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Happiness

American Nightmare

Plus: Squatters, Julian Assange, teen babysitters, Hong Kong migration, and more...

Liz Wolfe | 3.21.2024 9:30 AM

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American Flag blowing in the breeze | Joshua Hoehne / Unsplash
(Joshua Hoehne / Unsplash)

Are the kids all right? The annual World Happiness Report was released this week and for the first time in the decade-plus that the report has gone out, the U.S. failed to rank in the top 20 happiest countries.

The findings, which rely on Gallup polling data on self-reported happiness, show that it's Americans 30 and under who are responsible for bringing the average down. "Americans 30 years and younger ranked 62nd globally in terms of well-being," reported The Wall Street Journal, "trailing the Dominican Republic, Brazil and Guatemala. Older Americans ranked 10th." (The Nordics, a handful of Western European nations, Costa Rica, and Lithuania all rank above us in overall happiness rankings not separated by age.)

"Today's young people report feeling less supported by friends and family, less free to make life choices, more stressed and less satisfied with their living conditions," per a report editor's comment to Axios. A possibly representative tweet:

Turns out living in a garbage country that doesn't take care of its people and bombs the rest of the world makes people miserable pic.twitter.com/Vsp1muyqlT

— cabral (@doctor_cabral) March 20, 2024

This comes on the heels of Jonathan Haidt's lengthy Atlantic feature "End the Phone-Based Childhood Now," which attributes mental health problems to cultural and technological shifts that have pivoted kids away from play and toward being plugged into their devices.

Some of this may be attributable to younger generations struggling to find meaning in their lives—possibly a temporary failure, not one that will plague them for the rest of their days—and taking for granted the massive gains that alter the world they've inherited. Or it is possible that they're legitimately unwell, en masse, or it could be some combination of all of the above.

But it's worth mulling the gains we've made. Work today is—on average—safer, less physically arduous, and more intellectually stimulating than the work of 30 or 50 years ago. Money kinda sorta buys some level of happiness, and our level of wealth and economic freedom in America is nothing to sniff at. "As many traditional, tangible sources of suffering disappear, the expectation that we should feel good all the time increases; when we don't, we suddenly start talking in psychiatric terms, even though stress and sadness are part of a good life," wrote Johan Norberg for Reason last year.

None of that is to dismiss legitimate reasons why youths in particular might be struggling: Schools have reported massive pandemic-induced learning loss and greater issues with disciplinary infractions. Math test scores and reading proficiency rates are in trouble across the United States. But it's possible that too much hay is being made of the happiness report, and that some of the problem lies with young adults' expectations. After all, it's the former Soviets that have seen massive gains in the happiness rankings—perhaps in part because their material conditions have drastically improved, but also because people appreciate the fact that prosperity and abundance are not certainties.

Copycat states: Earlier this week, Reason covered S.B. 4, the law that has not gone into effect yet but is being held up in court, which would allow Texas law enforcement to arrest those who've illegally crossed the southern border. On Tuesday, Iowa lawmakers passed a copycat piece of legislation that would make it a state crime for an illegal immigrant to enter Iowa after having been deported.

Now other states are toying with similar legislation. Louisiana, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Missouri are all considering similar bills, but the success of this strategy largely depends on what happens to the Texas law, the legality of which will most likely be weighed by the Supreme Court. Republican lawmakers in West Virginia, Mississippi, and Arizona have all attempted to pass similar laws but have faced opposition—like, in Arizona's case, a Democratic governor's veto—that thwarted their efforts.

Each state setting its own deportation policy seems unlikely to hold up legally, but that's not to say stunt bills won't work to curry favor with Republican voters and further embarrass the Biden administration, which has struggled to get the border influx under control.


Scenes from New York: More information may come out about this viral dispute between a property owner and some alleged squatters, but it's a pretty stunning example of what happens when a society fails to enforce property rights:

How can you have a functioning society if it fails to protect property rights (and makes up ludicrous concepts like "squatters' rights")? https://t.co/3lbc5cYGeI

— Liz Wolfe (@LizWolfeReason) March 20, 2024


QUICK HITS

  • Though roughly 200,000 people left Hong Kong from the middle of 2019 to 2022, they've been somewhat replaced by mainland Chinese working professionals flocking to the island, where they can have slightly more political freedom than they're accustomed to and fetch higher pay. "If China is a big ship, then Hong Kong is a lifeboat," Will Wu, a banker who moved from the mainland, told The New York Times. It's a good thing mainland Chinese feel this way, because most Hongkongers feel like the boat is taking on water.
  • "Today, the teen babysitter as we knew her, in pop culture and in reality, has all but disappeared." (From The Atlantic.)
  • Possible updates coming in Julian Assange's legal saga (which Reason has covered on Just Asking Questions):

NEWS: DoJ is considering allowing Julian Assange to plead guilty to a reduced charge of mishandling classified information, opening the possibility of a deal that would end a lengthy legal saga triggered by one of the biggest classified leaks in history https://t.co/7Z0DtjHvhG

— Dustin Volz (@dnvolz) March 20, 2024

  • Did the pandemic change our eating habits and expenditures in a lasting way? Signs seem to point toward yes:

Even with inflation adjustment, Americans are just spending way more on food than we did pre-pandemic — either eating more, buying more expensive stuff, or relying more on restaurants & delivery. pic.twitter.com/ehOqnoIpXB

— Matthew Yglesias (@mattyglesias) March 21, 2024

  • "The Swiss National Bank unexpectedly cut its key interest rate by 25 basis points, moving months ahead of global peers as policymakers try to prevent gains in the franc," reported Bloomberg. "The SNB's move foreshadows possible easing later this year by the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank, taking upward pressure off the franc and lessening the need for officials to resort to interventions that might further swell their large balance sheet."
  • Somali pirates are back.
  • Problems with forensics:

Yup, even fingerprints--used for 200 years--are far less reliable than the public imagines and by the time we get to bitemark analysis its all bs. https://t.co/ffPJn4apQK

— Alex Tabarrok ????️ (@ATabarrok) March 20, 2024

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Liz Wolfe is an associate editor at Reason.

HappinessPoliticsHousing PolicyImmigrationHuman ProgressUnited StatesReason Roundup
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  1. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    ...the U.S. failed to rank in the top 20 happiest countries.

    I guess the beatings will continue then.

    1. Quicktown Brix   1 year ago

      Imagine being arrested for taking your home back from squatters

      …the U.S. failed to rank in the top 20 happiest countries.

      Yep

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        At least we can aim for the happiest squatter cohort.

    2. JesseAz   1 year ago

      Oddly enough the correlation with wokism to depression is not insignificant. Teach everyone to be victims and have them riot equals unhappiness for some reason.

      1. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

        In honor of the 30th anniversary of the crow

        Victims, aren't we all

        https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=LMd01I6eoqY

    3. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      I've been skeptical of happiness surveys ever since one of them said Bhutan was the world's happiest nation.

      It's a nation where the King bans television and expelled Indians and Nepalese who had lived there for centuries. Obviously not a happy place for TV afficionados and Indians and Nepalese.

      And of course, you never hear about this over all the noise about "Palestinians."

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

        You will own nothing and be happy. Unless we kick you out. Then you'll live somewhere else, own nothing, and be happy

    4. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

      Everything Is So Terrible And Unfair!

    5. But SkyNet is a Private Company   1 year ago

      I’m pretty bummed about this

    6. MoreFreedom   1 year ago

      The ranking is for happiest countries for 30 and under folks.

      IMHO, they like their phones, and the phones aren’t a problem. It’s just the gaslighting, propaganda, and lack of actual teaching in our government and woke private schools, including telling our kids they’ll be dead soon from Global Warming and an uninhabitable planet. Would you be happy being told you’re going to die as a young adult in 10-20 years, while you’re spending time in government school, or day jail depending on your school. That plus the counseling/grooming to get hormone treatments without the parents' knowledge, and later they learn they can no longer have children.

  2. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Today's young people report feeling less supported by friends and family, less free to make life choices, more stressed and less satisfied with their living conditions...

    "Today's young people are reaping what they've been sowing."

    1. Krokko   1 year ago

      Less free to make life choices? Under 30? How many life choices have they had to make? Is it because they can't make a living based on whatever fun degree they spent (our) money on in college?

