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2rafa


				

				

				
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joined 2022 September 06 11:20:51 UTC
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User ID: 841

2rafa


				
				
				

				
17 followers   follows 1 user   joined 2022 September 06 11:20:51 UTC

					

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User ID: 841

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They’re OK but so far they seem to lack the real killer feature of being able to make actually catchy hooks, at least from my prompting. They can make real sounding very mid music, like this or ‘lost records’ YouTube compilations generated by the AI.

I feel like LLMs are in a similar spot. They can write OK. They can’t write anything truly impressive. They can’t write fiction like Joyce or non-fiction like the best New Yorker journalism. The question is whether that’s just a minor revision away, whether it requires some tinkering with the training set, or whether it’s actually possible that there are limitations that prevent generation of 99.9th percentile art without architectural changes at the least.

Huh!

It is true but historically the extremists pull back when the IDF does. Settlers left the Sinai. Settlers left Gaza. Raze their houses and let the enemy move in and they run scared pretty easily. Most extremist religious Zionists aren’t angry young men, they’re large families with huge numbers of women and children, they’re easy targets.

What would be the legally acceptable way to quietly pay off a mistress like this? If a Pro-Trump Super PAC had paid Daniels instead of Cohen/Trump personally, would that be unambiguously legal? If the National Enquirer had caught-and-killed the story with David Pecker’s personal funds instead of merely informing Cohen, would that be unambiguously legal? What if it was simply a friend of Trump who paid, with no business relationship to the president? A surface level reading would suggest not, because by these trial standards that would technically involve more than $2700 or whatever going to something that could possibly benefit the campaign.

Yes, but that could just be because the cops who vote Democrat aren’t the sort of people who donate to the Democratic Party.

I don’t think Nybbler is Jewish.

1.25x is fine. Anything more and it begins to sound weird to me. If I’m watching YouTube rather than reading about an issue it’s probably because something about the video or audio presentation is interesting to me, and increasing the speed to 1.5x and beyond kind of defeats the purpose of enjoying that.

In the case of something purely informational like some kind of coding tutorial or software installation troubleshooting I’ll usually skip/scrub through it until I find the part I want, then watch closely and intently at normal speed.

It seems it was in a parliamentary panel on Palestine where this exact comparison was raised. In any case, he was a lifelong imperialist, which for much of the period was as much a liberal position as a conservative one. The liberals were more mercenary, and were divided over Empire, but there was a strong imperialist tendency in the liberal party early in the 20th century (referred to in contemporary politics as th gulf between the new idealists, moderates, liberal imperialists and - on the anti-empire side - little englanders). The early 20th century from around 1901 to 1935, despite the fact that Britain had already began its terminal decline and was already poorer than the US in absolute and per capita terms, was in fact the height of imperialist sentiment.

Even that isn’t intractable; there are countries where the middle class take the bus.

Our one was very inactive, a few people posting about challah baking, some orthodox people who work in back office trade functions in NYC/NJ posting Torah readings or rebbe quotes, and Israelis in the engineering team posting about Israeli EDM/techno/whatever. Political discussion is discouraged but unfortunately ours has just become “hope you guys are feeling safe, here are some mental health resources” concernposting since October 7th.

Churchill’s infamous quote about settler colonialism (“I do not admit that a great wrong”) was made in 1937.

Thanks those are some great ideas!

(Sorry in advance for double posting)

But we’ve made an idol out of self-pity. Being a Jew means being a victim. All histories contain suffering—but haven’t the Jews suffered most of all? In every century? In every country we’ve ever inhabited? Aren’t we the weak, the poor, the persecuted, and the despised? Weren’t we bullied at school, for our high intellects and our limp lokshen arms? Don’t other people have an obligation to feel bad for us? Even Jews who, like me, have never once been a victim of antisemitism—we’re still victims by descent. As a Jew, I’m not more likely to be impoverished, uneducated, or imprisoned than my gentile peers; in fact, precisely the opposite. But the victimhood remains. The one legacy of oppression I can never hope to escape. Like black tar on my skin. On Christmas Day last year, while the bombs continued to fall, the smug fucking face of smug Stephen Fry took over British TV to demand that the public do more to cherish and pity the Jews. Anything unpleasant—the taunts of some ordinary bigot, or the resistance of a people violently dispossessed for seventy-five years—gets folded into the vast archive of Jewish suffering, from Tiglath-Pileser to the death camps.

