims that Greene has made against them in her career.

    "I would definitely say so. They support grooming children," Greene shot back at Stahl.

    1. Nelson   2 years ago

      That's sane? I don't think you understand what that word means.

  36. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Paris has had enough of e-scooters.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2023/04/03/paris-bans-rented-e-scooters-after-an-overwhelming-90percent-vote-for-their-removal.html

    In a non-binding referendum held on Sunday, 89.03% of 103,084 votes cast said they were opposed to the freestanding scooters, which are booked on a short-term basis through apps, from the city. There were only two options, “for” or “against.”

    Critics of the scooters say they clutter up pavements and roads, but also raise safety concerns. There were 459 accidents involving e-scooters or similar vehicles in Paris last year, including three fatalities, according to a Reuters report.

    1. Jerry B.   2 years ago

      So Parisians are climate change deniers.

    2. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      Who scrapes the dogshit off the wheels?

  37. Nardz   2 years ago

    https://twitter.com/scarlett4kids/status/1642750016543502337?t=Cv4bcHOplJQHm06yk3A1eA&s=19

    Six Christians, including three children, were just gunned down by a radicalized transgender woman in a Nashville Christian elementary school.

    Days later...
    Drag queens join @KelseaBallerini to belt out a tribute to the trans community on the @CMT Awards stage.

    "If you go down, I'm going down too" they sang.

    [Link]

    1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

      If you go down, I’m going down too”

      Phrasing?

    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

      Kelsea Ballerini is a shitlib, so it's not a surprise she'd crap on some dead kids and Christian school administrators to prove a political point.

      1. Nelson   2 years ago

        I guess I missed the part where she crapped on them. So did everone else, apparently.

    3. Jerry B.   2 years ago

      You’d think that’d be more appropriate for lesbians.

  38. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

    WTF, tReason?! No mention of Trump’s indictment or gag order?!

    This just proves your TDS!!!

    1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

      By the way, anyone want to join a pool on how long Trump is capable of practicing self control before he inevitably breaks the gag order?

      1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

        WTF is wrong with you?

        1. perlmonger   2 years ago

          Brain damage.

          1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

            Must have had a train drive over his head.
            It takes a lot of brain damage to gloat about censoring a defendant on an ostensibly libertarian website.

            1. perlmonger   2 years ago

              Train damage? ????

        2. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          Laursen ate too many paint chips as a kid.

          1. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

            Of course he did:
            https://babylonbee.com/news/scientists-discover-strong-correlation-between-trusting-government-and-eating-paint-chips

          2. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

            Oh, why, oh why, does Laursen mute me?

            1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

              Oh, why, oh why, does Laursen not have a thick skin? It's 2023 on the internet, dude, not 1994.

              1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

                What benefit would I get from “having a thick skin” and leaving you unmuted?

                There’s a difference between having a thin skin and being stupidly masochistic for no reason.

            2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

              Because you're frightened of debating your loathsome ideas, and would rather just drop some Hot Takes and then run?

        3. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

          HO2 poisoning.

          1. Dillinger   2 years ago

            worst kind of all.

        4. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

          Liarson has Trump muted over at Truth Social.

      2. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

        Please be clearer on how you support government gagging defendants as they leak information to friendly media.

    2. JesseAz   2 years ago

      Mike defends political prosecutions and 1a violations if it helps the left? Where is my fainting couch?

  39. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    The NYT gets called propaganda. ENB and cohorts most hurt.

    https://www.foxnews.com/media/elon-musk-pulls-new-york-times-twitter-verified-check-mark-calling-propaganda

    In a tweet reply, Musk revealed that this could include the New York Times should it refuse to pay for a subscription. Shortly afterward, the publication’s main Twitter account lost its verified status.

    "The real tragedy of @NYTimes is that their propaganda isn’t even interesting," Musk tweeted.

    He added, "Also, their feed is the Twitter equivalent of diarrhea. It’s unreadable. They would have far more real followers if they only posted their top articles. Same applies to all publications."

    Though he did not elaborate on the New York Times losing its verified status, he later called the media outlet "hypocritical" for insisting on people to pay for their subscription while refusing to do the same for Twitter.

    1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

      They looked through all the couch cushions and couldn’t find $8.