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        No, it's because they feel oppressed by the need to make a living and support themselves. (And pay off their student loans.)

        1. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

          they feel oppressed by the need to make a living and support themselves in the manner to which mommy & daddy's money and participant-trophy child-rearing style allowed them to become accustomed to.

          That is, slack parents gave their bratty kids everything except responsibilities, and now we have a large population of adult brats who have never been told "no" in their lives and think that money is free.

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

            Sounds like the Biden administration.

    2. Jerry B.   1 year ago

      Consider that today's young people are constantly told that they'll die due to climate change, or a mass shooting, or the latest pandemic, or that they are racist colonizers if they're not the right race, or they're bigots if they think that sex and gender aren't flexible, or if they believe they have agency to run their own lives.

      1. JesseAz   1 year ago

        We stopped teaching kids how to be adults. Everything is handed to them. They all want to be influences and tiktok stars. Surveys of college kids say they think they should make 150-200k out of college. None are taught hard work as it is racist. It is all leftist indoctrination.

      2. Ajsloss   1 year ago

        Also consider that most young people wouldn't know unhappiness if it was waiting in the parking lot to give them herpes.

        1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

          But enough about Lyingjeffy

          1. I…….. Fudd   1 year ago

            Jeffy doesn’t have to worry about herpes. Unless prepubescent children have it, and aren’t fast enough to escape his corpulent clutches.

      3. A Thinking Mind   1 year ago

        And young men are taught that complimenting a woman on her appearance is both sexist and sexual harassment, and young women are taught that men are all rapists-in-waiting. Nobody can have a casual and positive interaction with a stranger.

        Women like compliments. Men like giving attention to women, and they’ve been taught this whole natural system of relating to people is wrong.

        1. I…….. Fudd   1 year ago

          I’ve lost any desire to deal with the general public at all. Most people are either incredibly stupid or just unwilling to engage in any amount of critical thinking. Often both.

          This is another obvious democrat phenomenon.

      4. Fats of Fury   1 year ago

        20% of GenZ think they're gay

        https://www.axios.com/2022/02/17/lgbtq-generation-z-gallup

        5% think they're a different gender. This is all due to public school indoctrination. Maybe Mao had a point with going after teachers during the cultural revolution.

      5. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

        Consider that today’s young people are constantly told that they’ll die due to climate change, or a mass shooting, or the latest pandemic, or that they are racist colonizers if they’re not the right race, or they’re bigots if they think that sex and gender aren’t flexible, or if they believe they have agency to run their own lives.

        Think about it for even a second. Not only do they have to suffer this brainwashing from their teachers day after day, they are graded on their performance, guaranteeing that it gets reinforced by their highest achieving peers. Marxism = neurosis.

        1. mad.casual   1 year ago

          Marxism = neurosis.

          Not exactly. Neuroses don't necessarily afflict the people around the pathological individual.

    3. BYODB   1 year ago

      There's a strange sort of national ennui among the younger generations that I've observed. I think that people are generally not very happy in jobs with no tangible goals or ends.

      Say you get a job doing accounts payable or something similar. It pays ok, is pretty middle class for a lot of corporate positions, but it also never ends and you never feel any kind of accomplishment from it. You are literally a cog repeating the same process day after day that will never end.

      And those are the jobs most college graduates are looking at straight out of college. I did that kind of thing myself, and yeah it's pretty soul crushing and tedious. Pays decently enough for a low person on the totem, but hardly satisfying work either.

      1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   1 year ago

        That’s 90% of jobs

        95% before the internet

        98% in the WWII era

        1. BYODB   1 year ago

          A fair point, although I think part of the difference is that before the internet (or WW2) you didn't have to have a degree just to be a cog in the corporate machine and for those people it was a pretty good wage involving no debt.

          Today that is simply not the case.

          Boomers really thought sending all their kids to college would mean their kids would have the same opportunities college afforded them, but none of them paid attention to what happens when you have an oversupply of college educated people. Nor, I think, did they really pay attention to what their kids were choosing to do with their money (or government money).

          This is how you end up with people who have undergrad degrees making coffee at Starbucks for 5+ years. It's understandable they would be pissed and feel lied to by both society and their parents.

          Sure, they could have made better decisions themselves but at 18 what the fuck do they know? Nothing of substance, really, at least for most people that age.

      2. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

        It boils down, I think, to where they get their media consumption, which is mostly TikTok and Instagram shit that's more manipulative than even the flashy commercials of the 80s and 90s. Boomer academics who complained about the advertising and "false body imaging" of that era would have a stroke seeing Zoomer "influencers" and their pervasive use of image filters, promotion of "tweakments" like botox and fillers, and shilling for bullshit lifestyle products. Coupled with the social maladaption of progressive social movements and detached/indulgent parenting styles, and you have an environment designed to emotionally cripple kids.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

          And if we didn't know for absolute, no-doubt, 100% certain that this has been totally, positively incidental, we might think some nefarious purpose has deliberately ruined millions of young people.

          1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

            Tiktok is literally run by Marxists. Facebook and Google are doing their best to give them a run for their money.

      3. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

        Research has shown rather consistently that blue collar, especially trade jobs, have a higher work satisfaction than white collar. There's definitely a sense of accomplishment when you work with your hands. Yeah, you might be attaching a door to a frame every day, but at the end of the day, that frame drives out of the factory a brand new truck or car and you helped accomplish that. The Hollywood trope of the embittered, blue collar worker who resents everything in their old age is largely just that a trope.

  3. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Schools have reported massive pandemic-induced learning loss and greater issues with disciplinary infractions.

    Randi Weingarten and the CDC tried their best.

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

      If only they got another trillion dollars or so. Damn budget cuts.

    2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Yeah, but they were defeated by seditious types who demanded that schools reopen.

      1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

        COVID deniers ruined everything.

    3. Social Justice is neither   1 year ago

      And she would have gotten away with it if it weren't for those meddling kids?

  4. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

    Imagine being arrested for taking your home back from squatters.

    Imagine calling the police when a little at-home violence is sufficient?

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      What would Hillary do?

      1. Anomalous   1 year ago

        The squatters would commit mass "suicide."

        1. Vernon Depner   1 year ago

          You need to have an untraceable throw-down gun in those situations so you can establish self-defense.

          1. I…….. Fudd   1 year ago

            Or just pay a couple of Hell’s Angels to have a ‘chat’ with the squatters in the middle of the night.

    2. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      It isn't just maggot-infested Big Apple New York. Squatting is also happening in the rich Buckhead section of Atlanta, GA.

      It's like a scene from Dr Zhivago all over the nation:

      Dr Zhivago comes home
      https://youtu.be/qnpATXvwWrI?si=ANgL8vsYTtDulr83

      The private life is dead!
      https://youtu.be/4bB2bYeh0Qg?si=rkvvHtgjkDWwSC7L

    3. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

      This might be a different case, but I thought I read that the squatters were the ones to call the cops?

      1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

        The case you are thinking of, the owner called the cops who escorted the squatters out. The squatters came right back and when a locksmith arrived, they called the cops on the owner. She was arrested because there is a law against changing the locks during a tenancy dispute.

        The squatters couldn't produce a lease, but that is not proof to cops. The guy changing the locks was proof.

        Having tried to get my car back after getting illegally towed before, I can testify that cops won't lift a finger in face of irrefutable logic, but will take you to the ground in a heartbeat if they even think they have evidence. I know 2 people who spent at least an entire weekend in jail for arguing during a traffic stop.

    4. mad.casual   1 year ago

      At-home? Just wait until one of them goes for groceries, stuff them in a drum of phenol or phosphoric acid, and dump the drum the ditch by some out-of-the-way abandoned industrial park. They're squatters, so you know none of their family is going to come looking for them and after enough of them disappear, they'll just know to stay away.

      If anybody shows up asking any questions, just start quoting them some stuff from Al Tabarrok about how forensic evidence, from fingerprints to bite marks and DNA analysis are all bs.

  5. The Angry Hippopotamus   1 year ago

    Turns out living in a garbage country that doesn’t take care of its people

    Newsflash, it isn't the government's job to take care you or to force others through the force of guns/gov to take care of you.

    1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

      Newsflash, it isn’t the government’s job to take care you or to force others through the force of guns/gov to take care of you.