I really do agree with Kriss here. As a Jew I find Jewish self-pity nauseating and embarrassing, but even more than that I find it kind of humiliating. But it’s important to note that many Israelis would agree with him too.

Israel was not borne of Jewish self-pity. Crying about how the goyim are oppressing us is, after all, probably the oldest diaspora Jewish pastime. You can find thousands of examples of it over the centuries, from medieval England to 17th century Iran, from the Old Testament to the shtetl. Diasporic Jewish writing for much of the last millennium, in both the Middle East and Europe, often accepted gentile torment as either just punishment by God, or just as an unfortunate reality of the test imposed by God on earth in anticipation of the world to come. Efforts to actually end that victimhood were limited to individual community success stories in some countries at some times, but little else.

Israel was a response to that, an effort to break free of it, to not be victims again and forevermore.

Sure, it is true that some of Israel’s supporters use the ‘historical oppression’ angle to justify Zionism. Personally I find that distasteful, though I understand that in the modern western progressive milieu an oppressed victimhood framework is pretty much the only acceptable one. But the actual core of the idea is quite different. It’s a commitment against self-pity, an acknowledgment of the hard ways of the world, an acceptance that while spiritual salvation and religious purity have their value, they are insufficient when it comes to survival in our earthly lives.

I don’t think there’s an issue imposing a Palestinian state upon the Israelis. Many in Israel would welcome it. The issue is with how that Palestinian state was structured, who ran it, how it was governed, and how the deep-seated Palestinian desire for revenge was tackled.

As it is, Independent Palestine would be declared, elect Hamas or equivalents, attempt a military campaign against Israel, be destroyed and be occupied. <— You Are Here etc etc. The only way to avoid this scenario is for the Palestinians to be ruled by someone who can actually control them. The Western powers, for all their moral frustration around Rafah, are unwilling to do this or to finance it; colonialism is in any case a tricky business. The Muslim countries don’t want to be seen dealing with Israel too openly, and besides Palestinians have caused many of them issues over the years.

Israel isn’t big enough, rich enough or politically powerful enough to attempt an Uighur-level pacification of Palestinians, even if it wanted to (which it doesn’t, really). The traditional, biblical outcomes of this kind of tribal conflict are off the table (at least for Israel) for reasons of modernity and geopolitics.

On the far left the solution is obviously to just make all Palestinians (including foreign descendants) citizens, rename the country Palestine and hope that everything surely works out. On the center left, it’s even more vague, essentially some version of withdraw, ‘accept’ a Palestinian state, pull back settlers and hope for peace. (See above.)

So there aren’t really any solutions. One can’t really fault the Arabs for refusing to accept the Palestinians, since they dislike them for many of the same reasons the Israelis do (violent, vengeful, doesn’t understand when it’s beat). On the Israeli side, “apartheid” was not the status quo for reasons of racial hostility, all the checkpoints and walls and restrictions on Palestinians entering Israel exist solely because of repeated Palestinian terror attacks against Israel citizens.

On the Palestinian side it is hard to find any logical undercurrent, but we might assume that - somewhere within - they truly and actually believe that the Jews might one day pack up and go home. That seems unlikely to me. The French in North Africa still had France, at least then. The white Rhodesians and South Africans made up less than 10% of the population, they were fewer than 4% in the former case and they were politically divided in the latter. The Israelis are half the total population and consider Israel their homeland. They will fight to the end.

