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> Things aren’t looking good for him nor his father, a lesson both of them will painfully learn from

You’re a hell of an optimist.

I’d say that it’s just as likely that the pardon sharpie is being readied, just as soon as the super PAC donation clears.


Put it into Trump's coin as a donation

Trump already rug pulled

Bribes are $3M cash. He's good.

why would that make a difference

X can't bribe Y by buying Z that Y has no interest in.

The soft power stuff has been canned. That has not generated good will, but that act pales compared to kidnapping, threats to invade various places and the destabilising effects of chaos as a leadership strategy.

> I hope Europe has learned from history and won’t follow.

France was recently an absolute inspiration in this regard.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgrlxn4ngdgo


> cheap goods

In a cost of living crisis, maybe this is seen as a helpful import?


Because the thief gets a gun.

The way ethnic minorities are getting treated in the US at the moment implies a race to the bottom.

How many days is it since the last state sanctioned shooting?


What are your views on abortion?

I believe in free access. I also believe those going to get an abortion shouldn’t be impeded by protesters in the immediate vicinity when getting their healthcare.


Do you believe God was listening to the prayers and influencing the people at the abortion clinic? From what I read the lady was standing there and not blocking free access. The law says you may not influence.

> Do you believe God was listening to the prayers and influencing the people at the abortion clinic?

No, the woman was there tying to influence other women’s healthcare, something she had no right to get involved in.

Edit: The police did screw this up - the clinic was closed. She also received a payout.

Framing this as ‘thought police’ is wrong, the issue was her presence.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4gze361j7xo


China is threatening invade other places, which are of more value to them.

It would not surprise me in the least to discover that China is the true source of the current internal attack on the US, and Russia is a cut out.

It would be efficient for China to have Russia undermine the US while Russia also weakens itself.

China has made huge inroads in Africa, which gives it access to essential metals and other raw materials, and also puts it in a strong position diplomatically.


America's history is basically one long story of internal divisions, briefly overcome primarily during economic booms. The last economic boom, the computing/internet boom, was particularly long lived and helped create the longest window of internal stability we've had. That boom's coming to an end, and the era of stability it brought probably isn't that far behind. And this is before you even stop to consider things like social media which helps amp up and accelerate divisions by orders of magnitude.

If the root cause is external, it’s easier to stomach. But what if this is just America, attacking itself? That’s a lot harder.

>China is threatening invade other places...

Taiwan and where else?


There's also the whole South China sea thing, where they're making claims on international waters and the territorial waters of their neighbors: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_disputes_in_the_So...

But I have a feeling your position is basically "Except for all the cases where they're threatening their neighbors, they're not threatening their neighbors at all."


>I have a feeling your position is basically...

No, not at all. I don't follow China closely, and was genuinely asking.


Arunachal Pradesh.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/amp/rcna245797

Tibet and Xinjiang already conquered and we have forgotten about them.


Xinjiang conquered? If you go that far back you can blame every big power for having conquered some of their territory.

Pretty much anything that happens to abut the South China Sea.

I suppose you could also make the argument that they already did invade Tibet and Hong Kong, though that's splitting hairs.


Hong Kong was always Chinese, and was leased at gun point.

The government that leased it couldn’t really have less to do with the government that took it over in recent times. Things got considerably worse for Hong Kong, and the citizens didn’t want to join China.

It’s certainly not a given that donating it to China was the right call.


> It’s certainly not a given that donating it to China was the right call.

The right call for who?

For the people there? Not good.

For a contracting British empire facing a clearly growing-in-power China it was a graceful exit without military conflict.


Good point, maybe I have questions about the ‘graceful’ bit though.

And now the agreement that they'd be given a more liberalistic government is being torn up at gun point.

India, Bhutan. South China Sea. East China Sea/Japan.

Wax is great for road riding. I ride in Auckland where it’s wet half the time (all the time this summer). I re-wax every 400 or so km. It’s clean running and beautiful compared to the expensive oils I was using, and lasts longer.

Wear appears to be down too. The reduction in grease and dirty chain makes is so nice.


It is much better than the expensive oils, but not as good as old fashioned 3in1. The expensive chain lubes are mostly meant for racing, they give you the least friction by a long shot but don't last and most of them do not take well to reapplying without cleaning, you end up with grinding paste.

Wax holds up quite well against water but does hold grit and tends to deposit it on chainrings, sprockets, and pulleys, and it wears them quicker than 3in1 will. Wax shares the downside of PTFE, you need to clean off the old before applying more or things start wearing fast, which is not an issue for everyone. It is nice and clean.

Here in the winter of northern Minnesota, one good snowy ride with the road salt and sand will strip wax. Not that you would want to use wax in this sort of cold even if the road salt and sand were not an issue, wax gets stiff and brittle in the sorts of cold we get. I am an everyday rider and bike is my mode of transportation for everything, in this climate I need ease of reapplication or I will be replacing chainrings yearly.


This sounds wild, and truely savage on gear.

What sort of temperature are you getting down to? Any special gear needed for you or the bike?

Here it’s never below about 5C and maxes at about 30C. It’s mild. The rain is the only thing that can be a lot. The most was about 250mm in a day, which is exceptional, but sudden, very downpours are common.


We can go from 30C to 5C in a couple minutes with a wind change, the weather here keeps your toes. We always get down into the -20sF with another 20 degrees thrown in by the windchill and can spend weeks at that, 2014/15 we spent 3 months in the -20s. Coldest I have biked in is -47 before the windchill. Windchill is tricky on a bike since you make your own wind, it is considerably colder biking than just standing or walking in such conditions.

Gear has mostly been a move away from cartridge bearings, you are lucky if those will last the winter. Old fashioned cup and cone bearings hold enough grease to get you through most winters without having to repack. For the messy and icy weather I try to ride my fixed gear, does not matter if the brakes freeze up, very simple drive train (single piece crank!) I can just ignore all winter other than oil the chain and its 1/8" chain sucks up a lot more oil than the skinny 10+ speed chains and sheds filth much better as well. 3in1 helps a lot as well, it is pretty good about shedding filth. For the brutal cold, when things are dry and for most errands it is generally my touring bike, its granny gear is nice when the grease starts to thicken in the cold and high rpm pedaling does a good job of keeping you warm but keeping the derailers working well even with friction shifters can be a chore.

Only specialty gear I have is studded BMX pedals, they do a great job of keeping your feet on the pedals and are footwear agnostic. Not the best pedal choice for a fixed gear, they can really shred your shins.


Amazing.

What sort of distances are you doing?

I work at a couple of locations that are about 9-15km from home.

I’m probably doing 150-300km per week, depending on weather. Even doing 5km in the conditions you describe sounds Herculean.


Distance is fairly variable, minimum is 4 miles, a busy day can be 50 miles. When we get extended bitter cold I tend to start running errands before work since I can break up the distances and stop and warm up instead of the shorter straight shot, that will be about 10 miles a day.

It is not as bad as most people think as long as you get out there everyday and avoid getting in the habit of not doing stuff because it is too cold. That first -10 day is brutal but that -10 is not so bad after a -20 day and feels almost warm after -30. So I convince myself that a beer would taste really good and bike to the bar in -30 just to get out there because the longer you go without riding in that sort of cold the harder it is to get back out there, do it daily and it is easy to remember that it is just a minor discomfort until you get the blood flowing.


> the US, the TSA is just a government jobs program for the lowly skilled or unskilled.

I thought that was the US military?


I don't necessarily agree with the OP, but a lot of TSA is ex-military.

I thought that was the US police force?

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