      Get a load of the guy that was born after the pandemic!

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        I bet he thinks all preschools should be feral, laissez-faire free markets.

        1. The Angry Hippopotamus   1 year ago

          Why, yes. Yes I do. The free market (if there were one) would sort it out.

          It also isn't an issue for the federal government. The list of the federal government's enumerated powers in Article I Section 8 makes no mention of education.

    2. Spiritus Mundi   1 year ago

      Moar welfare will make everybody happy.

  6. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    Should we stop making kids sad (actually clinically depressed and suicidal)? Sure. Phones might be a cause, but do you know what else causes grief? Liberal philosophy.

    Last year multiple sources reported on findings that while girls tend to have more trouble than boys, liberal kids had significantly more trouble than conservative kids. Specifically, liberal boys are worse off emotionally and mentally than conservative girls.

    So if we want to "save" kids, ban liberal indoctrination.

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      Who would've thought teaching a kid a bit of self-reliance would strengthen their mental well being?

      1. Randy Sax   1 year ago

        Everything is way too safe, way too structured, way too ordered and planned out. Let kids climb trees, fall down, scrape their knees. Stop tracking them 24/7 via GPS, stop putting so much expectation and pressure on them. "You have to get an A on this middle skool book report, you have to get into a good college"

        1. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

          And send them to work (not necessarily in the mines).

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

            Do tunnels count as mines? Asking for an oppressed Middle East resistance movement and their childish supporters in the US.

            1. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

              As long as you are resisting the genocide of the entire Arab race, I think its ok. But can we rename them freedom corridors or something less triggering than tunnels. Tunnels are used by fossil fuel murder machines.

    2. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      Don't ban any idea. Instead teach kids to think and question and analyze ideas and teach them that it's a fun exercise too!
      🙂
      😉

    3. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

      "Specifically, liberal boys are worse off emotionally and mentally than conservative girls."

      Your link fell off! Also, is this a REAL problem, or a REPORTED problem? Liberals are FAR more likely to be told (as they grow up) that there is NO shame in them seeking "mental health therapy", than conservatives, I would bet! To wit, I would add, just LOOK at how many sore-in-the-cunt cunt-sorevaturds on THESE PAGES (are ya LISTENING, UnEarthly Lizard Person?) try to invalidate the opinions AND FACTS of others by saying that they are "mentally ill"!!!

      For the record, I'm not much of a fan of "mental health therapy", since many of the shrinks and counselors aren't stellar specimens of sanity themselves. Trying to help people through "talk therapy" is ONE hell of a tough row to hoe, for various reasons. The skills required are no more easily book-learned than singing, swimming, drawing good free-hand, self-imagined artworks, or butt-loads of other things (skills).

      1. Quicktown Brix   1 year ago

        For the record, I’m not much of a fan of “mental health therapy”

        Low hanging fruit, SQRLSY.

        1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

          You mean like THIS guy? No thanks!

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nidal_Hasan

          I should be giving therapy to the likes of him, and SNOT vice versa!

          (Sad to say, evil is strongly entangled with being Perfect in One's Own Mind... Just like MANY of the commenters here! You can lead a piece of horse-shit to water, butt ya can NOT make it THINK, when all that shit wants to do, is to STINK!!!)

        2. I…….. Fudd   1 year ago

          It definitely has no connection to mental health at all. Best to just euthanize it. Ideally with gasoline and fire.

          1. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

            Hey Punk Boogers! HERE is your “fix”! Try shit, you might LIKE shit!!!

            https://rentahitman.com/ … If’n ye check ’em out & buy their service, ye will be… A Shitman hiring a hitman!!!

            If’n ye won’t help your own pathetic self, even when given a WIDE OPEN invitation, then WHY should ANYONE pity you? Punk Boogers, if your welfare check is too small to cover the hitman… You shitman you… Then take out a GoFundMe page already!!!

            A word to the wise, though... Nidal Hasan is in the fed-pen... So, ShitMan, your HitMan is gonna charge you a LOT extra to try and break through fed-pen security to go get him!

  7. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    ...Iowa lawmakers passed a copycat piece of legislation that would make it a state crime for an illegal immigrant to enter Iowa after having been deported.

    These poor border states need relief!

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      What do you call it when a whole bunch of states defy the federal government?

      1. Randy Sax   1 year ago

        Federalism

        1. I…….. Fudd   1 year ago

          If it isn’t in defiance of the federal government’s constitutionally enumerated powers, I would call it freedom.

      2. Ajsloss   1 year ago

        Northern Aggression?

      3. Vernon Depner   1 year ago

        1957?

      4. SQRLSY One   1 year ago

        "What do you call it when a whole bunch of states defy the federal government?"

        If they violate federal Government Almighty policies that agree with what I think, then I call all of the disobedience states "mentally ill"!!! If I agree with the disobedience states, instead, then I will call the federal Government Almighty "mentally ill"!!! THAT will fix shit ALL!!!

        THANK YOU SOOOO-sooo very much, UnEarthly Lizard Person, for Showing Us How Shit's Done!!!!

  8. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    How can you have a functioning society if it fails to protect property rights...

    Is New York claiming to be a functioning society?

    1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

      Well, they are getting ready to seize property from he who will remain nameless.

      1. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

        The ultimate kulak.

      2. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

        Trump should claim squatters rights!

        1. HorseConch   1 year ago

          He should convert them into migrant shelters before Fat Tish gets her greasy hands on them.

          1. Vernon Depner   1 year ago

            Brilliant.

          2. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

            Just so its hot Ukrainian refugees. For one he's got a brand to uphold. And two, he can say he does care about the Ukrainians.

            1. HorseConch   1 year ago

              Do you really want Biden to win? For all of Donald's strengths, not having a good time in a shelter full of hot Ukrainians doesn't seem to be one of them.

        2. I…….. Fudd   1 year ago

          Should Trump manage to get elected again, there should be a reckoning against democrats that would make Bane blow a load on his pants.

  9. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    Americans over 60 are some of the world’s happiest, while those under 30 are among the most miserable in the developed world.

    Wrapping them in bubble-wrap while they're growing up, and telling them that the world outside is a dark, scary place full of racists and misogynists destroying the planet through global warming probably didn't help.

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      This seems like an urban phenomenon. Rural kids are out fishing, hunting, ATV riding, horse riding, and yes, smoking-up in the woods.

      Free range the little fuckers once in awhile, and you get pretty good young adults.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        Read my comment above about the documented differences in mental illness between liberal and conservative kids.

        1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

          I did. The root cause (IMO) is teaching a kid problem solving skills (a conservative norm) versus teaching them victimhood or self-loathing (a liberal norm).

          It's not difficult.

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

            It may be difficult to undo.

            1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

              It may be difficult to undo.

              Many will realize what happened and make an effort to change, and hopefully raise their own kids with some self-confidence.

          2. Zeb   1 year ago

            I think that unstructured time just to play/fuck around is the most important thing for kids. Then you barely even have to teach problem solving skills. They just go out and create their own problems and figure out how to solve them.
            I always think one of the saddest things is when you see a kid who is older than like 2 go cry to mommy after having some minor injury. As a kid I would do everything I could to avoid having any injuries noticed so no one would interfere with my good time.

            1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

              Soccer field some years ago: Kid gets nailed and goes down. His mother ran onto the field, scooped him up, and ran to her car, and drove away. We never saw him again.

              I'd bet he spent his teen years playing video games, overweight, and never seeing a real girl naked. Moms like this create incels.

              1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

                Soccer field some years ago: Kid gets nailed and goes down.

                Flag football last year: kids run into each other and go down, one stays down. Mom edges to her seat, dad says, "don't you dare go out there", mom eventually runs onto field, dad mutters "what the fuck". (kid was obviously fine).

                1. I…….. Fudd   1 year ago

                  These are the rich liberal wine moms that watch Rich Liberal Wine Mom Story Hour on MSNBC.

                  1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

                    And also pay black grifters to help them admit their white guilt.

