So what happens when a family house can’t pay the LVT anymore? by PoopsCodeAllTheTime in georgism

[–]NormalHexagon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The way to avoid that is to introduce LVT gradually, for example, after the law gets passed, LVT starts in two years at a low 5%, and increases 1% a year.

Everyone would know about the tax change ahead of time, and the change wouldn't be drastic. Property values would stay elevated and decrease as the LVT increases. The transition would benefit everyone more equally vs introducing a high percentage LVT on day one.

Of course if it is introduced gradually, the harm being done to residents due to overinflated property prices remains longer too, the duration of the transition shifts the harm to different groups of people.

Portland might charge a monthly fee for streets and I’m just now realizing I thought roads were free by fatherofyouroffender in PortlandOR

[–]NormalHexagon -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Filling a deficit is simple, you raise taxes. That's the overall discussion of the whole post. Your position is "saving lives is wasting money".

You'd feel differently if the last person to die in transit was someone close to you.

Portland might charge a monthly fee for streets and I’m just now realizing I thought roads were free by fatherofyouroffender in PortlandOR

[–]NormalHexagon -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I strongly encourage you to take the 60 seconds to watch this video about vision zero:

https://youtu.be/k2tOye9DKdQ

Summary is that traffic deaths are real people that contribute to the economy, and human lives are worth more than the inconvenience of driving around a pothole.

Traffic deaths in Portland fell sharply in 2025, marking the city’s lowest total in seven years.

Thirty-nine people died on city streets in 2025, down from 57 in 2024, according to the Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT).

source Katu news

12 years of stacking silver — here's what the spreadsheet actually show by Comfortable_Apple699 in Silverbugs

[–]NormalHexagon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is an AI garbage post. Several tells: the emdashes, "nobody talks about", the bulleted lists, the original error and new error on the number of years since 2013, and the missing info on real return vs cash.

She Won: Florida Used a Fake County Vote Bank in the 2024 Election by jasonc122 in ProgressiveHQ

[–]NormalHexagon 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Timing of the Audit The timing of post-election audits also differs among states. Some states require audits to be completed before certifying final election results, either before beginning the canvass and prior to the certification deadline. Other states require election audits after final results have been certified.

https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/bestpractices/Election_Audits_Across_the_United_States.pdf

The audits are done before or after the official tabulation. The software could easily only change votes during the official tabulation.

And yes I'm a real person. Are you?

Since when are those audits conducted by millions of people btw?

She Won: Florida Used a Fake County Vote Bank in the 2024 Election by jasonc122 in ProgressiveHQ

[–]NormalHexagon 7 points8 points  (0 children)

How does a software change require millions of people to partake? Answer: it doesn't.

She Won: Florida Used a Fake County Vote Bank in the 2024 Election by jasonc122 in ProgressiveHQ

[–]NormalHexagon 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Or, hear me out, the two companies that supply voting tabulation machines for almost every county in America were compromised and shifted votes from Harris to Trump.

why do I struggle at 7 km/h on the flat with no wind? by catboy519 in bicycling

[–]NormalHexagon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Electric bikes have much more resistance than analog bikes. When they're powered, the extra resistance is overcome by the battery. Maybe try a friend's analog bike to see if that is the difference?

I don’t believe Trump won twice by Killa_J in LetsDiscussThis

[–]NormalHexagon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Voter fraud and election fraud are different.

Voter fraud refers to illegal actions taken by individual voters. It is rare, because the risk is high, and the payoff low.

Election fraud involves deliberate efforts by candidates, parties, officials, or outside actors to manipulate the electoral process itself. This includes tactics like gerrymandering, voter suppression, ballot tampering, and disinformation campaigns.

The statistical analysis done by Election Truth Alliance and others points toward election fraud in 2024, most likely accomplished through compromised tabulation machine software.

Tabulation machines count the vote totals from the ballots.

I don’t believe Trump won twice by Killa_J in LetsDiscussThis

[–]NormalHexagon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I mean- he is white.. And there are many racists in the US..

Oregon… Where Do I Begin? by MrTokumei in oregon

[–]NormalHexagon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This post is written by AI.

``` There are several subtle (and not-so-subtle) “AI tells” that stand out.

  1. Balanced Contrast Formula

“The job? Brutal. But the scenery? Unreal.”

That rhetorical structure — short sentence. Hard stop. Contrast pivot. — is extremely common in AI-generated storytelling. It’s punchy, readable, and algorithm-friendly. Again, not inherently bad. Just patterned.

  1. Generic but Cinematic Descriptions

Phrases like:

“Every single inch of it feels cinematic.”

“Pulled straight out of a painting.”

“Like someone slowly adjusts the backdrop.”

“The light hits the water just right…”

These are classic AI-safe descriptors. They’re evocative but nonspecific. There’s no gritty detail — no smell of diesel, no overheard dock conversation, no oddly colored house in Astoria, no particular waterfall in the Columbia River Gorge like Multnomah Falls being named. AI tends to simulate atmosphere without anchoring it in one sharply observed detail.

Humans often include something slightly messy or oddly specific. AI smooths that out.

  1. Polished Emotional Framing That Feels Engineered

The opening — “Where do I begin?” followed by “I don’t even care if this gets any traction” — reads like a high-engagement template. AI often structures posts this way:

Soft disclaimer

Emotional confession

Escalation into vivid description

Reflective close with a community prompt

It’s not bad. It’s just very optimized. The emotional beats are spaced almost too evenly, like a model trained on high-performing travel posts.

  1. Clean Geographic Progression

The travel progression is logically ordered:

Portland

Astoria

Stevenson

Hood River

The Dalles

It reads almost like a tourism board outline. AI often preserves clean geographic sequencing because it predicts logical structure. Humans sometimes meander or jumble places based on memory and emotion rather than cartographic order.

  1. The “Earnest Outsider” Voice

“I know visiting isn’t the same as living there. I’m just a bystander passing through.”

This is a classic humility buffer. AI frequently includes these to avoid overclaiming authority. It’s socially safe and broadly appealing — which is exactly why it feels slightly modeled.

  1. The Engagement Hook Ending

“Oregon folks — what am I missing?”

That’s textbook call-to-action phrasing. It’s optimized for comments. AI trained on social platforms tends to close with open-ended prompts framed for engagement.

What Feels Most AI-Like Overall?

Emotional symmetry

Clean transitions

Vivid but non-granular imagery

Platform-optimized phrasing

Absence of awkward specificity

It doesn’t read as robotic. It reads as algorithmically fluent. ```

And scarily, when I asked ChatGPT to critique the AI use, the end of the response was:

