Lurker > Antifar

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TopicDoes anyone not really care about Israel and Palestine?
Antifar
05/28/21 7:31:46 PM
#5
I'd encourage people to read this
https://defector.com/what-a-ceasefire-really-means/

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TopicTV shows that would make good video games
Antifar
05/28/21 5:37:40 PM
#22
Breaking Bad as meth empire management sim.

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Topicis Biden the most republican president of all time? seems so
Antifar
05/28/21 5:32:41 PM
#14
Payzmaykr posted...
do anything and Clinton was fairly left leaning for a modern democrat.
Well this is just revisionist history; Clinton and the DLC are credited with moving the party rightward and his administration's record on issues like criminal justice and welfare reform are way out of step with where the party is now.

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TopicBidens 2022 spending plan is 8 TRILLION dollars..
Antifar
05/28/21 4:17:23 PM
#32
Just gonna note that TC's title is off by 33 percent
https://www.cnn.com/2021/05/27/politics/joe-biden-budget/index.html

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TopicWhat game should I play this weekend?
Antifar
05/28/21 2:55:44 PM
#6
Yakuza

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TopicVideo game protagonists who fuck
Antifar
05/28/21 1:32:36 PM
#27
Majima, but not Kiryu

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TopicSenate Republicans killed the commission to investigate January 6th
Antifar
05/28/21 1:32:08 PM
#41
https://twitter.com/lindsaywise/status/1398309078103961602

Look at this fucking weasel


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TopicTwitter Blue. $3/month for iOS users
Antifar
05/28/21 1:26:20 PM
#14
TroutPaste posted...
According to images shared by Wong, the service includes an undo tweet feature
You can already delete tweets, though.

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TopicPresident Manchin won't budge on filibuster to pass 1/6 commission
Antifar
05/28/21 12:46:48 PM
#24
TopicPaul Ryan to enter GOP's civil war by criticizing Trump's hold on party
Antifar
05/28/21 8:03:47 AM
#7
I mean look at this weak shit
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/27/us/politics/paul-ryan-trump-reagan-dinner.html
The former speaker tempered his criticism by avoiding any mention of Mr. Trump by name except to say that the former presidents brand of populism, when tethered to conservative principles, had led to economic growth, and to credit him with bringing new voters to the party.

A senior adviser for Mr. Trump, Jason Miller, responded to early excerpts from the speech with a terse brushoff: Who is Paul Ryan? he said in a text message.

I can't imagine anything less influential than this.

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TopicSuppose Trump dies like a year from now of natural causes...
Antifar
05/27/21 10:58:35 PM
#31
PFrench2 posted...
"The margin in the EC - where Biden won Georgia and Arizona for the first time in a generation, and turned most other states Purple - was kinda close. Therefore me scared of Donald Trump"

-Antifar.
44k votes go the other way, and Trump wins in 2020.

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TopicSuppose Trump dies like a year from now of natural causes...
Antifar
05/27/21 10:51:44 PM
#27
PFrench2 posted...
What, is he going to run and win against the damn guy he JUST lost to by 7 million votes?
The margin in the EC was significantly closer, and the GOP is hard at work ousting the Republican officials who certified Biden's win.

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TopicSuppose Trump dies like a year from now of natural causes...
Antifar
05/27/21 10:44:06 PM
#21
Ron DeSantis would happily waltz right into the gap left by him.

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TopicPaul Ryan to enter GOP's civil war by criticizing Trump's hold on party
Antifar
05/27/21 10:37:54 PM
#2
Teenager without even a gun to enter nation's civil war

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TopicFinished Yakuza 0
Antifar
05/27/21 10:23:23 PM
#14
Yeah Kiwami is my least favorite of the Yakuzas I've played so far (0, K2, Like a Dragon, Judgment)

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TopicWhy did you originally join GameFAQs?
Antifar
05/27/21 10:21:47 PM
#65
I first came to GameFAQs when I was 10 and couldn't figure out something in Golden Sun: The Lost Age. It wasn't even a puzzle, just the perspective making it hard to notice a path through a cave. I lurked on the boards (Next Gen Gaming and Sports and Racing were big ones for me) for a few years after that before figuring out how to create an email address and actually make an account here.