            2. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

              Reminds me of the time my oldest was about two. We were in Walmart in Anchorage and had let him pick out a candy bar. He didn't want to put it down on the conveyor belt to be scanned but I made him do it. As you can imagine he started crying (typical toddler behavior really). I told him he could stop throwing a fit or he wouldn't get the candy bar (until we got home but I didn't tell him that). The clerk was 'oh it's okay sir, he can have it'. I told her 'no, he can't, he needs to learn proper behavior'. She looked at me like I was some kind of monster. But, all of my kids teachers have always told us how well behaved and mannered our kids are and how happy and creative they are. Amazing how teaching them proper behavior is when they're young can go a long ways.

              1. Bill Dalasio   1 year ago

                Counterintuitively, always getting your way doesn't make for happiness. It isn't in the human make-up to have nothing to aim for or nothing to learn to have to deal without. There's a reason such people were traditionally called "spoiled". It not only makes them a lousy person. It also makes them an unhappy person.

                1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

                  As a biology major one of concepts we learned was that stress is actually necessary for a living organism. Stress is necessary for a strong, healthy individual.

                  1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

                    Most of us learn resiliency through challenging experiences. And some learn fragility through a lack of challenging experiences.

                2. Ajsloss   1 year ago

                  It isn’t in the human make-up to have nothing to aim for or nothing to learn to have to deal without.

                  Well, yeah. That's the reason why early versions of the Matrix failed.

                  1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

                    And why the Federation will tear itself apart in a bloody orgy of discontent. Like my old drill sergeant used to say 'I don't worry when my soldiers are bitching, I only start worrying when they stop bitching'.

              2. rbike   1 year ago

                When my son was about 5 we went to a nice restaurant with his grandfather. He got upset about something and started a fit before ordering. I took him out to the car and we both missed dinner. It is what responsible adults will do. My wife. Daughter and father in law had a nice meal and my son learned a lesson. Now this was rare for him but we did not put up with bad behavior. He is an adult now and doing well.

  10. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

    Looking back to the sixties will tell you dissatisfaction of youth is nothing new.

    1. The Margrave of Azilia   1 year ago

      Time to dig up that old Socrates quote that he didn't actually say.

  11. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Though roughly 200,000 people left Hong Kong from the middle of 2019 to 2022, they've been somewhat replaced by mainland Chinese working professionals flocking to the island...

    They're trying not to send their best and brightest.

  12. Ajsloss   1 year ago

    "Today, the teen babysitter as we knew her, in pop culture and in reality, has all but disappeared."

    Not on the websites I've seen.

    1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      The eighteen plus babysitter

      1. Ska   1 year ago

        Won't someone think of the step-sisters?

        1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

          Step-sister as the babysitter?

    2. Quicktown Brix   1 year ago

      Oof. I was gonna say they were all killed in horror movies, but I see you went with a different kind of video there.

  13. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    'More information may come out about this viral dispute between a property owner and some alleged squatters, but it's a pretty stunning example of what happens when a society fails to enforce property rights'

    But our betters told me that property rights are racist and colonizing, at least when the property is "owned" by the wrong sorts of people, and more deserving (oppressed) victims need it.

    Hmm, this sounds kinda like what they told me about speech rights.

  14. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Today, the teen babysitter as we knew her, in pop culture and in reality, has all but disappeared.

    Replaced by a they?

    1. Anomalous   1 year ago

      Would you let a they/them babysit your kids?

      1. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

        The more the merrier!

  15. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    DoJ is considering allowing Julian Assange to plead guilty to a reduced charge of mishandling classified information...

    People who took no oath to handle classified information can do that?

    1. Stuck in California   1 year ago

      yeah, I can get prosecuting Bradley Manning. He was enlisted, took an oath, was supposed to safeguard the information, and deliberately leaked it...

      Assange was not an American, took no oath, etc.

      I don't like the guy, personally. I don't think he was a journalist, per se. I don't see him as any sort of heroic figure. He was just on the "hur durr fuck America amiright" bandwagon under the guise of free information. But, he was not a US citizen, not subject to US laws, and didn't do the stealing. So suck it the fuck up and move on, because spending decades persecuting a foreign national from a nation we are NOT at war with, for publishing information someone else stole, is a bad thing.

      If some kid leaves your hose running in the street, another kid later comes by and takes a drink, you don't accuse the second kid of stealing your water.

  16. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Did the pandemic change our eating habits and expenditures in a lasting way?

    Uber Eats was behind the Kung Flu all along!!!

  17. damikesc   1 year ago

    "further embarrass the Biden administration, which has struggled to get the border influx under control."

    It is not an inability.

    Biden does not WANT it "under control".

    More census reapportionment for blue states is the goal. Also, eventual naturalization and voting rights for people he is fairly certain will vote Dem for years to come.

    1. Spiritus Mundi   1 year ago

      Tomato Tomahto. Liberals always act with good intentions.

    2. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

      Do the cartels give the big man a cut?

      1. Vernon Depner   1 year ago

        They probably just tell him he'll find his family eviscerated and hanging from a bridge if he doesn't cooperate.

  18. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    The Swiss National Bank unexpectedly cut its key interest rate by 25 basis points...

    THEY CAN DO THAT?

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Do they focus on cuckoo clock prices?

      1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

        Chocolate futures.

        1. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

          And Swiss Cheese derivatives.
          🙂
          😉

  19. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Somali pirates are back.

    They saw all the sympathy the Houthis got.

    1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

      Unfortunately for them, the Houthis are the Captain now.

    2. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      They never really left.

  20. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Yup, even fingerprints--used for 200 years--are far less reliable than the public imagines and by the time we get to bitemark analysis its all bs.

    My next jury duty might be a lot more fun now.

    1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

      Well, after all, DNA can't even tell a man from a woman any more, so - - - - - - - - -

    2. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      Well, even when unreliable, fingerprints and DNA still beat: "If she weighs the same as a duck, she's made of wood, and therefore...A WITCH!!!"
      🙂
      😉
      Or the more modern, inverted version of #BelieveAllWomen.

    3. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

      Fingerprints predate homo sapiens, if they mean fingerprint technology, it's hardly been 200 years. Scotland Yard is largely credited with having the first fingerprint investigation bureau and that wasn't formed until the late 19th century.

  21. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

    Today, the teen babysitter as we knew her, in pop culture and in reality, has all but disappeared.

    Would you trust todays pierced and tattooed purple haired teen with your kid?

    1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

      In all states it's illegal for anyone under 18 to get tattoos. Some allow them with parental consent.

      1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

        Some allow them with parental consent.

        Those aren't parents.

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

        It’s illegal for kids under 18 to drink beer, therefore teen drinking doesn’t exist.

      3. damikesc   1 year ago

        ....but drugs to stop puberty are OK.

        Our "elites" are fucking clowns.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

          So if kids want to get drunk they just have to identify as winos?

      4. Zeb   1 year ago

        That's why we did our own as teens.

      5. R Mac   1 year ago

        Poor sarc.

    2. Zeb   1 year ago

      If I knew them and had some reason to trust them, why not? Not everyone engaging in current fashion trends is a retard. Not quite, anyway.

    3. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

      Yes based on the info provided.

    4. BYODB   1 year ago

      I don't see an issue with it as long as I know them. I've had outlandish hair colors and piercings in the past, and that was during the same period of time I was going to evangelical Baptist churches.

      Maybe don't judge a book by the cover, although I'll admit with some people (say, facial tattoos) I tend to prejudge them just because that's such an incredibly retarded thing to do to yourself.

  22. JesseAz   1 year ago

    Good thing those hard working illegal immigrants would never take advantage if squatting.


    Collin Rugg
    @CollinRugg
    NEW: TikToker is going viral by telling illegal immigrants how to "invade" homes in America thanks to progressive squatting laws
    .
    Remarkable.

    "We can invade a house in the USA, what do you think about this new law?" a video from one TikTok user read.
    .
    The man said he has African friends who have successfully taken over 7 homes thanks to squatting laws.
    .
    "My African friends have told me that they have already taken about 7 homes."
    VIDEO

    https://twitter.com/CollinRugg/status/1770486545214251441

    1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

      You are aware that they learned that from white Americans, right?

      1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

        White Americans are the source of all evil.

        1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

          I thought leftists and immigrants were the source of all evil. That's 81 million who voted for Biden, and 10.5 million illegals. That makes 91.5 million in need of a Final Solution to save us from evil.

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

            Are you really this dumb (and this disingenuous)?

            1. JesseAz   1 year ago

              Yes. He pushes every narrative and has fully adopted the everyone on the right is hitler and wants to kill all migrants.