    2. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

      looking forward to an article that can be summed up as "here is why Elon is a fascist authoritarian" because of how many feels got hurt here

  40. JesseAz   2 years ago

    Still no care about the Mackey conviction. Huh. Thought 1a was a hobby horse. Just for trans I guess. Hope Mackey declares himself trans to get a mention among libertarians.

    1. Moonrocks   2 years ago

      But he's so icky. Surely there are better examples to champion.

    2. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

      Mackey made fun of Hillary. No greater crime.

    3. DesigNate   2 years ago

      Those 4900 text (did they prove that those people didn't go vote?) cost Hilldawg the presidency, leading directly to the 4 years of tyranny.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        Doj didn't provide 1 of them that said they didn't vote due to texting that internet number.

        1. perlmonger   2 years ago

          As I've said, I'm truly glad I made that same basic joke back in the Livejournal days rather than the Twitter days.

      2. Social Justice is neither   2 years ago

        But don't you dare talk about the election inaccuracies and shenanigans of blue cities or the targeted equipment failures to blue counties, that's a threat to "our democracy"

  41. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

    More micromanaging business from Biden's FTC.

    Lol. "micromanaging business" is the job of the FTC and every three letter agency related to any industry.

  42. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

    A report released last Friday reveals that Social Security will be insolvent even sooner than was previously thought,

    This is my shocked face.

    The biggest financial scam of all human history was even lying about when it would collapse? amazing.

    1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

      I still cant believe that the normies for decades have bought the "trust fund" scam without even a second thought. Just fucking incredible.

      Our fates our in the hands of incompetent villains acting with the full faith and support of boobs and dunces.

      1. perlmonger   2 years ago

        "I know I climbed into bed with the Devil but I wasn't expecting to get **fucked!**"

  43. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

    Research links internet use to global well-being. In a new paper, researchers from Tilburg University and the University of Oxford look at how internet access and use are linked to well-being in countries around the world. Overall, their results showed that across eight well-being outcomes, "individuals who had access to, or actively used the internet reported meaningfully greater well-being than those who did not," the authors wrote.

    I'm highly skeptical of this study.

    1. mad.casual   2 years ago

      The multiverse comment makes it seem like someone at Gallup who's never cracked a statistics textbook binge-watched all the Marvel movies and said, "With an entire multiverse, there's no end to the possibilities (of shitty narratives)!"

      You've got 1,000 people and it doesn't even crack 1SD. It's not even a representative sample of *one* of the 164 countries in this *Uni*verse.

  44. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

    Asa Hutchison has shown that he will take the fight to Donald Trump. That may not get him the nomination, but I expect him to do better than those that think they can get the nomination by kowtowing to the former President. It pretty hard to ask people to vote for you after told them that your rival is a better candidate.

    1. damikesc   2 years ago

      "Asa Hutchison has shown that he will take the fight to Donald Trump."

      But not to Democrats, which is kinda the issue.

      Nobody is going to vote for the epitome of a "Go along to get along" establishment Republican. He is not going to hit 1%.

      1. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

        Asa Hutchinson will fight for conservative values. Trump will whine that he is not treated fairly. Which is better campaign platform for you?

        1. damikesc   2 years ago

          "Asa Hutchinson will fight for conservative values."

          WHO will he fight with over them? The establishment has watched conservative values get torn down to next to nothing because "This is not the hill to die on".

          Rest assured, he goes nowhere in the primaries because him fighting for conservative values is laughable as it is unlikely to be OTHER Republicans trying to stop him. Democrats will and he won't do a damned thing to slow them down.

          1. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

            Conservative values started draining away with the Tea Party and then MAGA. These group stopping thinking government should be small and started thinking that big government should serve their interests. There was a time when government debt concerned conservatives, today's Tea Party/MAGA think debts OK if they are doing the spending. Republicans let these group thinking they could control them and it may now be too late.

  45. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    Hey Mike Laursen, what do you make of this? I thought you said this didn't happen in the US?

    https://www.foxnews.com/media/boston-childrens-hospital-director-calls-drastic-increase-capacity-gender-surgeries-minors

    Boston Children's Hospital co-director at its Center for Gender Surgery called for a drastic increase in capacity for what he called "gender-affirming care" (GAC), including surgeries, for kids as GOP states enact bans on the practices.