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TopicThe Series Ranking Topic
Antifar
05/27/21 8:00:48 PM
#1
I know you freaks love making your views on the relative quality of series known. One series per post, don't go dumping everything on us

Forza Horizon: 3>4>1>2

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TopicFinished Yakuza 0
Antifar
05/27/21 7:48:56 PM
#10
Bump for Yakuza talk

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TopicNeighborhood watch app put 30k bounty on innocent man
Antifar
05/27/21 7:45:29 PM
#17
Some more details on the app, which again, nightmare

Motherboard spoke to eight sources in reporting this story: five former Citizen employees, two sources with knowledge of the company's operations, and one person close to the company's founders. Motherboard also obtained multiple caches of internal policy documents, Slack messages, and company notes. Our reporting spells out not only what happened in Pacific Palisades, but also how workers and Andrew Frame view the incident and Citizen's role in society. The app pitches itself as a public-safety tool, but aims to grow its user base and revenue just as much as any other startup. The Palisades incident was characterized by Frame as a risk, a test, an experiment, even though it potentially put the person they named in danger.
Motherboard has learned that:
Users are flooded with notifications in what multiple sources interpret as an attempt to make users feel anxious enough about their neighborhoods to buy "Protect," a $19.99 per month service that allows users to livestream their phone's camera and location to a Citizen "Protect agent" who monitors it and sends "Instant emergency response" in case of an emergency.
The return of a missing autistic teen to his family in the Bronx earlier this month was done by Citizen employees on a "Street Team" that films and interacts with people while pretending to be ordinary app users.
Employee performance is measured by how many seconds it takes workers to input an incident into the app and how many incidents they cover.
Citizen's grand vision has never been a secret: From its initial launch as an app called "Vigilante" in 2016, the company pictured a world in which people were alerted to crime as it happened, and then app users stepped in to stop it before the police needed to intervene. In the Vigilante launch advertisement, a criminal stalks and then attacks a woman in New York City. The app broadcasts the location of this active crime to Vigilante's users, and a horde of people descend on the criminal, stopping the crime in progress: "Can injustice survive transparency?" the ad asks.

Thus far, however, Citizen has essentially been a social network for reporting crime that operates in around 50 cities. Citizen workers listen to and summarize police scanner audio as "incidents," which are then pushed to the app. Users can also post their own incidents, upload photos and videos, and comment on or react to incidents with emojis. The app allows users to search "around you" for incidents, and also sends push alerts to users for nearby events.

"The whole idea behind Protect is that you could convince people to pay for the product once youve gotten them to the highest point of anxiety you can possibly get them to," one former employee said, referring to Citizen's subscription service. "Citizen cant make money unless it makes its users believe there are constant, urgent threats around them at all times," they added. A Citizen spokesperson denied this in a statement: "Its actually the opposite. With user feedback in mind, we have designed the Citizen home screen so users only see relevant, real-time information within their immediate surroundings," the spokesperson said.

The disastrous Palisades fire bounty hunt and the discovery of a Citizen-branded "private patrol" vehicle driving around Los Angeles (part of a pilot program in which Citizen envisions offering a physical private security force to respond to the problems of its users) hint that Citizen's goals essentially remain the same as Vigilante's.

Frame seems to imagine Citizen as an all-encompassing crime-fighting machine that he believes will make the world safer. In Slack messages viewed by Motherboard, Frame calls ProtectOS, the system Citizen uses to create incidents and push them out to users, "the most powerful operating system ever created."

"Our vision is a global safety network of people protecting each othera world in which a kidnapping is impossible, because everyone is looking out for each other, and neighbors are alerted as soon as a kidnapping attempt is made," a Citizen spokesperson told Motherboard in a statement.

Vigilante was instantly controversial for a variety of reasons. Unsurprisingly, police said the app encouraged vigilantism. Critics worried that the app's users would racially profile Black people as suspicious, as happened on other safety-focused apps. Apple took the app out of the App Store because it violated terms of service that ban apps that risk "physical harm to people." The app relaunched as "Citizen" in 2017, with Frame saying that the original name "distracted from our mission" and that people should not take the law into their own hands. They should use Citizen to avoid crime rather than fight it.

