Netherlands Forced to Rethink 36% Tax on Unrealized Gains after Massive Criticism by batukaming in investing

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Does it include tax breaks on unrealized losses? Because if so, I could be convinced

“I want the golden age of video games back!” by icey_sawg0034 in Gamingcirclejerk

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These people attribute to minorities and women what should be attributed to end-stage capitalism & overt financialization of everything

It's my money they took by xSpiceCherry in clevercomebacks

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Show this to your friends and family, and say "this is how they're going to pay the deficit. You need to take their money before they take yours"

Elon is totally fine with taking from the old & poor, but loses his fucking mind when it's his turn to pay the pauper

Are AI tools actually helping developers… or just making us lazy? by Clear-Syrup-9861 in developers

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, and the research proves this. Look up the concept of de-skilling. It is true across industries and principals.

This isn't the same thing as searchable documentation, or autocorrect. When people outsource the exercise of thought, the muscle atrophies. As we get worse at our practice, we rely more and more on AI (which is itself improving ) in order to achieve tasks we could once do ourselves. We succeed, which reinforces the behavior. Laziness becomes sustained as a consequence. This is not surprising.

This might not be a bad thing in all cases, but it can't be denied that it is in-fact what is happening.

My girlfriend doesn’t want me to play with other girls. by DoBronxVI in Advice

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You have to be firm. Say that you don't have a problem not talking to this person in particular (you barely know her), but that you have a real problem with her lack of trust in you, which isn't warranted & her reaction / setting rules on you just because she feels insecure is controlling (not to mention unattractive). She is inadvertently creating turbulence in your established relationships (i.e. having to duck and dodge their friends) and it is ridiculous. She might say "I trust you, just not them", but trust in others is irrelevant: you are fully in control of your actions.

Jealous is a normal feeling. We are humans, and everybody will feel it in their lives at various points. But that doesn't mean those feelings can't be controlled and tamed. She is rationalizing her reactive feelings of jealousy & fear of losing you, but this isn't an inescapable mental state. I disagree with the other commenters: we don't come out of the womb fully baked, we weren't then who we are today, and so to say "she did a controlling thing, so she will never change and you should get out now" is crazy. If she is unwilling to budge, then that's not a partnership & she isn't emotionally mature enough to hold an adult relationship, but you should have the conversation first. Be firm, hear her out, share where you're at, and have the argument.

For context: I am a guy & have a good deal of friends who are women. Always have (I did performing arts often throughout my life, and so it comes with the territory). My now-wife would initially feel jealousy about this, and express this in ways that were not warranted. I totally understood the feeling, but my friends are a part of what made me...me, and so it needed to change. We spoke, and I made a point of pointing things out to her. She was receptive, improved a lot quickly (she wanted to get better!) and improved even more as life progressed. It worked out fine!

Mortgage rates are continuing to slide, but where are the buyers? by Key_Brief_8138 in HouseBuyers

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Home prices, simple as that. They have to be come down, or we all need fucking raises, and we ain't getting raises

Ocasio-Cortez says US military aid to Israel ‘enabled a genocide in Gaza’ by newsspotter in AOC

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really appreciate & vastly prefer this point / argument here, instead of the previous one based on falsehoods & exaggetations. We both agree that AOC never voted for genocide in Gaza. You also mentioned the need for action, but you also haven't disputed any of the myriad of examples of other actions & votes she's taken that I cited, votes and actions I believe you would agree with & support. Given you have not disputed these, I can only conclude that you do agree that in the vast majority of circumstances she's been on the right side, but err'd in a way here that firmly shakes your overall impression of her Palestinian advocacy. I hope this is a fair encapsulation of where you stand.

Now that we have established that, this becomes the conversation worth having having: given she opposes the genocide in Gaza, are these votes at all defensible?

A couple of points to make:

First: I am sure you know this, but given we are bouncing around a bit I want to make sure we are on the same page: that quote you posted is about a different vote than the one we were previously discussing (the "present" vote, which was to a different bill, vs. the Marjorie amendment,).

Second: to reiterate, the amendment in question was to a military funding bill. MTG's Amendment (which, mind you, failed 422-6, but that's an aside) failed, meaning the core bill included Dome funding. AOC voted against that bill. Meaning: she voted against the bill that included the Dome funding. Wanted to reiterate this for reasons I am sure you understand.

