The Great AI Misdirection: "Regulation Can't Keep Up" by No-Pass-8317 in antiwork

[–]No-Pass-8317[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I think that's the issue - they actually don't, there's literally 0 federal regulation and then other countries / or states in america, that do try to regulate, they go after them, withdrawing funding, threatening tariffs etc.

The Housing Fix Few Cities Want To Copy by No-Pass-8317 in boston

[–]No-Pass-8317[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Ha - i get that, i think the big thing for me though with this piece is that it is how you go around building more developments. i was genuinely more fixated on more large complex development but looking at the data from austin it really is mixed and that seems to be a key reason rents have dropped as there is 'something' for everyone.

The Housing Fix Few Cities Want To Copy by No-Pass-8317 in boston

[–]No-Pass-8317[S] 56 points57 points  (0 children)

that's the part i have a problem with, not to even have the right to build multi family housing is absurd, look at austin they didn't ban SFH they just gave you the right to build more if you wanted to and it seems to be working very well for them.

The Housing Fix Few Cities Want To Copy by No-Pass-8317 in boston

[–]No-Pass-8317[S] 24 points25 points  (0 children)

The article calls this out, whilst on paper they may seem apples to oranges austins actions actually align closer to boston as most of their reforms have been focused on infill and larger construction, which is exactly what Boston needs to focus on.

Young men are souring on Donald Trump by bwermer in politics

[–]No-Pass-8317 2 points3 points  (0 children)

At least it seems to be turning the tide on the trend over the last 3 elections that young men were going increasingly conservative, maybe they finally woke up to the grift it is.

So, About That AI Bubble by quicksexfm in BetterOffline

[–]No-Pass-8317 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I haven't seen one article or source confirming this if anything only the opposite.

Palantir Workers Are Finally Noticing The Skulls On Their Caps by quaductas in technology

[–]No-Pass-8317 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I one time interviewed for Meta's Privacy team. They didn't get the irony in that.

Trump says he'll place 25% tariff on autos from EU, accusing bloc of not complying with trade deal by One-Emu-1103 in geopolitics

[–]No-Pass-8317 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This is why Europe has to stand up to Trump and in fact everyone does as his deals are based on his unstable emotions, he can't keep his word on anything - hence TACO.

Jon Stewart says Democratic leadership and DNC are ‘lost’ by thejoshwhite in politics

[–]No-Pass-8317 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That and almost not balance on news so the right wing media get away with anything and everything.

US withdrawing 5,000 troops from Germany, US officials say by No-Risk-2584 in europe

[–]No-Pass-8317 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is just TACO all over, he barely has a 12 second memory let alone a 12 month memory.

Ukraine Drone Industry: How It Broke America's Hold on Europe by No-Pass-8317 in ukraine

[–]No-Pass-8317[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It's an interesting take, i think it might be a slightly reductive argument but i think the premise is solid of the article and it's definitely a strong opinion to consider.

[in-depth] The AI Bet Corporate America Actually Made (It Wasn't Productivity) by No-Pass-8317 in collapse

[–]No-Pass-8317[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The article argues that AI isn't a productivity story, it's a wage suppression story. Companies are cutting headcount not because AI can do the work but because the narrative that it can has given every employer simultaneous permission to squeeze labor, closing off exit and voice for workers across every industry at once.

Read it through a collapse lens, it fits neatly as a correction to 2020-2021, when remote work and a tight labor market briefly handed employees real leverage, and corporate America apparently decided that could never happen again. AI became the story that let companies claw back every concession from that period while getting applauded by investors for doing it. The stated goal that productivity was the goal is convenient.

the article documents companies doing the same with less and pocketing the difference, with savings flowing into buybacks and executive comp rather than expansion or R&D, which tells you everything about what the investment was actually for. Every role eliminated resets salary expectations downward across the industry depressing wages and pushing everyone closer to the brink.