In practice, Citizen is an app that experts say fuels paranoia and a fear of one's neighbors and surroundings by reporting "suspicious" people. Many of the incidents reported on the app are about people experiencing homelessness, for example. Citizen says it "does not report on suspicious people, nor does it report on people experiencing homelessness. Citizen reports on safety incidents such as car crashes, fires, and searches for missing people." However, many of the incidents do indeed relate to incidents involving people experiencing homelessness and many of the comments are overtly about homelessness.

"It plays into peoples anxieties and fears and magnifies peoples fears of the other and who and what they think should not exist in their neighborhood or their area," Chris Gilliard, a research fellow with the Technology and Social Change Research Project at Harvard Kennedy Schools Shorenstein Center, said. "As weve seen, that often means people who dont look like them."

One former Citizen employee told Motherboard that a portion of the app's user base is "insanely racist, which comes out in comment sections that are especially vile even by the standards of internet comment sections." Citizen does moderate comments, but "two people having an argument about whether or not someones comment is racist drives engagement," the source added. A hacker recently scraped a wealth of information from Citizen, including user comments that repeatedly use the N-word, according to a screenshot provided by the hacker. Some of these were deleted by Citizen, but racist comments are regularly posted on incidents.


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TopicPresident Manchin won't budge on filibuster to pass 1/6 commission
Antifar
05/27/21 7:30:02 PM
#22
TopicPresident Manchin won't budge on filibuster to pass 1/6 commission
Antifar
05/27/21 6:05:18 PM
#14
Dianne Feinstein, surprise, has not been keeping up
https://twitter.com/sahilkapur/status/1398011558660300800

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TopicLook at the bottom of my foot, what is this
Antifar
05/27/21 4:20:24 PM
#3
You know how some people have birthmarks?

That's a deathmark

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TopicIs Bernie a huge hypocrite?
Antifar
05/27/21 4:12:41 PM
#3
No, 60 degrees is the ideal hotel room temperature

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TopicNeighborhood watch app put 30k bounty on innocent man
Antifar
05/27/21 4:10:39 PM
#1
https://www.vice.com/en/article/y3dpyw/inside-crime-app-citizen-vigilante
Andrew Frame was excited.

It was Saturday night two weeks ago, and Frame, the CEO of the crime and neighborhood watch app Citizen, was on Slack, whipping himself and his employees into what he'd later call at an all-hands meeting a "fury of passion" about a wildfire that had broken out earlier that afternoon in Los Angeles' Pacific Palisades neighborhood.

Citizen had gotten a tip that the wildfire was started by an arsonist, and Frame had decided earlier in the night that the fire was a huge opportunity. Citizen, using a new livestreaming service it had just launched called OnAir, would catch the suspect live on air, with thousands of people watching. Frame decided the Citizen user who provided information that led to the suspects arrest would get $10,000. Frame wanted him. Before midnight. As the night wore on, Citizen got more information about the supposed suspect. They obtained a photo of the man, which they kept up on the livestream for large portions of the night. More information trickled in through a tips line Citizen had set up.

"first name? What is it?! publish ALL info," Frame told employees working in a Citizen Slack room who were working on the case.

"FIND THIS FUCK," he told them. "LETS GET THIS GUY BEFORE MIDNIGHT HES GOING DOWN."

"BREAKING NEWS. this guy is the devil. get him," Frame said. "by midnight!@#! we hate this guy. GET HIM."

He was growing impatient. He increased the bounty to $20,000. Thousands of people were watching Citizen's livestream, but the man still hadn't been caught. Frame asked his staff to send out another notification, one that would hit all Citizen users in Los Angeles. The bounty had to go higher.

"Close in on him. 30k Let's get him. No escape. Let's increase. 30k," Frame said. "Notify all of la. Blast to all of la."

"Citizen is OnAir: Arsonist Pursuit Continues," the notification, which went out to 848,816 Citizen users in Los Angeles, said. "We are now offering a $30,000 reward for any information directly leading to his arrest tonight. Tap to join the live search."

Over the course of nearly seven hours, Citizen, under the increasingly frantic direction of Frame, conducted a citywide, app-fueled manhunt for a specific suspected arsonist. The employees went back and forth on how they should frame the manhunt they had started, who in Los Angeles they should notify via the app, and how often they should do it.