            2. sarcasmic   1 year ago

              There are folks in these here comments who would pay money to be a guard.

              1. JesseAz   1 year ago

                Cite?

          2. JesseAz   1 year ago

            Sarc, this is projection. You just issued a statement blaming white people. Then claim others are doing the opposite. This is literal projection.

            Bookmarked for next time you claim you come here for honest discussion.

            1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

              You mean bookmarked for the next time you come here to disrupt honest discussion, which would be every time you come here.

              1. JesseAz   1 year ago

                Again. This is projection. Please take note.

                I can add hypocrisy to it as well if you want me to.

                1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

                  Except for the hundreds of times I’ve told you to fuck off because I’m trying to have an actual conversation, and you respond by leaving a dozen dickhead replies to all my posts, effectively ending the conversation by making it nearly impossible to follow.

                  1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

                    Everything Is So Terrible And Unfair!

              2. VinniUSMC   1 year ago

                It's impossible to disrupt honest discussion when the person being disrupted is an alcoholic Leftist shitstain incapable of either honesty or discussion. Yes sarc, I am talking about you. Wouldn't want you to spend too long trying to figure that out.

        2. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

          Dude is totally not a democrat.

      2. JesseAz   1 year ago

        I'm sure you have your citation on how to always blame white people.

        1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

          That was in response to you obsessing about them being illegals from Africa.

          1. JesseAz   1 year ago

            I quoted a tweet. Where is the obsession? It is literally from a video they themselves posted.

            You go full retard earlier and earlier lately.

            Now. Do you have the citation for your claim white people told them how to do this or not.

            1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

              Do you have the citation for your claim white people told them how to do this or not.

              Who does the most squatting in this country? Blacks? Hispanics? Asians? No, white people. Who do you see in the news squatting in houses? Blacks? Hispanics? Asians? No, white people. Now apply some common sense. I know it’s hard because you don’t have any, but try to pretend.

              1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

                Racist!

              2. JesseAz   1 year ago

                So you dont have a citation. Just a dem like narrative. Got it.

            2. sarcasmic   1 year ago

              Also, I didn’t say “told”. That’s an example of one of your bad faith arguments where you infer something absurd and then claim it's what I actually said. No, I said “learned from.” There are plenty of ways to learn other than being told.

              1. JesseAz   1 year ago

                What exactly do you think learned from means retard?

      3. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

        Yes, they learned to hate white Americans from white Americans like you.

        Duh.

    2. Anomalous   1 year ago

      The solution to the squatter problem is to make them disappear.

      1. Ska   1 year ago

        I see a potential opportunity in the shitbag rousting industry.

        1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

          It is already a business sector - - - -

          https://notthebee.com/article/a-team-of-squatter-hunters-in-california-is-using-the-squatting-laws-to-reacquire-property-for-homeowners

          1. VinniUSMC   1 year ago

            Squatter Squad for southern California.

            https://squattersquad.co/

  23. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

    makes up ludicrous concepts like "squatters' rights")

    Not a ludicrous concept, but it is mis-applied. Has its roots in English commonlaw (and hell the Romans had concept of it) so it isn't new fangled progressive bs. In America specifically, it protected settlers (to a degree) from Washington fat cats looking to remove people who build homes and farmed/mined unsettled lands. Now in our more modern era, it has morphed into bullshit but the foundational concept isn't silly.

    1. chemjeff radical individualist   1 year ago

      Yes, excellent point. The whole basis of property rights stems from the Lockean idea of "mixing land with labour" - once a person has taken unowned and unclaimed land and improved it in some way, that land becomes that person's property by virtue of the person's investment of labor. So these squatters may actually have rights in a Lockean sense depending on whether the land/property was functionally abandoned or not, and whether those squatters mixed their labor with the property sufficiently enough (again in a Lockean sense) to claim some measure of property rights over it.

      1. sarcasmic   1 year ago
        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Learn from this post.

          1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

            I'm sure you'll spin an entire narrative around what I didn't say.

            1. JesseAz   1 year ago

              Didn't you get embarrassed enough yesterday trying this idiocy when I posted your exact posts word for word?

              Just how strong is your self delusion and denial. Would you say pathalogical?

              1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

                You mean when you post comments out of context without a link, infer something totally absurd, and claim your inference is what I actually said? No, that doesn't embarrass me. Not at all. If you were an honest person with a sense of shame it would embarrass you, but alas that's not the case.

                1. JesseAz   1 year ago

                  You can just say you’re pathalogical. It is much shorter. Don’t have to try to keep inventing idiotic narratives to justify your actions.

      2. damikesc   1 year ago

        No, they do not.

        Your, uh, "radical individualism" is failing you.

        1. Sevo   1 year ago

          His "bootlicking of powers" has never let him down.

        2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

          radical collectivism

      3. sarcasmic   1 year ago

        So these squatters may actually have rights in a Lockean sense depending on whether the land/property was functionally abandoned or not, and whether those squatters mixed their labor with the property sufficiently enough (again in a Lockean sense) to claim some measure of property rights over it.

        Bullshit. They’re trespassers. Empty doesn’t mean abandoned, and most squatters destroy the property.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

          Exactly. It's not theirs, so they have no respect nor incentive to take care of it. They just treat it like a fucking rat's nest and move on to the next house.

          1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

            I saw one recently in the Daily Mail where the owner was arrested for changing the locks on her house while the squatter was out picking up supplies for renovations. But that is the rare exception. The renovations part, not the arrest.

        2. VinniUSMC   1 year ago

          Bullshit. They’re trespassers. Empty doesn’t mean abandoned, and most squatters destroy the property.

          Sarcasmic has a broken clock moment! Well, credit where it's due. Or is it a fake sarcasmic?

        3. chemjeff radical individualist   1 year ago

          Probably. But you are right, empty doesn't mean abandoned. I'm referring to genuinely abandoned property. How long does property have to be empty in order to be considered abandoned?

          Again I'm speaking in the abstract, not about any specific case.

          1. See Double You   1 year ago

            In Montana, a person can successfully claim adverse possession (the legal term for "squatter's rights") of real property if his occupancy is actual, exclusive, visible, hostile, and continuous for a period of five years, and the person has to have paid the property taxes during that 5-year period.

      4. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

        Spoken like a person who doesn’t own anything.

        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Not even a few food eating records?

          1. HorseConch   1 year ago

            Probably not. He seems like the type that's too lazy to finish the competition.

      5. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

        The squatter's rights used to come into play after 10 years. The law in New York was changed to 30 days, while bringing a case to court by the owner can take 20 months.

        1. chemjeff radical individualist   1 year ago

          Thirty days doesn't seem long enough IMO. Not sure if 10 years is too long or not. The point is, not every example of "squatting" is a violation of property rights, when viewed from a Lockean perspective.

      6. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

        My guess is less than 0% actually have a legitimate case. If they were legitimate, than their wouldn't be complaints from title holders who never abandoned the property. And the squatters would be able to produce a legal tenant agreement.

        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Since rental agreements are contracts, one would think it would be easy to require some form of verification of authorization to rent or you hold the title. Yet often these claimants just use fake names as the renter to give prove of rental agreements. Should be very easy for a cop to call the supposed person who is renting the property legally. If not legally, go after them.

      7. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

        When the North American Continent had vast swaths of unoccupied land, "Squatter's rights" made sense, but not in a thoroughly mixed-with-labor mansion in Buckhead!

        Sorry, faux "Individualist".

        And, no, bears don't have a right to squat in my vehicle trunk either!
        🙂
        😉

      8. R Mac   1 year ago

        Hey Lying Jeffy, still waiting on your response if Hunter Biden should go to jail for refusing to show up to a Congressional hearing?

        1. chemjeff radical individualist   1 year ago

          Still trolling
          0/10

          1. R Mac   1 year ago

            No it’s a legitimate question after you commented on Navarro going to prison for the same thing.

    2. Minadin   1 year ago

      "How can you have a functioning society if it fails to protect property rights (and makes up ludicrous concepts like "squatters' rights")?"

      As SaGN said - it's been recently perverted by progressives, but if you look at it as originally intended, it's not a terrible idea.