    Oren Ganor is a plastic and reconstructive surgeon who specializes in gender-affirming surgeries. He has previously stated in an email that the hospital is "slightly flexible" when it comes to the age of transgender girls seeking genital surgery," according to a local outlet. The policy had not been finalized, he said, "because of the issue around consent for sterilization."

    Boston Children’s Hospital also previously faced a wave of backlash over its Center for Gender Surgery that performs mastectomies on teenagers as young as 15, as well as since-deleted wording on the hospital's website that claimed teens as young as 17 can get vaginoplasties.

    1. Spiritus Mundi   2 years ago

      How is this different from when the progressives of 1923 we sterilizing people with mental health issues in the name of eugenics?

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        It's not. They're literally sterilizing gay kids and calling it progress.

        1. Longtobefree   2 years ago

          Well, they don't breed either way

      2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

        Shit, it isn't any different at all than when Magnus Hirschfeld's institute in Weimar was doing it.

    2. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

      I think my brother Mike was going for the "AOC" defense move here:

      "Its not happening, and the person who copy/pasted the video, showing it's happening, is a liar and made it up. Something something fascism!"

    3. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 years ago

      I for one am shocked he didn’t reply. He has not seen this, so therefore it doesn’t exist

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        He's got me on mute. Something, something, I irritated him somehow, something, something, fascist.

        1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

          I've got you on mute because about every fourth comment you post in discussions with me you acted like a total asshole. If you want me to engage with you in real discussion, read your links, etc. stop with the personal attacks.

          1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

            Always a victim Mike. Always.

            How about reading the links to educate yourself instead?

          2. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

            If showing you links and the fact that something is happening is a "total asshole", then I'm ever so happy to be that "total asshole" to you, Mike.

            1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

              The links are fine. That’s not what makes you an asshole.

      2. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

        Will ask for a cite next week.

      3. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

        He has everyone on mute, except sarcastrated, the 2 pedos and sqrlsy.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          There are 3 pedos: Jeffy, Shrike, and Tony.

    4. Dakotian   2 years ago

      He will focus on the mastectomies and claim he never said those didn't happen. Because apparently top surgery is no big deal and totally reversible with boob jobs.
      He will ignore the vaginoplasties.

      1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

        I have never said "top surgery is no big deal".

        I have had many discussions here where I pointed out that it is factually incorrect that any US surgeon currently does gender-affirming genital surgery on minors.

        And, then, I've had people argue back, "What about top surgeries!" Which I never denied happen.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          Bull. You effectively did tell us all that minors can undergo "top" surgery all the time so long as you tell us that "bottom" surgery isn't happening.

          I have had many discussions here where I pointed out that it is factually incorrect that any US surgeon currently does gender-affirming genital surgery on minors.

          And you've been told, time and time again, including here, that genital surgery on minors is in fact happening. Denial is not just a river in Egypt apparently.

          1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago (edited)

            Do you understand the difference between normative and positive statements? Evidently, you do not.

            There’s a huge difference between making a factual statement about how things are and arguing how things should be.

        2. JesseAz   2 years ago

          It is not factually correct as you've been given evidence of it many many many times. For example Jazz Jennings. You continue to lie.

    5. Mike Laursen   2 years ago (edited)

      I had to unmute you to read this. It was a waste of my time.

      The article itself confirms that Boston Children’s Hospital’s policy is “To qualify for gender affirmation at Boston Children’s Hospital, you must be at least 18 years old for phalloplasty or metoidioplasty and for vaginoplasty.”

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        You're a waste of time, Liarson.

        1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

          Tacit admission I am right.

          If it were not the case you wouldn’t have to resort to name calling.

  46. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

    These included questions related to purpose ("liking what one does each day and being motivated to achieve one's goals")

    I highly doubt that having to the internet would make a difference to this one way or the other.

    Also, I'm not sure who would answer yes to that but I hate them already...

  47. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

    For the average country, individuals who had access to the internet reported on average approximately 0.08 units greater life satisfaction, positive experiences, and social life satisfaction, and 0.06 units lower negative experiences than individuals who did not have access.

