Man, the wealth tax ban is mind-boggling to me. I can only imagine what marketing they must have done to convince the average voter there was any downside to the POSSIBILITY of taxing high net worth individuals, without any specifics.
Man, the wealth tax ban is mind-boggling to me. I can only imagine what marketing they must have done to convince the average voter there was any downside to the POSSIBILITY of taxing high net worth individuals, without any specifics.
As of right now, the button is just a toggle that will turn on the feature to hide read posts in your feed, but won’t restore hidden posts (as you found). If you want to see your hidden posts, you can go to your profile (center button on the bottom buttons) and you can unhide a given post from the post itself.
Not sure if this is different depending on the backing browser, but my experience with this is that it works great to open the link, but when you hit the back button to go back to Voyager, you get kicked out to your home page instead of back to the thread you were in.
This might not be caused by opening a page in the same browser as the PWA (could be due to issues with the back button that I think we’re fixed in the latest build? Or was that about the native apps? Can’t remember) but I’ve been assuming that’s part of the issue 🤷♂️
According to the video, the original effort to get this passenger rail set up died in 2016 because Union Pacific wasn’t interested and that’s (theoretically) changed now. I wonder if it’s just a change in management decision makers or if UP’s business is down on those routes and it’d actually benefit them to get a slice of that traffic.
I do wonder what the projected cost might be to make this a reality - the rep from the rail line project said a study projected a 20% in traffic on 35 if the rail line were to be completed. I’m guessing that’s the optimistic number and it doesn’t feel like 20% would be life-changing necessarily, so it’s a real question of whether it’d be worth whatever the cost might be
If you go to your profile (middle button on the bottom), there’s an option to view hidden posts there. Don’t think there’s an option to filter by community though, which can be tough if you’re looking for a hidden post from a day or two ago.
Code reform has always been such a hot button issue in the past, I don’t understand why I haven’t heard more about this until now. An I just out of the loop or is this different in some way from CodeNEXT and the other reform attempts that make it less of a slig to get through?
I think the compromise of requiring the historic facades and setbacks from the facades is a good way to not lose history while also turning Dirty 6th into something approaching usefulness.
I think the whole focus on small buildings and maintaining sightlines to the capitol building is stupid, honestly. If we want downtown to support a big city’s level of people (and not be a dead zone), we have to build it up like an actual city.
lemmings, lemurs, lemurians?
I vote Lemurians just for the Golden Sun vibes.
That’s part of a question from the reporter - here’s the rest, with Watson’s response:
Aside from the DoJ portion, this looks like a nothing burger of a response 😐 Banning one type of non-lethal weaponry just means the companies that sell to police departments have to change products. It seems like it would be more fruitful to establish regulations around what non-lethal weaponry can be used in protest or non-violent situations, along with defined penalties for violating the regulations that incentivize either leadership or individual officers from resorting to them unnecessarily? Or more generally general regulations on which non-lethal weaponry the department can even buy, based on what it does to the victim?
Updating training for those deployed in a crowd situation does seem relevant though, so hopefully that helps.
I don’t really get the point about de-escalation though - is there some way they intend to deescalate a protest? The point of the protest is that people are angry enough to come out and demonstrate. If the deescaltion procedures involve working with the protestors to make them feel like their voices are being heard, that seems useful, but if the intention is just to “pacify” the crowd I don’t see that preventing another situation like the BLM protests.
Overall, I’m kinda disappointed in how short the article is and how much of its limited time it sounds on how the mayor is trying to pacify APD