      Up until the recent progressive stupidity, (i.e. past decade or less), squatters rights needed to be established over many years, typically 7 - 10, depending on the state. It's a concept dating back to English common law that enshrines the idea that it's generally bad practice to force abandoned property to go unused and unimproved.

      Allowing people who break into your house pretend to live there after no time at all and giving them the full protections a tenant with a contractual lease is so far away from the original concept that it's not even the same thing. This is just rent theft, legalized.

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

        The other issue with this is that these assholes will forge lease documents, and because of the fucking "squatter's rights" laws, it takes forever for the court to confirm that and get an actual eviction action in place.

        Bottom line--if someone barges into your house with a "lease," treat them as an invader and put them down.

        1. HorseConch   1 year ago

          Notice how the state only tends to speed court procedings to exert their power. They don't expedite it to relenquish it.

    3. Zeb   1 year ago

      I agree, it's not a completely absurd concept. But it's insane to apply it to what is basically a burglar who didn't get caught right away.

      1. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

        Couldn't agree more.

      2. sarcasmic   1 year ago

        Where's the legal line between a trespasser and a squatter?

        1. Dillinger   1 year ago

          who elected or appointed the judge?

          1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

            I'm serious. How many wouldbe squatters are caught while still trespassers? What's the line?

            1. Dillinger   1 year ago

              when the law was "decades of unceasing use" probably most of them but New York destroyed the line ... and the concept of trespass

              1. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

                I wonder why the time period was reduced from years to 30 days.

                Who came up with the idea in the first place?

                1. Dillinger   1 year ago

                  seems right up Leticia James' alley

                2. Zeb   1 year ago

                  I don't know when, but I bet it was something to do with renters' rights and evil landlords and was pitched as a way to prevent arbitrary and unfair evictions.

        2. Minadin   1 year ago

          Typically, under standard squatting law, if someone takes adverse possession of a property, the rightful owner has 7-10 years (depending on the state) to kick them out at any time, or even temporarily occupy the property at any time, or make a single improvement, to show that the property is not abandoned and that the owner is not indifferent, and the squatter doesn't have any right to resist that action.

    4. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

      Called adverse possession in real estate law usually to gain legal title to an adjoining property or a portion thereof. The possession must be "open and notorious" and the term varies by state. 20 years in IL if memory serves. Old common law stuff but still enforceable. This obviously does not apply to squatters who hide out in a vacant house for 6 months and produce a phony lease document if challenged. This is trespassing, fraud and grand theft. The states really need to clean up their statutes to end this shit while leaving legitimate adverse possession in place.

      1. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

        In common law, the burden of proving adverse possession falls upon the adverse possesser.

    5. Vernon Depner   1 year ago

      In ancient times, it was far more common than today for land owners to simply disappear, due to war, famine, plague, or other calamities. Then, it made sense to make it easy for new tenants to take over abandoned properties.

  24. JesseAz   1 year ago

    Future of woke medicine.

    ***

    The United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), a quasi-governmental nonprofit that runs American transplant centers, enacted a significant policy change. The network compiles the national waitlist for kidney transplants and consults a formula that helps determine which candidates it will prioritize. Before 2020, the network used a formula that measured serum creatinine concentrations to assess a patient’s estimated glomerular filtration rate—the best-known measure of whether a patient has chronic kidney disease. Since black patients typically have higher serum creatinine concentrations than nonblacks with the same kidney function, the formula had applied an adjustment for black patients to ensure a more precise GFR estimate.

    Activists in the wake of George Floyd’s death claimed that the formula’s adjustment was racist. This prompted the National Kidney Foundation and the American Society of Nephrology to create a task force to “reassess inclusion of race in the estimation of glomerular filtration rate.” The task force decided to nix the racial adjustment and set to work choosing a new formula that would not take race into account, which it released in 2021.

    In December 2022, the board of UNOS’s transplant system issued a directive requiring all transplant centers to apply retroactively the new formula to determine black patients’ spots on the national waitlist. Last December, the network announced the results of its application of the new formula. Removing the racial adjustments had moved the waitlist’s more than 6,100 black patients up by an average of 1.7 years, with just over 500 receiving a transplant. Of course, this meant that some nonblack patients were correspondingly pushed back in line.

    https://www.city-journal.org/article/equity-over-accuracy-in-kidney-care

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      Simple fix for a racist policy.

      Voluntary removal from the donor list.

      1. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

        A long game fix to defeat "race"-hustling organ pimps is vat-grown organs made from stem cells cheaply available for all! No more lines of either donors or recipients! It'll be a great day when we can all have our own personal "body shops" of spare parts!

    2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Oh, great. Now we will hear rants about kidney reparations.

      1. Its_Not_Inevitable   1 year ago

        "You can pry my kidney from my cold dead hands!"

        1. rbike   1 year ago

          Pig kidney successfully implanted today. Into some black guy. Good news for everyone unless you are a pig.

  25. JesseAz   1 year ago

    DoJ promises to ignore USSC case regarding false charges if Jan 6th prisoners. Will maintain prison lengths despite the charges being the longest charged to most people.

    https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/bidens-doj-says-jan-6-defendants-may-still-face-heightened-sentences-despite

    1. damikesc   1 year ago

      ...BuT TrUmP DoEsN't ReSpEcT tHe CoNsTiTuTiOn!

      1. JesseAz   1 year ago

        As long as Biden says he recognizes the constitution his actions don't matter. - sarcasmic

    2. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

      I doubt the DOJ gets the final say regardless of what they say.

      I have noticed a trend of people believing the prosecutor is superior to the judge. I see articles about how judge Cannon should be removed for not siding with the prosecutor and perhaps worse, calls to dismiss the judge for ruling for the defendant.

  26. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

    Americans are just spending way more on food than we did pre-pandemic

    Cheesy-Poof Index sets new records every week. Demand is higher than ever.

    1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

      Is spittin tobaccy a food?

    2. JesseAz   1 year ago

      I'm sure inflation adjusted wages dropping under Biden has nothing to do with it. Also importing in more consumers and giving them money to buy food has no effect on prices. Also all those new regulations the Biden WH endorses has no effect.

    3. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

      LOL, you still running with this claim that inflation isn't happening?

      1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

        No, but it is caused by record demand. The economy is too hot. The Fed couldn't even cause a recession to cool it off.

        1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

          Inflation is profit!

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

            Tax it!

        2. JesseAz   1 year ago

          I thought you and dems were saying it was supply chain issues still. Which is it?

          Seeing as even CNN has had articles on people buying less groceries due to rising costs, demand is down.

        3. Sevo   1 year ago

          turd, the TDS-addled ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
          If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
          turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

    4. Sevo   1 year ago

      turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
      If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
      turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

  27. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

    Somali pirates are back.

    Just so they aren't dressed in large novelty shoes and red noses, I can't suffer another evil clown panic.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      How about in Pride rainbow wigs and seat-less chaps?

  28. chemjeff radical individualist   1 year ago

    Did the pandemic change our eating habits and expenditures in a lasting way? Signs seem to point toward yes:

    The chart you cited doesn't make this case. If you look at the overall trendline from ca. 2011 or so, it is about a straight line upwards up to today. There was a disruption due to the pandemic but the trend seems to have reverted back to the pre-pandemic baseline.

    Frankly I blame the lack of basic cooking skills. I am perpetually shocked by people who don't know how to do basic cooking things beyond preparing spaghetti or mac and cheese (from a box, of course). Asking them to prepare even something not too complicated like lasagna is like asking them to prepare lobster thermidore or something.

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

      ""Frankly I blame the lack of basic cooking skills.""

      The "give me" generation isn't interested in doing it themselves.

      Just order with the app and put it on a credit card. Then complain about the credit card balance.

  29. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    'Though roughly 200,000 people left Hong Kong from the middle of 2019 to 2022, they've been somewhat replaced by mainland Chinese working professionals flocking to the island, where they can have slightly more political freedom than they're accustomed to and fetch higher pay.'

    Good thing we don't have that problem.

  30. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    "Today, the teen babysitter as we knew her, in pop culture and in reality, has all but disappeared."

    Probably due to tall, husky trans-sitters showing up to watch the kids. What horny suburban dad wants to fantasize about a sitter who is taller and has a beard (among other things).

    1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

      Pluggo might.

      1. Vernon Depner   1 year ago

        He probably IS a baby sitter.