    I'm not sure what "units" one measure positive and negative "experiences and life satisfaction" in, but this sounds like a bunch of purely subjective, non-scientific non-sense to me (IOW typical social "science" bullshit). Also, 0.08 and ).06? Seriously? That's got to be in the noise. This is such a bunch of horseshit, I can't believe they wasted time reporting on this. Must not be much else happening in the world that would be of interest to a libertarian news site or worth reporting on.

    1. DesigNate   2 years ago

      Nope, it's been a really slow news week.

    2. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      Islamic Rage Boy is at his happiest yelling "Death to America!".

  48. Moderation4ever   2 years ago

    It is hardly surprising that internet use and access has been a great boon for all. Technology almost always helps people and also has downsides effects. I expect that 100 years from now the internet connectivity will among the great advances, like agriculture and the industrial revolution.

    1. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      One small step for Mankind, one giant leap for cat videos.

  49. Dillinger   2 years ago

    >>Social Security will be insolvent even sooner than was previously thought

    by someone who has been living on Mars in a cave with his eyes closed and fingers in his ears.

  50. Dillinger   2 years ago

    >>individuals who had access to, or actively used the internet reported meaningfully greater well-being than those who did not

    did anyone ask the public library hobos?

    1. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

      Exclusively!

  51. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

    Compare and contrast the bolded concepts.

    After more than 29 hours of often tense and emotional debate over three days, Colorado lawmakers passed Democrats’ three priority abortion and gender-affirming-care bills Saturday night.

    The bills approved by the Colorado House place tighter regulations upon the advertising and unproven scientific claims of crisis-pregnancy centers, codify protections for providers of abortion- and gender-affirming care, and extend insurance coverage to abortion and other reproductive health-related treatment.

    [...]

    On Friday, Republicans had focused part of the debate on gender-affirming care for minors and cast treatment as experimental and harmful (medical experts say gender-affirming care is critical for trans youths’ well-being). Holtorf, of Akron, spoke at length about the issue from the House floor and said he supported a prohibition on gender-affirming “procedures” for minors (such procedures are rare; according to Reuters, fewer than 300 minors received gender-affirming breast surgery in 2021).

    Most libertarian Governor in 'Murrica.

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

      I like the last sentence. It's full on "Ok, it's happening, but it's not as bad as you say"

      Dr. Mengele was only one doctor, how many gruesome medical experiments could one doctor carry out? Cool your jets...

    2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

      Democrats had the votes to pass the package of bills, and Epps, a sponsor of the deceptive trade practices bill, said, “while Colorado is already a very special place, it’s going to be an even better place because at a time when our rights and our bodies are under such attack, we’ll continue to be a beacon.”

      There are bodies under attack, I'll give you that much.

    3. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

      In a 2013 article, Sahar Sadjadi, a medical anthropologist and MD, drew attention to the stunning silence around the trans-child sterilization question:

      It must be remembered that puberty suppression as the first step to medical transition, if followed by cross-sex hormones, which has been the case for almost all reported cases, leads to infertility due to the permanent immaturity of the gonads and the reproductive tract. The absence of the discussion of sterilization of children as a major ethical challenge … is striking. For any other group of children, such an intervention would be discussed extensively with ethics review boards. (What grounds might justify the permanent elimination of the child’s reproductive ability? Should parents be able to make such a decision for the child? Which futures are opened by the treatment and which ones are foreclosed? How might benefits be weighed in relation to the loss of reproductive capacity?) The media would likely react with investigations and questions about the long-term consequences of treatment. These “queer” children’s bodily integrity and reproductive rights should not be any less pressing than other children’s. Needless to say, children are not legally capable of consent, and 9–10 year olds are not capable of understanding all the health consequences of the treatment.

      Excellent article.

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        Fun stuff:

        But what may be new to our readers is that Ehrensaft–a developmental psychologist by training– herself recognizes a concern that child-transition skeptics have repeatedly pointed out: tweens and young teens undergoing these treatments are not developmentally mature enough to comprehend the full magnitude of irreversible sterilization. (Interestingly, she also discussed this three years ago at the 2018 WPATH conference in Buenos Aires.)

        Although Ehrensaft (as you might guess) continues to recommend these treatments, in her Zoom presentation, she explains in detail that clinicians, parents, and other adults involved in the child’s care shouldn’t overburden a child with “TMI” –too much information—too many details– about the momentous decision to undergo interventions that result in permanent chemical sterilization.