In the Slack room with Frame, one staffer brought up a "loophole," pointing out that Citizen was violating its own terms of service that prohibit "posting of specific information that could identify parties involved in an incident." The staffer who brought up the terms of service violation was ignored in that specific Slack room, and the broadcast continued to specifically name the person and share his photo for hours.

Earlier in the night, soon after news of a fire broke, Frame said he saw the fire as a chance to catch a suspected arsonist live on the internet, therefore proving Citizen's utility to users and helping the app grow.

"The more courage we have, the more signups we will have. go after bad guys, signups will skyrocket. period ... we should catch a new bad guy EVERY DAY," Frame said.

At one point, Frame said "these metrics will be great." And they were. At one point 40,000 people were watching the live feed, according to the Slack messages. Citizen saw a sharp spike in signups as the livestream spread. Frame said at a later all-hands meeting that 1.4 million people engaged with the content, according to other Slack messages.

Well after midnight, Los Angeles police made an arrest. In a separate Slack room, employees cautiously began to celebrate: "cop said its an ongoing investigation, this looks like our guy!!!" one employee wrote.

It wasn't Citizen's guy. Frame and the entirety of the Citizen apparatus had spent a whole night putting a bounty on the head of an innocent man.

(Motherboard is not publishing the name of the person Citizen falsely accused, though Citizen repeatedly used it both internally and externally.)
The article goes on with much more about this nightmare app, which used to be called "Vigilante."


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TopicKissinger dead at 96
Antifar
05/27/21 4:05:15 PM
#11
He can't keep getting away with it dot gif

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TopicPresident Manchin won't budge on filibuster to pass 1/6 commission
Antifar
05/27/21 3:49:21 PM
#11
DarkRoast posted...
Democrats were willing to use reconciliation to pass the Affordable Care Act,
No they weren't; they had 60 votes to pass that.

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TopicPresident Manchin won't budge on filibuster to pass 1/6 commission
Antifar
05/27/21 3:39:45 PM
#1
TopicMatt Gaetz paraphrase: I'll run for President in 2024 if Trump doesn't
Antifar
05/27/21 3:31:16 PM
#9
thronedfire2 posted...
is there a law that says you can't run for president from prison?
No, Eugene Debs got a million votes from prison.

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TopicFinished Yakuza 0
Antifar
05/27/21 3:23:35 PM
#9
It's such a pure video game. A fantastic experience.

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TopicPittsburgh Pirates baseballl
Antifar
05/27/21 3:02:26 PM
#14
He said Stanley Cup, so I'm going to guess he meant Stanley Cups.

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Topic"The Republican Party is NOT a cult of Trump!!"
Antifar
05/27/21 2:41:19 PM
#42
Takuya Lee posted...
No it won't. It won't get as far as the last attempt. The thing about coup attempts is that it allows people to prepare and be vigilant.
The people with the power to do that are Democrats.

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Topic"The Republican Party is NOT a cult of Trump!!"
Antifar
05/27/21 2:37:23 PM
#34
It was always the platform

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TopicPittsburgh Pirates baseballl
Antifar
05/27/21 2:35:44 PM
#1
TopicWhy do we not care that we're all slowly gonna die from a climate apocalypse?
Antifar
05/27/21 11:10:21 AM
#21
How proven do you need the greenhouse effect to be?

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TopicDragon Quest 2D-HD: Octopath-like remake of Dragon Quest III announced.
Antifar
05/27/21 11:04:11 AM
#21
The_Korey posted...
Nice! Wish 1 and 2 were getting the same treatment, though.
That was extremely hinted at during the stream last night.

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TopicPoll: ~20 percent of Republicans believe in QAnon
Antifar
05/27/21 10:57:25 AM
#1
https://twitter.com/robertpjones/status/1397920176205549581

That's about the same portion that supported Trump when he entered the primary.

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TopicShould the police be reformed, defunded, or abolished?
Antifar
05/27/21 10:41:54 AM
#27
Nemu posted...
There is nothing that can be done on a broad level to inherently fix local corruption.
Corruption is not the primary problem with policing.

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TopicSquare Enix is having a livestream to celebrate Dragon Quest's 35th anniversary.
Antifar
05/26/21 11:33:48 PM
#21
Six!?