  31. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    If Assange takes the deal, how long before he commits "suicide" in his special cell that has absolutely, positively no working video cameras.

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

      IDK, what else does he know that he needs to be permanently shut up? Silence is the usual reason for "suicide".

      Government would probably rather send him to Gitmo and let him suffer for his "crimes".

  32. Dan S.   1 year ago

    "As many traditional, tangible sources of suffering disappear, the expectation that we should feel good all the time increases; when we don't, we suddenly start talking in psychiatric terms, even though stress and sadness are part of a good life," wrote Johan Norberg for Reason last year.

    Exactly so. Nobody is happy all the time, nor should they expect to be. Everyone gets depressed, anxious, or just restless sometimes, and being told that there is something "wrong" with that will only make it worse. Some may see that as ironic, but it shouldn't surprise anyone. Remember, people have the right to pursue happiness, by making choices in life which "to them shall seem most likely to effect" it, but not necessarily to achieve it.

  33. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    'Did the pandemic change our eating habits and expenditures in a lasting way?'

    Sure. Did we satisfy WEF goals, and meet their targets for a sustainable peasant population? Hardly. Stay tuned for pandemic 2.0.

  34. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

    Mark ‘High-Pitch Spermy Voice’ Levin cries because billionaires won’t loan deadbeat $454 million:

    Fox Host Gets Hilarious Reminder After Asking Why Right-Wing Billionaires Won’t Give Trump Money
    After Mark Levin asked why ‘Republican multi-billionaires’ won’t loan Donald Trump the money he needs to secure the bond in his civil fraud case, people were happy to enlighten him.

    https://secondnexus.com/mark-levin-billionaires-trump-bond

    1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

      Fox’s Gasparino Says Billionaires Aren’t Helping Trump Post Massive Bond Because ‘Donald Doesn’t Have a Great Record at Paying Back’ Loans

      https://www.mediaite.com/tv/foxs-gasparino-says-billionaires-arent-helping-trump-post-massive-bond-because-donald-doesnt-have-a-great-record-at-paying-back-loans/

      Con Man Deadbeat

      1. JesseAz   1 year ago

        This is strange since the case you are applauding he literally paid back all his loans.

        Fascism is your ideology.

        1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

          literally paid back all his loans.

          Bullshit. Hasn't defaulted =/= "paid back". Donnie is leveraged to the hilt.

          Warren Buffett Exposed The Reason For Trump's Failed Business Ventures Decades Before The Fraud Case — 'Where Did Donald Trump Go Wrong? The Big Problem With Donald Trump Was He Never Went Right'
          .
          “He was terrific at borrowing money. If you look at his assets and what he paid for them and what he borrowed to get them, there was never any real equity there,” Buffett said, highlighting the precarious financial foundation on which Trump built his empire.

          https://finance.yahoo.com/news/warren-buffett-exposed-reason-trumps-174241835.html

          Buffett - financial genius
          Trump - financial con man

          1. JesseAz   1 year ago

            The banks literally testified all loans were repaid. How dumb are you shrike?

            1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

              Why can't the Con Man post bond?

              1. JesseAz   1 year ago

                Which NY business is going to bond properties under threat of an AG going after property valuations dumdum?

                1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

                  Donnie is a fucking deadbeat.

                  He is going to drain the RNC if he can.

                  1. Sevo   1 year ago

                    turd certainly is dishonest, but he’s got a heaping helping of stupid to go with his dishonesty. Stupid, lying, despicable steaming pile of lefty shit and proud of it!

                  2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

                    Literally fascist. Making excuses for political prosecutions.

              2. Sevo   1 year ago

                Why can't turd fuck off and die?

          2. Sevo   1 year ago

            turd lies. That's not a surprise to anyone who reads his constant stream of bullshit.
            But it's becoming obvious that as Misek is too stupid to understand the concepts of "evidence" or "relevance", the concept of "honesty" is simply beyond turd's ken

          3. I, Woodchipper   1 year ago

            imagine caring about some politician's finances

      2. Sevo   1 year ago

        The TDS-addled turd lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
        If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
        turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

    2. Sevo   1 year ago

      turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
      If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
      turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a TDS-addled lying pile of lefty shit.

  35. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

    How can you have a functioning society if it fails to protect property rights (and makes up ludicrous concepts like “squatters’ rights”)?

    It’s important to note that this isn’t anything new–you can find news clips on YouTube about problems with squatters going back a decade.

    However, one of the dumb side effects of HGTV becoming more popular in the late 2000s-2010s was the idea that you needed to buy homes for the purpose of passive income–buy up a few houses, become a landlord or do short-term rentals like AirBnB, and make bank to buy even more homes, etc. All of which was enabled by over a decade of rock-bottom interest rates.

    The pandemic fucked up that dynamic by liberal governments suspending rental requirements and evictions during the height of it, and later extending late periods before you could actually evict people for months on end. So inevitably, lefties and social parasites decided that rent was an oppressive construct and housing was a “right” that needed to be free. Combine that with a mass flood of illegal immigrants and housing costs taking a rocket ride across the country, and you get an upsurge in squatter problems.

    Bottom line? Buy a house to live in it, or you’re asking for trouble.

    1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

      Just make sure someone is always at home.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        And armed.

      2. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

        Populate your home with AI sexdolls armed like Robocop and creep the squatters out!
        🙂
        😉

    2. Illocust   1 year ago

      With inflation being a permanent thing, and stock markets being overblown. Passive income is incredibly important for a steady retirement. The fact that liberals are putting in place laws that fuck up a good deal for renters and landlords, doesn't say much about the original idea, except don't try it in a liberal market.

    3. Chaino   1 year ago

      Actually, California has been leading the way on screwing over property owners for much longer.

      Pacific Heights came out in 1990. The basis for this horror film is a prospective tenant moving in to an apartment without a lease. Once in, he can only be removed by taking him to court because of the state and city’s tenant protection laws.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Heights_(film)

      1. Vernon Depner   1 year ago

        I tell people to NEVER let anyone stay overnight at your house for more than one night without a written lease agreement. That includes your family members and significant other.

    4. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

      Yeah I was selling real estate back in HGTV hysteria days. Everybody thought they could buy a foreclosure, do some aesthetic improvements and flip it for huge profits. This mindset continued even as market was crashing. More foreclosures more flips right? I flipped a few but saw the writing on the wall and got out before the big crash. At the time I was warning buyers that the good times were probably over but some persisted and got badly burned. Yeah buy a house live in it and pay it off. You might make money when your done but don't count on it.

  36. Randy Sax   1 year ago

    Any bets on when the paywall is gonna kill most of us off? Been a couple weeks now.

    1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

      March 30th.

    2. creech   1 year ago

      It has already killed off the "make $40 per hour at home" spammers. Maybe that was enough and they will leave the rest of the non-payers alone?

      1. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

        I hadn't bothered to notice, but now that you mention it, you're right!

        That's great, although I did have fun giving snarky replies to them.
        🙂
        😉

    3. Dillinger   1 year ago

      I've managed the separation anxiety so far.

  37. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

    "But it's worth mulling the gains we've made."

    There are many, many things wrong with both this analysis and the "poll" it's based upon. First of all, fewer people reporting that they feel as if they are doing well tells us nothing about how they are actually doing. Next, comparing how many people report that they are doing well now with how many people reported that they feel they were doing well in the past; or with people in other countries; is like comparing apples with oranges. Again, people rate their feelings based on how they feel they OUGHT to be doing. Finally, polls are notoriously unreliable and critically sensitive to wording and social context. Even if this is meaningful, who's to say that it isn't actually GOOD for people to be dissatisfied with their lives and social network? When my generation was growing up it was popular for parents to say, "I want to make things easier for my kids than it was when I was growing up," and there is some support for the notion that maybe we had it TOO easy and got spoiled as a result.

  38. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

    I don’t usually concern myself over these sort of international polls, as the questions tend to skew to a particular bias. E.g., some of the assessments in this one:

    Satisfied with the public transportation system in your city/area
    Satisfied with the roads and highways in your city/area
    Satisfied with the quality of air in your city/area
    Satisfied with the quality of water in your city/area
    Satisfied with the availability of affordable housing in your city/area
    Satisfied with the education system/schools in your city/area
    Satisfied with the quality healthcare in your city/area
    Satisfied with opportunities to meet people and make friends in your city/area
    Satisfied with the city/area where you live
    Satisfied with your standard of living (things you can buy and do)

    Note the bias toward public transportation (I have zero public transportation availability where I live) and “affordable housing” (I can afford my housing).