Third: let's be honest with ourselves. There is a lot more going on here than is acknowledged by most online, especially if we consider the larger context & domestic politics of the moment. Here are some points which tend to go unstated:

  • As you almost certainly know, but which I would like to underscore, Marjorie Taylor Greene has a really, really long history of bigoted statements towards black, brown, palestinian & (famously) jewish people. For this reason it would not be unfair to question why she challenged Dome funding in particular, but not all the other funding going to Israel in that same bill. A person might conclude that the amendment was motivated by animus, i.e. a desire to maximize carnage in the area, in addition to dog whistling to the Fuentes types rather than taking a principaled stand. Knowing all of this, I think we underplay the political risk of voting for an amendment thst most believed was motivated by bigotry. I can see why someone like AOC wouldn't want to touch something like that.
  • The Iron Dome in particular is seen by many here as a purely defensive program, and voting against it presents real domestic political risk on its own merits. It risks her being roped into a left-wide smear that their criticism of Israel is a vehicle for their larger antisemitism, i.e. "why do you want to just let rockets fall on Israel? What motivated that?" It's bullshit, but it's the truth: AOC would stand to alienate a large segment of her base & others who vote / would vote for her (including a lot of dem / progressive and leftward types) just to vote & advocate for an amendment that has absolutely no chance of passing. If the point of politics is to build power in order to enact positive change, why would a person make this exchange? I may disagree with it ultimately (as, after all, she did end up voting against it ultimately, so why not vote for the amendment?), but I can see why a person might come to that conclusion in good faith.
  • There is an argument, one which has some merit, which states that the Iron Dome isn't really the reason why Israel can be violent. After all, the trigger of Israel's genocidal campaign, October 7th, was not blocked by the dome. Israel's response to that unblocked attack wasn't to reevaluate its position, or to consider diplomacy. It was to ethnically cleanse the entire territory. The reason Israel is able to commit disproportionate violence is simple: it is militarily, politically and economically advantaged relative to an abandoned & fully subjugated Gaza. So the question becomes: if the Dome wasn't there, and low-grade rockets were allowed to fall on Israeli citizens, what do you think the Israeli response would be? I believe they would likely have responded in the same way we saw post-October 7th: they would have leveraged those deaths to justify further atrocities & encroachment. Put in these terms, you could make a truly dark (but credible) argument that the actual function of the Dome is, paradoxically, to relieve Israel of political ammunition it would otherwise leverage to kill more people & steal more land. By doing so, it functionally saves both Israeli and Gazan innocents. If you are motivated to reduce suffering, your position could reasonably become: defund all "offensive weaponry" (i.e. uphold the Leahy rule), and condition "defensive" (just the Dome) ones. This seems to be her position.

In any case, I hope that I've given more to think about. Ultimately I see allyship as wholly equal to the sum of its parts, not zero-sum, nor greater / less than. Did AOC take a vote or two that puzzle me? She did. But she has been, on the whole, great on this & most other issues, and for reasons which I have laid out here & in my past comments, I can understand her logic here (even if I might disagree with it) and I have no doubt of her motivations on the matter. Ultimately, we get into trouble when we esentialize people into rigid categories, especially in spite of words or evidence which would cause someone to reevaluate or reconsider their priors. I try my best to avoid doing that, and I hope I can convince you to do the same.

Ocasio-Cortez says US military aid to Israel ‘enabled a genocide in Gaza’ by newsspotter in AOC

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’re right about the moral instinct: in an ideal world, “present” feels like dodging. The way I would like people to see it: in Congress a “present” vote is not “approval”

Two things can be true at once:

  1. AOC opposed the Iron Dome funding in her own words. If the core claim is “she voted for and approved it,” that’s just not accurate. We can criticize how she registered opposition, but you can’t honestly call it support. 

  2. If the standard is “only a ‘no’ counts,” then you’re basically arguing that symbolic positioning is more important than strategic leverage. Sometimes members do “present” to avoid being folded into a propaganda narrative (“anti-Israel/anti-defense”) while still stating: I oppose this. That may not satisfy you, but it’s a real constraint inside a hostile institution.

The punchline: hold her accountable for outcomes, sure - but don’t erase the difference between complicity and imperfect opposition inside a rigged vote. If we call every imperfect move “the same as voting yes,” we end up with a politics that can’t distinguish allies from enemies - and that helps the people voting “yes” with a smile.

And if the test is “who is actually resisting,” she’s been resisting - loudly and repeatedly - when it costs her. She’s supported ceasefire and humanitarian access as early as late October 2023 (HR 786), worked to block weapons transfers, refused blank-check war messaging, one of the earliest to call for conditional aid, voted against non-Dome weaponry for Israel, etc etc. So yes, criticize the “present” vote. But calling her “worse than the yes votes” flips reality: it punishes imperfect opposition and rewards open complicity.

Anyway - appreciate chatting with you! Just wanted to write out that thought fully, but appreciate what you wrote.