        Don't bother your tweens with pesky medical details about what we're about to inject in you.

        1. Don't look at me!   2 years ago

          100% safe and effective with no downsides!

      2. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        Another part of it. The trans movement could be considered a genocide of gays and lesbians.

        Modern transgender treatment leads to sterilization of gay and lesbian people

        As discussed below, it isn’t easy to find reliable statistics about child or teen transgender medical treatment in the United States. One aspect of the field does, however, seem comparatively beyond dispute: that gay and lesbian young people are disproportionately affected. This is because “gender non-conforming” children – in other words, those often identified at a young age as potentially transgender – typically grow up to be gay or lesbian. (See an earlier article on this website for further explanation and detail.) A priori, the children most likely to be sterilized by transgender medical procedures are those who would otherwise grow up to be gay and lesbian adults.

        1. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

          I've made that point many times here.

          1. Nelson   2 years ago

            And? So what? How far do you want paternalism to go?

            Taking choices away from people because you, an uninvolved person, doesn't like the choices people make is wrong. Period. It's taking away liberty for no objective reason.

            That is very different than taking choices away because the person making the decision (the parent(s), in this case) isn't capable of understanding or giving informed consent. That is almost never the case, so it can't justify restricting the liberty of the vast majority due to the existence of the outliers.

            1. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

              100% of children are incapable of giving informed consent to a "sex change". The "choice" to intentionally harm someone else cannot be permitted simply because the aggressor is the victim's parent.

              1. Nelson   2 years ago

                The parents have the ability to understand the treatment that is being considered. That is informed consent, unless the parent doesn't understand the potential side effects and negative outcomes that are possible from the treatment offered.

                The fact that you would make a different choice doesn't mean that you are right. It just means that that would be the right choice *for you*.

                The thing about liberty is that you have to accept that people will make a different decision when provided with the same information as you.

                Yet again you are claiming that transition (which runs the gamut from social to surgical) is always surgical and irreversible. That happens in a vanishingly small number of cases.

                If you can't be trusted to discuss things honestly, why should anyone listen to you?

    4. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

      "gender affirming care for minors". is the ugliest euphemism I have encountered in my life.

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        Ironic that it's stuffed into a bill that bans "disinformation" about abortion care.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          He'll still be Governor McDreamy here when he signs it.

      2. Dillinger   2 years ago

        >>ugliest euphemism

        definitely. getting them before they're born not enough, let's chop the kids up after they're born too!

    5. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

      medical experts say gender-affirming care is critical for trans youths’ well-being

      I suppose we're not supposed to point out that the suicide rate amongst transgender people is actually higher post-transition than before?

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        That's Ron DeSantis's fault.

        1. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

          Everything is. #FloridaManBad

      2. Mike Parsons   2 years ago (edited)

        Its just because there are people in the world that would dare question if this is a benefit to them. Critical analysis is now transphobia, and transphobia makes them spontaneously combust

        Also, even the best studies they have on it as a defense (which arent great, or long term) show the suicide rate is nearly unchanged.

        Remember, their entire argument stems from the emotional blackmail of "theyll kill themselves if they cant be the other gender" and the best studies they have for this show almost no benefit

        1. perlmonger   2 years ago

          Spoiler alert: They'll never actually be the other gender.

      3. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

        We're not supposed to notice that someone suffering the delusion that they're the opposite sex is not in a state of well-being.

    6. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

      medical experts say gender-affirming care is critical for trans youths’ well-being

      Yeah, look how healthy and well-adjusted Jazz Jennings is, or how stable Karen Berg's trans kid was with "gender-affirming care" and political love-bombing.

      The whole "gender-affirming" part is the biggest bit of gaslighting, because it argues that the basic biology that someone was born with is actually false.

    7. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

      Sounds like standard issue Blue vs. Red Team culture war.

  52. damikesc   2 years ago

    Looks like Biden and China (BIRM) lied to us.

    "Chinese spy balloon gathered intelligence from sensitive U.S. military sites, despite U.S. efforts to block it"
    https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/national-security/china-spy-balloon-collected-intelligence-us-military-bases-rcna77155

    Nice of Biden to make damned sure that it crossed the ENTIRE USA before dealing with it.