On the Israeli side, there is a fair amount of exasperation. “We lived in exile for 2000 years, so can you” is a sentiment I have heard on a number of occasions. When that classic trope of the nature documentary, the old king, the patriarch, being supplanted by some younger challenger who beats him in combat, steals his territory and females, and sends the elder male into exile, occurs, we accept it as part of the cycle of life in nature. Nothing that has happened in Israel is uncommon in human history. Countless peoples are conquered by those more advanced and more capable. That is life.

Most Israelis don’t care what happens to the Palestinians, but they wish for them to stop being a nuisance. Economic growth has been tried and has failed. Ideological indoctrination would be unacceptable to the Palestinians or the wider Muslim world. What does that leave?

They were shunted onto largely shitty land and democracy is irrelevant since at 2% of the population they don’t have any real power. Palestinians were able to travel freely into Israel until they started killing large number of civilians in terror attacks.

I’m probably not going to do it but I’m curious as to what the diet would be to build muscle optimally.

Ah, the “Neanderthal warlord” diet.

140 grams of protein a day:

  1. Max 2000 calories per day
  2. No protein shakes/powder/bars
  3. Actually flavorful and uncompromisingly delicious food

How would you do it?

Sure, but regulatory factors mean that most manufacturers will likely be able to develop or buy capable self-driving tech at around the same time, and there’s no real reason why it wouldn’t work in ICE cars either, so Tesla wouldn’t necessarily have a great advantage in that event.

No, his employees and former employees say understands rocket engineering to a very high level and is responsible for the very ambitious engineering that got done by insisting it's possible.

I bet there are plenty of MBAs at Boeing smart enough to understand rocket engineering too, who can insist that “it’s possible”. The reason for Musk’s success is that against all the odds his personal brand is extremely strong, and that pays immense dividends. “The real life Tony Stark” is what Tesla and SpaceX were built on, a meme from the first Marvel movie which of course itself begat the most successful box office franchise of all time.

Musk’s image can attract engineering talent nobody else can. There are very smart minds whose choice is essentially going into quant roles, possibly the most elite tech jobs, or working for Elon Musk. They won’t work for Ford or Boeing, no matter their pay. But they will work for Tesla or SpaceX, because of him.

But I don’t think vague comments about him being able to understand the tech means much. Transformer models are easy to explain and understand, but it still took someone to invent them. Musk wasn’t that person for his product. Making it possible isn’t the same thing.

Cloud seedling doesn’t prove chemtrail conspiracy theories, which almost all allege some kind of poison / mind control / chemical to keep people docile is being dropped from the aircraft. Benign cloud seeding for research purposes (almost universally disclosed precisely because it’s completely legal and there is little widespread opposition to it) isn’t it.

And does that follow for his discussion of distrust of the media, of Nature, of the institutions like the NIH? Does it follow for flippantly stating the CIA killed JFK and covered it up for sixty years?

Sure, this kind of hippie left think health authorities help the pharma companies cover up the “cure for cancer”, believe in chemtrails, have an extreme distrust for anything that comes out of a lab (including vaccines), and certainly believe in JFK and 911 conspiracies.

Cars are just too expensive to be iPhones. Apple hit that perfect price point where people are willing to pay $1000 vs a $300 Android because of the OS, convenience, style, brand and lack of desire to switch, and that means huge margins for Apple. People are not willing to pay $70,000 for a Tesla vs $35,000 equivalent tier other car. That’s real money, which many car buyers literally cannot afford.

Musk is a very impressive booster and is therefore an important figure in modern capitalism.

He isn’t an “inventor” or “engineer” the way, say, Brunel was. No Musk stan can point to a key mechanical component of the spaceship, or model S, that he personally designed, drew the CAD model of, came up with the physics behind, actually invented in the way even a 5 year old would understand the term.

Yeah, you can point to his employees saying he’s really smart and “gets it”. So do plenty of regular people with STEM degrees. Musk isn’t a great inventor in the Victorian tradition. He’s a businessman.

Electric cars existed for 120 years before Tesla. Why should I care that Musk made them popular? They’re not particularly better than ICE cars; there is no great improvement to the consumer.