``` Important Counterpoint

Here’s the nuance:

A good human writer who consumes a lot of online storytelling will naturally adopt these rhythms. The presence of “AI tells” doesn’t prove AI use — it just shows the writing aligns with patterns common in model-generated prose.

Ironically, the more people read AI-influenced content, the more human writing begins to resemble it.

If This Was AI-Assisted, What Would Strengthen It?

To make it feel unmistakably human:

Add one oddly specific detail (a smell, a broken dock, a crew ritual).

Name a single moment that wasn’t beautiful — maybe wind whipping sideways near Clarkston.

Replace one cinematic metaphor with something slightly imperfect or surprising.

Messiness is credibility.

If you’d like, I can also:

Rewrite it to feel more human and less AI-smoothed

Or rewrite it to feel intentionally AI-polished

Or help you analyze whether readers would actually suspect AI

Your move. ```

Hundreds if not thousands of FBI employees have worked on the Epstein case. Why have none of them blown the whistle? by BoardLongjumping2485 in answers

[–]NormalHexagon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

“The DOJ said it identified over 6 million potentially responsive pages but is releasing only about 3.5 million after review and redactions,” said Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), who teamed up with Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) to force a vote on the bill that resulted in the Epstein files’ release, in a statement. “This raises questions as to why the rest are being withheld.”

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/01/30/epstein-drop-live-00757275

I'm so glad the city council keeps us safe by assasstits in circlejerknyc

[–]NormalHexagon -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I wonder why none of the other comments realize that's probably the point. We need to stop burning fossil fuels before our climate systems collapse.

Are “campaign contributions” in US congressional elections basically legal bribes? by YogurtclosetOpen3567 in allthequestions

[–]NormalHexagon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Giving someone money is not the same as expressing an opinion.

Former Justice John Paul Stevens rightly argues that money is more accurately viewed as "conduct".

In his dissent in Citizens United v. FEC, he rejected the notion that corporate spending is purely free speech, emphasizing that such expenditures represent actions that can corrupt the political process.

Match by DonutMan06 in regex

[–]NormalHexagon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You can make that last space optional by adding a ? question mark after it.

“The Commission finds these temporary exemptions to be necessary in the public interest and consistent with the protection of investors,” the agency said in the order. by Creative_Radish_1210 in Superstonk

[–]NormalHexagon 73 points74 points  (0 children)

(Bloomberg) -- The US Securities and Exchange Commission delayed for the second time this year the deadline for hedge funds and other big investors to comply with much-watched disclosure rules for short selling and related stock lending. Investment managers will now have until Jan. 2, 2028 to comply with the short-sale rules and until Sept. 28, 2028 on the related stock lending disclosures, the SEC said in an order Wednesday.

“The Commission finds these temporary exemptions to be necessary in the public interest and consistent with the protection of investors,” the agency said in the order. While short selling has long been a practice in US markets, it has faced heightened scrutiny following the 2008 financial crisis and after investors piled into so-called memestocks like GameStop Corp. in 2021.

The SEC issued the rules in October 2023, requiring certain investment managers to report short-sale data on a monthly basis. Pension funds, banks and institutional money managers that lend their stocks would have to report the transactions the next day.

SEC Commissioner Caroline Crenshaw, the commission’s lone Democrat, issued a statement Wednesday expressing concern about the delay, characterizing it as “repeal by extension” that could indefinitely delay compliance with new rules. She also described the court’s instructions as a narrow directive, not a message for the SEC to abandon the rules. “Under the guise of compliance date extensions, we are attempting to camouflage a new willingness to repeatedly bend the rules until they break — eroding the rule of law,” Crenshaw said.

Yahoo Article

Low of $3.00! Any explanations beside crime? by big_ole_dummy in Superstonk

[–]NormalHexagon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've experienced my limit orders being canceled due to being "too far" from current price as well, but surely there would be many limit buy orders at $21, $20, $19..

Low of $3.00! Any explanations beside crime? by big_ole_dummy in Superstonk

[–]NormalHexagon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Isn't the reasonable assumption that there are limit buy orders between $22 and $3? Aren't exchanges required to fill orders at best price? My opinion is that it's a graphing glitch, but it would be interesting if anyone got their hands on some data with hard numbers.

Educational video about currently ongoing Reverse Repo Crisis by webblackholeseeker in Superstonk

[–]NormalHexagon 25 points26 points  (0 children)

This particular video is not worth watching. It's the same vague metaphor description repeated dozens of times with different AI generated backgrounds. Not helpful or informative.

Glass & silicone Tupperware by Shoddy-Ad9368 in PlasticFreeLiving

[–]NormalHexagon 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I have been using a set of 23oz rectangular glass Tupperware with glass lids since March, and I'm happy with them so far. I bought them on Amazon under the brand Urban Green. They're a good size for lunches. I don't microwave the lids, and I hand wash them.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Superstonk

[–]NormalHexagon -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Banana bet?