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TopicPolice handcuffed man so tightly he had to have his hand amputated
Antifar
05/26/21 11:20:38 PM
#12
ClunkerSlim posted...
Get a ring doorbell and NEVER open the door for the police.
If you're concerned about the cops, do not buy a Ring.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/may/18/amazon-ring-largest-civilian-surveillance-network-us
Not only is Rings surveillance network spreading rapidly, it is extending the reach of law enforcement into private property and expanding the surveillance of everyday life. Whats more, once Ring users agree to release video content to law enforcement, there is no way to revoke access and few limitations on how that content can be used, stored, and with whom it can be shared.
...
Then theres this: since Amazon bought Ring in 2018, it has brokered more than 1,800 partnerships with local law enforcement agencies, who can request recorded video content from Ring users without a warrant. That is, in as little as three years, Ring connected around one in 10 police departments across the US with the ability to access recorded content from millions of privately owned home security cameras. These partnerships are growing at an alarming rate.
Data Ive collected from Rings quarterly reported numbers shows that in the past year through the end of April 2021, law enforcement have placed more than 22,000 individual requests to access content captured and recorded on Ring cameras. Rings cloud-based infrastructure (supported by Amazon Web Services) makes it convenient for law enforcement agencies to place mass requests for access to recordings without a warrant. Because Ring cameras are owned by civilians, law enforcement are given a backdoor entry into private video recordings of people in residential and public space that would otherwise be protected under the fourth amendment. By partnering with Amazon, law enforcement circumvents these constitutional and statutory protections, as noted by the attorney Yesenia Flores. In doing so, Ring blurs the line between police work and civilian surveillance and turns your neighbors home security system into an informant. Except, unlike an informant, its always watching.
Rings pervasive network of cameras expands the dragnet of everyday pre-emptive surveillance a dragnet that surveils anyone who passes into its gaze, whether a suspect in a crime or not.

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TopicPolice handcuffed man so tightly he had to have his hand amputated
Antifar
05/26/21 11:00:18 PM
#1
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/police-handcuffed-a-man-so-tightly-he-had-to-have-hand-amputated-lawsuit-says/ar-AAKpYTn?ocid=uxbndlbing
Before Giovanni Loyola was arrested in February 2020, he enjoyed using his hands and worked mainly in construction. Now the 26-year-old is unable to fasten his own belt or tie his shoes, his attorney said.

Loyola had segments of fingers removed in several operations last year, and doctors ultimately had to amputate his entire left hand. According to a federal civil rights complaint filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama last month, the amputation was the result of injuries sustained from being left for hours in overly tight handcuffs after a disorderly-conduct arrest.

Hes depressed really depressed. He wont leave his house, Jon Goldfarb, Loyolas attorney, told The Washington Post on Wednesday.

In an interview with AL.com, Loyola said he watched with fear as he noticed his fingers turning blue, then black, after his release from jail.

It really scared me, and I havent been the same since, he told the outlet.

These brutal police dog attacks were captured on video. Now some cities are curtailing K-9 use.

Now Loyola is seeking damages against a sheriffs deputy alleged to have handcuffed him and a chance for a jury to hear his case. The lawsuit names Jefferson County sheriffs deputy Godber as the defendant. County records list Christopher Godber as a deputy with the office.

Reached by phone Wednesday, the Jefferson County Sheriffs Office said it does not comment on pending litigation and declined to discuss the lawsuit.

The 14-page federal complaint alleges Godber violated Loyolas constitutional rights by using excessive force and conducting an unlawful arrest.

Jefferson County sheriffs deputies responded to calls of gunshots and a fight shortly after 11 p.m. Feb. 16, 2020, at a Birmingham trailer park, according to the lawsuit and the police report. One caller said two men were fighting outside a residence and had large weapons, police said.

When Godber and two other deputies arrived at the scene, they knocked on the door of Loyolas mothers home and he answered. The police report and the lawsuit offer contrasting narratives of the scene: According to police, officers asked to check on others in the home and asked Loyola to step outside, but he refused and became combative and pushed Godber away, which prompted officers to restrain him.

According to the lawsuit, Loyola was watching TV at home and there had been no disturbances when deputies arrived. When Loyola answered the door, the lawsuit says, they reached across the threshold and pulled him outside the home, threw him against a car and the ground, and later searched the property despite having no warrant or cause to detain Loyola.