    1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

      Yawn. This is pure Red Team sniping against Blue Team.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

        When was NBC News on the Red Team?

        1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

          Ever since they took away his fire extinguisher, lying about stuff is the only tool poor Mike has left.

        2. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

          The news story isn’t where the sniping is taking place. It’s the Red Team pundits and talking points trying to make it out at a big, giant screw-up that Trump supposedly would have handled perfectly.

          1. damikesc   2 years ago

            It does not matter IF Trump would do it perfectly. He could not have done worse, but it is not relevant.

            WE know that Biden specifically did not. He handled it as poorly as possible.

            A hypothetical on Trump is immaterial compared to a concrete Biden example.

            1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

              You’re spinning right there in your comment: “… as poorly as possible”.

              1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

                You actually think worse is achievable?

          2. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 years ago

            Sounds like a liberal victimhood narrative ya got there, mike.

  53. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

    Fun twitter story going around apparently AOC outed her burner account #zazademon by mistake. hilarity ensues

    1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

      here's a good summary. it's hilarious

      https://twitter.com/dyingscribe/status/1642306554157301761

    2. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

      Ya, a lot of it would almost make me think its an AOC megafan or a paid staffer, but the "what makes you think I did anything to support Nazi's" after a direct accusation toward AOC as a reply under, is not a great look. Plus the cunty smug leftist oozes out of the screen on each Tweet.

      Watch for the media to run cover for her this afternoon, I would bet money on it.

      From either NYT or Wapo: "Here's how random incels create fake accounts to make democrats look bad"

      1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

        Also the account's entire tweet history has been deleted and account deactivated since this came out. Not a good look either. Why would anyone other than AOC herself do that in response to the latest tweets. Occam's Razor wins bigly here I think.

        1. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

          Fun hypothetical:

          Elon leaks the accounts email address, and it matches one of AOC's.

          1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

            ^ please please please let this happen

            1. DesigNate   2 years ago

              That wouldn't be a great business decision on his part, but it would be hilarious if it proved it was her.

              1. Social Justice is neither   2 years ago

                Could proclaim he was following the precedent these twats fought for with Trump and make the history and email visible and accessible to everyone because it's a 1A issue.

      2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

        Ya, a lot of it would almost make me think its an AOC megafan or a paid staffer, but the “what makes you think I did anything to support Nazi’s” after a direct accusation toward AOC as a reply under, is not a great look.

        I was wondering when that bitch's lack of impulse control was going to come back and finally bite her in the ass.

        Even if it wasn't hers, and the fact the account did a direct response is pretty strong evidence in the affirmative anyway, she's basically going to be called "zazademon" the rest of her political career. If she wasn't a meme before, she definitely is now.

    3. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

      Oof, and telling Matt Walsh he's going to get ventilated for his anti-trans rhetoric...

      Just imagine the calls for impeachment if this was an R:

      "House Republican uses burner account to threaten the life of brave democracy-loving journalist"

      1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

        ^ Yep. This. Every time.

      2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

        Walsh is fucking retarded if he doesn't make hay of this. "I don't know if it's really her or not (wink, wink), but I wonder why AOC is okay with one of her fan accounts threatening to shoot me."

  54. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

    The new Tennessee law deems "male or female impersonators who provide entertainment that appeals to a prurient interest, or similar entertainers" to be adult cabaret performers, a category that also includes "topless dancers, go-go dancers, exotic dancers, [and] strippers." The law also bans "adult-oriented performances that are harmful to minors" from taking place on public property or in places where they may be viewed by kids.
    ...
    "The Court can think of at least three scenarios in which Plaintiff is likely to succeed on the merits," wrote Parker in his decision. These include Friends of George's arguments that "the regulation here is content-based," which means it's presumptively unconstitutional

    Then wouldn't any existing law banning other types of "cabaret performers" (e.g., "topless dancers, go-go dancers, exotic dancers, [and] strippers") from from "taking place on public property or in places where they may be viewed by kids " also be considered "content-based?" After all, not all of those other types of cabaret performances are necessarily always "indecent" either (depending on what one's definition of "indecent" is). Either it's all OK or none of it is.

    1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

      Was there any such existing state-wide Tennessee law?

  55. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

    Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson is running for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination.

    Who?