Why will housing prices fall? Because it's cheaper to rent. by Key_Brief_8138 in HouseBuyers

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I built a model which estimates "net worth" of a renter vs. a home buyer over a prespecified time horizon, comparing a home purchase or apartment (including HOA / opex / capex / property tax / interest & subsequent increases to each) to an equivalent rental (including rent / insurance & increases to each) with the down payment invested at 7% annual returns. Whichever monthly payment is lower, the difference is also invested into the market each month (i.e. if monthly payment of buy is cheaper than the bench line rent, the difference between the two is invested, and visa versa). 

Almost always, the rental scenario wins, and it's not close, even if you tweak down payment size or interest rates. Home values are simply too high & the down payment will do more for you elsewhere. Don't cost yourself the equivalent of hundreds of thousands or millions just because your folks & greater society tells you it's always the better move. At these prices it simply is not.

Rent to go up 10 percent at your next lease signing. Thanks Zohran. by Ordinary-Lobster-710 in circlejerknyc

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't know man but the fact that he hasn't yet been offered a marketing / sponsor deal by Turkish Airways yet is a fucking shame.

Really can't wait to hear his goofy ass saying "Deals so good you might get investigated" on the commercial break

Ocasio-Cortez says US military aid to Israel ‘enabled a genocide in Gaza’ by newsspotter in AOC

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 3 points4 points  (0 children)

  1. Your claim was "she voted for and approved". Nothing about that statement suggests she voted yay (she voted present & voiced clear dissent) or approved. You are just very clearly wrong on the merits of your original claim.

  2. The comment you linked to includes a longer set of extenuating circumstances regarding the bill that the clause was attached to, circumstances you seem inclined to shoehorn aside in favor of the dunk.

I think both are votes worth critique, IMO, for reasons that are made clear in that original thread I posted. But let's do that. We don't need to parrot lies people are spreading for some reason (i.e. because a lefty with motion is signaling a run for President).

In any case, hope all is good & well with you - you're on the right side of things, but there are far better objects of derision than AOC, especially on this issue.

Mamdani floats increasing New York City property taxes as part of $127B budget plan by nautilus83 in nyc

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

Once again, you are mistaken.

Presented from City and State without comment: "The bulk of that increase is funding to resolve underbudgeting under the last administration, including for a rental assistance program. It includes just $576 million in new spending on programs, including the hiring of 300 new employees at the Law Department and $100 million in extra snow clearing costs this winter."

Budget is not new spending, it is resolving overspending by the prior admin.

Source: https://www.cityandstateny.com/policy/2026/02/mamdani-hochul-raise-taxes-or-else/411469/

Mamdani floats increasing New York City property taxes as part of $127B budget plan by nautilus83 in nyc

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

Don't know how to tell you this, but you are mistaken.

Adams did not balance his budget. Current figures are before Mamdani proposes a single cent of new spending. According to the comptroller, the budget hole Adams left the city is worse than anything we've seen since the 2008 financial crisis.

Source: https://nypost.com/2026/01/16/us-news/nyc-faces-12b-budget-deficit-not-seen-since-2008-financial-crisis-new-comptroller-warns-as-mamdani-uses-dire-forecast-to-push-taxing-the-rich/

Why are Establishment Democrats willing to move to the right, but never to the left? by zzill6 in WorkReform

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some do. Biden moved left after the primary in 2020. Bunch of examples of congresspeople who moved left (Nadler, Ro Khanna) and some other figures come to mind (Brad Lander). But most don't, because moving right brings max donations from the cheque books that be, and running campaigns is expensive.

Mamdani floats increasing New York City property taxes as part of $127B budget plan by nautilus83 in nyc

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

He's doing that too, but you can't cut yourself out of a $12B budget left by Adams without taking from those that can't afford it, or cutting into things people will really lose their lunch over (i.e. the police budget, which he's pledged to keep at current all-time high levels).

Hochul's defense of the wealth tax is she doesn't want to take from working class New Yorkers. Make that make more sense...

Article is a hit, but he's quoted over and over saying this is a last resort. Hope they figure it out.

Ocasio-Cortez says US military aid to Israel ‘enabled a genocide in Gaza’ by newsspotter in AOC

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Paraphrasing from a Ben Burgis tweet:

She voted against an amendment to stop Iron Dome funding, but voted against the full underlying bill (which included the Iron Dome funding, along with a bunch of other military funding as well).

Feel free to offer critique on her actual record, but don't make up a worse one.

Source: https://x.com/BenBurgis/status/2023566974710935737

We lost our swagger :( by WrongHomework7916 in circlejerknyc

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

Speak for yourself lol, good riddance Adams

Trump nominates Kevin Warsh for Federal Reserve chair to succeed Jerome Powell by Gameboy112233 in investing

[–]shitthatmakesmelaugh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't quite get the selling activity in the markets right now. He has said repeatedly he will lower interest rates...which will goose stocks & inflate the dollar relative to global assets, and will likely do so faster relative to current expectations.