In this case the real threat is the tsunami, which from the time I saw should have hit San Francisco already (given that it is 1:02 PM PT as I write this).
Edit: Actually, the tsunami warning has been called off, so maybe not.
In this case the real threat is the tsunami, which from the time I saw should have hit San Francisco already (given that it is 1:02 PM PT as I write this).
I don’t think ‘succeed’ is quite the right word here. I’d say it’s already failed — it’s just that the president might get off without any consequences. (Which is still pretty despicable, but a failure of the actual coup attempt nonetheless.)
Capitalism - because its top priority is customer satisfaction!Man in Space wrote: ↑Sun Dec 08, 2024 11:41 pm In 2022, Spotify made the Car Thing—a device for your car so you could easily control Spotify without having to use your actual phone. It was announced earlier this year that they were going to brick it, despite these devices costing at least $70 and having a significant user and fan base, offering refunds instead.
I don’t pretend to know anything, but the situation reminded me very strongly of Bret Devereaux’s article on Protracted War. After a long, slow period of gradual attrition, the stronger party becomes weakened enough that they collapse unexpectedly quickly once attacked by the notionally weaker party. A recent comparison might be Afghanistan, where the recognised government was overwhelmed by the Taliban as soon as the US pulled out (an instance which is also covered by that article).
Thank you!bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09, 2024 6:52 am
I don’t pretend to know anything, but the situation reminded me very strongly of Bret Devereaux’s article on Protracted War. After a long, slow period of gradual attrition, the stronger party becomes weakened enough that they collapse unexpectedly quickly once attacked by the notionally weaker party. A recent comparison might be Afghanistan, where the recognised government was overwhelmed by the Taliban as soon as the US pulled out (an instance which is also covered by that article).
I figured it was too brittle to stay in power indefinitely, but I certainly didn't expect it to collapse as quickly as it did.
I got people in my family with serious mental health issues. Symptoms not only include trouble keeping appointments, but trouble making appointments in the first place, or even not giving up on treatment entirely.Raphael wrote: ↑Mon Dec 16, 2024 4:48 am Something random I've been thinking about a bit recently: How do you provide needed mental health services to people whose mental health issues are of such a kind that the symptoms include being very bad at keeping appointments?
I mean, usually, if there's an effective way of paying for people's mental health care, then they visit therapists or other mental health professionals, and ideally, this ends up helping them. But in practice, "visiting a therapist or other mental health professional" means "making an appointment with a therapist or other mental health professional, and then keeping that appointment". Which becomes pretty difficult if the mental health issues for which the people in question need help in the first place have symptoms that include being very bad at keeping appointments.
And, for the record, that's not some kind of weird hypothetical or silly mind game for me; it at least used to be directly personally relevant. I'm, thankfully, better at it these days, but I used to be very bad at keeping appointments myself.
If there’s not someone else available to help them out, then it would be very difficult, I think.
*nods* Insofar as I am aware, it tends to be handled by relatives, legal guardians, and social workers & PTs & OTs {physical and occupational therapists}
Facing certain capture by one's enemies, followed by certain torture, in which one will inevitably betray one's comrades (leading to their likely capture and execution), followed by either execution or being coerced into further betrayal of one's comrades. That does not apply here.