    1. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

      Bingo! Even the most impartial of poll question designers unconsciously has an outcome in mind when formulating each question. The implicit assumption behind the wording here is that the public provides all good things and if you don't like the outcome your nation sucks and so does your life.

      1. Sevo   1 year ago

        Self-reported, subjective polls can and should be ignored; NWS.

    2. Zeb   1 year ago

      Hmm, yeah, it's not exactly clear that those are the right metrics for measuring happiness. Satisfaction with material aspects of life helps, but there's a lot more to happiness, and there's a lot that people who are good at being happy can do without.

      1. Medulla Oblongata   1 year ago

        Well, TBF, those are just a few of the cited questions. I picked the low-hanging fruit in this case. This whole thing is a meta study of different sources and finding the actual poll questions for each of the sources takes a lot of effort--more than I'm willing to put in for a Reason comment.

      2. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

        Several years back it was claimed that the US had horrible health care. When you dug into the metrics they were counting things like what % of patients had a visit summary printed. It was more aligned with following the guidelines of population health mandates like Meaningful Use, than actual health outcomes. You could save the life of everyone that came through your door, but if you didn't print the right document to give when the patient leaves it's a disaster. Worse healthcare ever.

    3. Dillinger   1 year ago

      oh it's not a poll to measure happiness ...

  39. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    A hundred years ago I was a kid who enjoyed Mad Magazine. (I wonder if that is a useful predictor of some kind.) Anyway, I remember a bit where a hippy was arguing with an establishment type about how to rile up the masses for revolution. The old normy pointed out that the young people had life better than ever before. The hippy then replied that he would just have to convince his future comrades just how bad things were.

    Like Marxists in general 60 years ago, we should have believed them.

    1. Dillinger   1 year ago

      >>(I wonder if that is a useful predictor of some kind.)

      my background on every device is a still from the Simpsons scene with Alfred E. Neuman

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjlDDZkGONs

    2. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      I like the one where the Hippie was about to sing a song about something like how The Man's factories and power plants were despoiling Mother Nature...and he ends by saying: "Just as soon as I plug in my factort-made electric guitar!"
      🙂
      😉
      The best interview 60 Minutes ever did was with the editors of MAD Magazine!. Laugh-a-minute stuff!
      https://youtu.be/vuIolzTpgfI?si=bqcedcoR08bBraNL
      🙂
      😉

  40. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

    "S.B. 4, the law ... which would allow Texas law enforcement to arrest those who've illegally crossed the southern border."

    This is not a genuine policy debate based upon legitimate disagreement over issues, but just another battle front in the escalating culture wars. This law would be completely gutted by the simple act of Congress legalizing entry into the United States of America. Since Congress has abdicated its responsibility to come to terms with the massive failure of U.S. border policy - not to mention the massive failure of their regulatory, welfare and labor policies - states are understandably pushing back in the only way they can: by violating Federal edicts and challenging the national government in court. Although understandable, it is clearly not good for civil stability or peace!

    1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

      So just roll over and do whatever the federal government wants for the sake of “peace”?

      1. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

        What didn't you understand about "understandably pushing back?" My point was that the way they are pushing back does nothing to correct the problem that they're pushing back over! In fact, arresting all of the people they can find who crossed the border without permission will make things worse, not better. It's a dramatic way to make a point, but it's still the WRONG way to go about it.

  41. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>it's Americans 30 and under who are responsible for bringing the average down

    I don't get how this isn't the best day to be alive so far what's wrong with the utes?

    1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

      FFS, they have apps that will get them laid! What the fuck do they have to be upset about?!

      1. Dillinger   1 year ago

        I'd be the guy who gets murdered.

        1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

          We all died at least 3 times in the last few years. One more wouldn’t be a big deal.

    2. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

      Well, one clue might be the point in the article about a thirty-year-old living in mom and dad's basement who thinks his parents and society don't do enough to help him.

  42. TJJ2000   1 year ago

    Now check Americans freedom index.
    Holy crap a direct correlation who would've thunk it.

  43. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>Possible updates coming in Julian Assange's legal saga

    what to do when a plea may mean a death sentence?

  44. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>Today, the teen babysitter as we knew her, in pop culture and in reality, has all but disappeared.

    why babysit when creepy grown men will pay you to do things online?

  45. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>Somali pirates are back.

    sweet. needed Halloween costume idea.

    1. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

      Q: "What is a Somali pirate's favorite location?"

      A: "AAAAaaarrrr-abia"

    2. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

      “….where are your ideas?
      ….. you sit around and dream
      …… of next Halloween.”

      Lol. Great song.

  46. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>Problems with forensics:

    the Fulton County Precedent wrecks the premise.

  47. middlefinger   1 year ago

    Food hyperinflation..GEE. I. WONDER. WHY.
    https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/2929514/denvers-food-bill-on-feeding-migrants-skyrockets/

    Open borders into the world’s largest welfare states are the end of free market economics. Shit, even Cuomo admitted as much.

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   1 year ago

      I would not be surprised if Cuomo makes a comeback.

      1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

        There is no recovery from the awkward grope. I picture he and Al Franken sitting in a bar somewhere pinching their waitress on the ass.

    2. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

      Middle-F, are you laboring under the delusion that the world’s largest welfare states have anything left resembling free markets? I don’t see why you’re worried about ending something that died long ago. Even if you’re right that there might be a shred of free market economics left in those welfare states to lose, why not simply let them hoist themselves on their own petards? Who would miss California, Oregon, New York and Massachusetts if they go bankrupt?

      1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

        Great plan, doc.

        Well, not for taxpayers, of course.

  48. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

    Some of this may be attributable to younger generations struggling to find meaning in their lives—possibly a temporary failure, not one that will plague them for the rest of their days—and taking for granted the massive gains that alter the world they've inherited. Or it is possible that they're legitimately unwell, en masse, or it could be some combination of all of the above.

    Liz is grossly overthinking this. The problem with the majority of kids today is public schools. Full stop.

    Kids are not happy because they are being told by their teachers that they should not be happy. They are being taught that the world will get worse and worse and will never get better because of "tipping points". They are being taught that they can't trust something as basic who is a boy and who is a girl. They are being taught that they are the problem. They face years of continually being educationally graded and morally judged by the Marxists that run the public schools and the prospect of another 4-8 years at a university.

    No wonder they are unhappy.

    Leave them alone. Teach them to read and write and multiply and leave them the fuck alone to learn the rest themselves. That is all kids need to be happy.

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

      They don't the education. They don't need the thought control. No dark sarcasm in the classroom. Teacher, leave them kids alone.

    2. Dillinger   1 year ago

      >> the majority of kids today is public schools.

      Koch must be in w/that dude Randy Weingarten

  49. mad.casual   1 year ago

    I was haunted by this ProPublica story about how nonsensical analysis of 911 calls is used to convict people of killing their kids. I mentioned it to a friend with more knowledge of criminal justice. "Oh," she said casually, "all of forensics is like that"

    Imagine not knowing what circumstantial evidence is and thinking the problem is the collection methodology.

    1. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

      Well to be fair, the evidence is presented in court falsely. When you say that DNA found at the scene matches the suspect's DNA and that proves the suspect was at the scene of the crime, that's false. You should say, rather, that the chance of someone else matching that DNA is approximately 1 in fifteen million, and DNA is scientifically the best forensic evidence available to courts at this time. Everything else is less reliable.

      1. mad.casual   1 year ago

        Well to be fair, the evidence is presented in court falsely.

        Were you in the courtroom for all of these false presentations or are you relying on the media and activists to present things more truthfully?

  50. MilikusFlorium   1 year ago

    I've been helped a lot with insomnia and also with night terrors that previously didn't give me even the slightest chance to rest, by various strains of cannabis. Now in search of more interesting and even unique experiences, I'm trying new products like Death Bubba Shatter https://www.shroomsdirect.io/product/death-bubba-shatter/ . I think this is for more advanced amateurs as special equipment will be needed, but there is a guide on the site anyway.

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