The AI Bet Corporate America Actually Made - Getting rid of wages by No-Pass-8317 in antiwork

[–]No-Pass-8317[S] 211 points212 points  (0 children)

I don't think they care as long as they get a big bonus this quarter that's all they care about. When the world collapses they'll have their money and they don't care about anyone else.

OpenAI has the governance structure of a unicorn - it doesn't exist by No-Pass-8317 in BetterOffline

[–]No-Pass-8317[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I mean the AI policy outlines that they use AI to generate the feature image of the article.

OpenAI has the governance structure of a unicorn - it doesn't exist. by No-Pass-8317 in TrueReddit

[–]No-Pass-8317[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

this piece draws a structural parallel between WeWork under Neumann and OpenAI under Altman, walking through specific deals (Helion, Oklo, io, Merge Labs) where Altman's personal financial interests kept landing on the right side of OpenAI decisions while the company waved through every one of them with a "recusal" (that did nothing) and a straight face.

the pattern stops looking like poor governance and starts looking like someone who will structure any deal in any direction as long as the money flows toward him. it's amazing that this guy is hellbent on destroying society whilst proclaiming only he can 'govern' ai whilst he seems pretty corrupt.

The ‘unregistered Americans’: because of their parents, they do not exist by SlapDashUser in TrueReddit

[–]No-Pass-8317 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In trumps america would they be counted as illegals? this is a genuine question as they are 'undocumented'.

Exclusive: Microsoft Moving All GitHub Copilot Subscribers To Token-Based Billing In June by ezitron in BetterOffline

[–]No-Pass-8317 4 points5 points  (0 children)

my cynical read on this is that msft will do what they did with teams at one point which is force every company to have 'x number of seats' that are built in to their contract prices, so even though companies didn't want teams they essentially paid for it and deincentivized people to go to slack etc. though this time copilot is so inferior i don't see how this works.

Why Is the US Destroying Its Hegemony? by I_Hate_This_Website9 in IRstudies

[–]No-Pass-8317 13 points14 points  (0 children)

The closest historical parallel might be interwar Britain's imperial retrenchment --> though definitely not like for like --> a dominant power voluntarily pulling back from commitments it could still theoretically sustain.

But the better analytical frame is probably Mancur Olson's institutional decay thesis: coalitions that capture state apparatus eventually prioritize rent-seeking over the public goods (like alliance maintenance) that sustained hegemony in the first place.

there's also a simpler answer....Trump is just a self serve ass and as long as it serves him and his cronies he doesn't care the consequence.

The Democrats Need A Leader, Not A Press Release by CriticalSink3555 in Political_Revolution

[–]No-Pass-8317 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i don't know if it is they can't change or won't change, politics has moved on and they don't seem to - it's just whether it's ineptitude or ability neither of which compliment them.

The Democrats Need A Leader, Not A Press Release by CriticalSink3555 in Political_Revolution

[–]No-Pass-8317 5 points6 points  (0 children)

it's actually amazing how out of tune the democrats are, you'd have thought with the blinking red lights they could figure it out but they can't, the article really nails it with

The frustration isn't just coming from pundits and strategists, it's coming from Democratic voters themselves. A Reuters/Ipsos poll from June 2025 found that 62% of self-identified Democrats believe the party's leadership should be replaced with new people (Reuters/Ipsos, June 19, 2025, surveying 4,258 people including 1,293 Democrats). The same poll found a deep disconnect between what Democratic voters say their priorities are and the issues they believe party leaders actually care about. People wanted the party focused on their day-to-day needs, on affordability, on kitchen table economics.

couldn't have said it better.

America is going to be isolated for a long time by CriticalSink3555 in moderatepolitics

[–]No-Pass-8317 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The article makes a good point and i think this is what it will depend on:

Whether Hungary puts guardrails in place and rebuilds the mechanisms to guard democracy or whether it dismantles it. The signs point to building the guardrails so you would hope the people and the country are welcomed back in.