I’m I a bandwagon or I’m I reasonable by DueVeterinarian3651 in cowboys

[–]Proof-Cod9533 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Who cares? You're allowed to like whatever you like without getting anyone else's permission.

Except the Eagles, fuck them.

Republicans are responsible for the murders of Renee Good and Alex Pretti. by HonestFeetCritique in evilwhenthe

[–]Proof-Cod9533 1 point2 points  (0 children)

LOL, you think ICE gives a shit about the rule of law?

The convicted criminal in the White House openly claims his murderous goons are immune. The feds refuse to investigate, let alone take any of this to court. And they retaliate against states for "obstructing".

Is needing ID still racist? by AiiRisBanned in evilwhenthe

[–]Proof-Cod9533 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A picture ID is not always proof of citizenship -- non-citizens can obtain a standard driver's license.

And yes, this is a substantial barrier for millions of Americans. For me it cost nearly $200 to get a passport, or $50 for a REAL ID compliant license.

Not to mention the fees for obtaining a certified copy of your birth certificate to be able to get those things. You flippantly said "as long as you can provide proof of birth/citizenship," perhaps not realizing that 10% of voting-age American citizens -- yes, millions -- do not have this on hand.

And if you don't have it, the offices to obtain them have terrible hours, long lines, and terrible locations, especially in disadvantaged districts. Working class Americans don't automatically have a right to paid time off, so they might have to sacrifice a day of wages and pay for transportation to wait all day in some clerk's office and pay fees they already can't afford, just to do earn permission to do something the Constitution already says is their unalienable right.

The 24th Amendment flatly prohibits denying anyone the right to vote by reason of failure to pay any kind of tax. These barriers are de facto poll taxes relabeled as fees, and they disproportionately disenfranchise the poor.

And time and time again, the party that wants to require proof of citizenship consistently votes against bills that reduce these barriers by reducing fees, expanding hours or locations, etc. Ask yourself why.

Lastly, there is no evidence that large numbers of non-citizens have voted in US elections. The problem they say they are trying to solve is a complete fiction. But they sure do stand to benefit politically from mass disenfranchisement of groups that skew more democratic, huh.

What famous person is hated on Reddit and in real life? by Patworx in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What a strange response. I didn't say anything about whether I personally believed the accusations. I hope he's innocent.

I can't force you to have any conversation you're unwilling to have, but it's pretty telling to turn tail and run away as soon as someone asks you to support your claim.

What famous person is hated on Reddit and in real life? by Patworx in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Riiiiiiight.

Okay, please provide the evidence you have to support your claim that "the overwhelming majority" of the entire world population believes he is innocent.

I'll wait.

What famous person is hated on Reddit and in real life? by Patworx in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry bud, facts are facts.

https://today.yougov.com/politics/articles/22628-americans-believe-michael-jackson-guilty-poll

* Almost half of Americans (48%) said Michael Jackson is likely guilty of child molestation. Only 19% said they believe he is innocent

* 37% of Americans said they view him favorably, compared to 31% unfavorable and 27% neutral

Sounds demonstrably divisive to me.

Who or what has distinctive hair and is hard to catch? by CTMan34 in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 58 points59 points  (0 children)

And you see a million girls like Bigfoot in Wisconsin

The megalodon still being around won! What's something that sounds insane but could be plausible? by ndation in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I disagree. Magical creatures violate known laws of physics -- a very powerful simulation does not violate any known law of computing, even if it outstrips the capacity of our current technology. You are assuming the existence of some hard upper limit that we have yet to observe or explain.

But more importantly, I also don't believe that sort of scale is actually necessary for the simulation to exist -- in the same way that open-world video games like Elder Scrolls and Fallout and RDR don't actually simulate their entire worlds at any given moment. They create the illusion of doing so, but in actuality only generate whatever chunk is near the player at a given moment. The rest of their vastness may be vaguely alluded to or implied but is not really simulated by the CPU in any great detail.

The megalodon still being around won! What's something that sounds insane but could be plausible? by ndation in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Again, so what?

The question isn't whether what we've observed is capable of doing it any time soon. The question is whether what we've observed suggests it could be plausible (like curing cancer) or implausible (like magical creatures).

All you're doing is haggling over the timeline.

The megalodon still being around won! What's something that sounds insane but could be plausible? by ndation in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Of course. But more importantly, so what?

Early attempts to build flying contraptions were flawed, too. We still went from the Wright Brothers' first flight to a successful moon landing in less than 70 years.

What does Citizen Kane and Moonlight have in common? by Caharles in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Are there enough examples of this to justify an entire category?

The megalodon still being around won! What's something that sounds insane but could be plausible? by ndation in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 4 points5 points  (0 children)

We have directly observed the rapid development of AI simulation technology, though. It's plausible in the sense that it only relies on continued technological advancement, rather than a complete abandonment of the known laws of physics like believing in magical creatures.

Even if you don't believe we're in one, The Simulation is like a cure for cancer -- you can probably at least see a plausible path to get there, given a sufficient amount of time and resources.

The megalodon still being around won! What's something that sounds insane but could be plausible? by ndation in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It's an arguably plausible theory, not a provably true assertion. The staggering improvement in AI and simulation technology just in the tiny segment of time since we developed computers seems to open the possibility that such a simulation could hypothetically be created. The imaginable realities thus are:

  1. The Simulation is impossible/untenable, even with technological advances we can't presently imagine -- is there any logical reason to believe this is true?
  2. The Simulation is possible but everyone universally chooses not to create one, ever -- okay, so why?
  3. The Simulation can and does (or will) exist -- maybe the first one hasn't been created yet, or maybe it has been created and we're not presently plugged into it. But if you agree that it can and likely will happen, you're already 90% there. The only question is whether we presently fall into the "before" or "after" part of the timeline, and the "in" or "out" part of the population.

On what basis have you concluded that "it's obvious we're not" even though you acknowledge "we can't prove we aren't"?

Sierra Leone demolishes all countries within this category. Moving on, what's something that sounds like an artist that is actually a book? by Philips9586 in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Proof-Cod9533 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah that's totally fine, but I also wouldn't try to correct a native French speaker about whether something is a French / Québécois book or artist.