The lawsuit said Loyola was handcuffed on the ground with Godber placing his knee into Loyolas back as the other deputies performed a safety sweep of the home, despite Maribel Perez, Loyolas mother and the only other occupant, being outside the home.

Perez estimated that her son was handcuffed on the ground for at least 45 minutes, according to Goldfarb, the attorney.

Loyola immediately began to lose feeling in one hand, but Godber refused to loosen the handcuffs when he complained, the lawsuit says. Loyola was eventually taken to jail on charges of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.

It was not immediately clear from the lawsuit or the police report how long Loyola was in handcuffs, though the complaint estimated that it was hours before they were removed at the jail. He remained in jail until Feb. 28, 2020, serving time for outstanding warrants on traffic violations.

Loyola went to the hospital immediately after his release and was referred for surgery. He had two of his fingertips removed but continued to wake up with pain and noticed his fingers were turning colors. Over the next several months, he underwent four more operations, including his hand amputation.

That his damages are so severe is what makes this case so powerful, Goldfarb said. But it could have easily been avoided and never should have happened.



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TopicHas anyone tried Xcloud or whatever
Antifar
05/26/21 8:51:36 PM
#7
I've done more streaming directly from my Xbox than Xcloud proper, but I've had good success either way, minus a couple games where d-pad input seemed off.

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TopicVermont governor designates George Floyd Remembrance Day
Antifar
05/26/21 7:51:38 PM
#7
Singling out Floyd really seems to miss the point, imo

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TopicAZ Republicans looking to strip secretary of state of authority over elections
Antifar
05/26/21 6:39:24 PM
#4
Not according to the law

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TopicAZ Republicans looking to strip secretary of state of authority over elections
Antifar
05/26/21 6:34:25 PM
#1
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/hobbs-election-bill-arizona-secretary-of-state
Arizona Republicans are looking to put an end to the states top election officials ability to defend election laws in court. Recently added language to the states budget package, which could be passed by the legislature as soon as this week, deprives Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs of any role in elections-related litigation. The bill rests that authority solely with the states attorney general, who currently is a Republican, Mark Brnovich.

But theres a catch. The measure sunsets in Jan. 2023 presumably because, come the 2022 election, the attorney general could be a Democrat. Or, perhaps, the secretary of state could be a Republican.

That provision is just one example of how the refusal to come to terms with President Trumps loss has empowered fringe actors to cast doubt on the 2020 election, while making Secretary Katie Hobbs a villain to the far-right.

The budget language seems in part aimed at how Hobbs sided against restrictive state voter laws that are before the U.S. Supreme Court this term. But the bill also targets how she brought in outside counsel to help her defend Arizonas 2020 election results against the wacky lawsuits brought by Trumps allies amid his election reversal crusade. The budget bill blocks her office from spending on outside counsel, though she can hire one full-time official to her office to serve internally as her legal advisor, under the legislation. The attorney general is also, under the bill, banned from representing Hobbs in court or giving her legal advice in another provision that expires specifically in 2023.

Hobbs, in a statement on the legislation, said that while other state officials remained silent, we defended the election in countless lawsuits seeking to overturn the will of Arizona voters.

The fact that the legislature has singled out me and my office for these unjustifiable restrictions restrictions which would expire at the end of my term make it clear what this is really about: partisan politics, she said.

She also connected the bill to the sketchy Senate-ordered audit underway to recount Maricopas 2.1 million ballots and how the legislature had worked all year to undermine our elections.

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TopicGamer who was bullied for having 1 hand becomes beloved after getting MGS5 arm
Antifar
05/26/21 6:19:49 PM
#16
MGSV was great

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TopicPresident Trump SHOOTS HARD on the Witch Hunt, State of New York
Antifar
05/26/21 3:33:39 PM
#8
Twitter's character limit was the best thing he could hope for.

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TopicTheir really should be some sort of requirements to reproduce.
Antifar
05/26/21 3:09:19 PM
#20
RebelElite791 posted...
I don't think people who support eugenics are the same ones supporting access to medicine and housing?
Right, it's very funny to see people treat CE as a hivemind

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TopicMarco Rubio, on "social justice" and "wokeness"
Antifar
05/26/21 1:11:00 PM
#1
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