  56. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

    Front page of my local newspaper:

    A century before Trump, a president paid a mistress to stay silent

    Trump faces setbacks in other probes as NY case proceeds VIEW

    Justice Dept. said to have more evidence of possible Trump obstruction at Mar-a-Lago

    Trump to deliver remarks Tuesday night after his arraignment VIEW

    Over 24 hours, rumblings of a reckoning for the right

    *ctrl-f biden 0/0*

    1. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

      Why would they have articles about Biden? It's not like he's president or anything.

    2. Sevo   2 years ago

      "A century before Trump, a president paid a mistress to stay silent"

      As have how many others, but they were/are not guilty of being Donald Trump, for which crime *he's* being prosecuted.

    3. JesseAz   2 years ago

      I like how the DoJ is hung up on only process crimes at this point.

    4. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago

      A century before Trump, a president paid a mistress to stay silent

      Shit, we even have to go back that far.

    5. Mother's Lament   2 years ago (edited)

      It sounds like they’re trying to make the crime out to be “somehow illegally paying off a mistress”, rather than “The NY prosecutor disagrees with federal prosecutors about which column Trump's accountant should’ve reported the cheque under”.

      Because as soon as Joe Sixpack realizes what the charges are actually about, they’ve lost him.

  57. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

    The law also bans "adult-oriented performances that are harmful to minors" from taking place on public property or in places where they may be viewed by kids.

    This is a bit of a silly church-lady law but then again, i'll take some overzealous "protect MUH KIDS from pervs" over the fucking marxist revolutionaries on the other side.

    Laws like this are performative and do almost nothing.

    Pervs: "no one want to do erotic drag dances for children"

    Me: "great so you dont care if a bunch of people admittedly over-reacting a bit decide to ban it explicitly right?"

    Pervs: [RAAAAAAAAAAGE]

    1. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

      This is a bit of a silly church-lady law but then again, i’ll take some overzealous “protect MUH KIDS from pervs” over the fucking marxist revolutionaries on the other side.

      ^This^

      And it's not even a contest. I'll take over-reacting church ladies over revolutionary marxists hellbent on burning everything down any day of the week and twice on Sunday. Obviously I'd prefer actual libertarianism but that's not really in the cards, so...

    2. DesigNate   2 years ago

      Their rage at the laws puts lie to their statements that "nobody wants to do erotic things in front of/with children."

      1. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

        Same as the CRT stuff in Fl.

        "Dont be an open, blatant racist, and follow the CRA as written"

        The left: *RAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGE MOOOOOOOODE!!*

    3. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 years ago (edited)

      Like Overt has pointed out, if you don’t want the reaction, prevent the action from taking place.

      None of this shit would really be an issue if the drag queens had stuck with shaking their groove thangs in front of adults on Ladies Night at the club like they had for decades, instead of branching out to kids when the troonpocalypse started.

      The fact that they are so intent on sexualizing minors is the most telling aspect of this whole thing.

  58. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

    Damn, tech already stepping in to launder the AOC burner info.

    Google searched it:

    "It looks like the results below are changing quickly
    If this topic is new, it can sometimes take time for reliable sources to publish information
    Check the source
    Are they trusted on this topic?
    Come back later
    Other sources might have more information on this topic in a few hours or days"

    What do we think they will go with this time? Russian disinfo? Conservative conspiracy theory?

    1. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

      What do we think they will go with this time? Russian disinfo? Conservative conspiracy theory?

      Whatever it is, "Republicans pounced!"

    2. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

      This has Pierre Delecto written all over it.

      1. I, Woodchipper   2 years ago

        Never forget Carlos Danger

  59. Libertariantranslator   2 years ago

    Negative-option entrapment baad? What next? Fishhooks without barbs? They already banned fishing with dynamite!

    Bagge on Montessori? Yesss!

  60. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

    So anti-racist.

  61. rev-arthur-l-kuckland   2 years ago

    Another woman threw a banana at him

  62. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 years ago

    And the Clintons. And Bidens. And BLM and Antifa. And comedians posting election interference memes

  63. damikesc   2 years ago

    He seems to be more beneficial to China than Xi himself is.

  64. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

    And at this point they might be in a position to blackmail him. No need to buy him off.

  65. perlmonger   2 years ago

    If only.

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