

You can’t fix those companies because you can’t fix their incentives.
And if we agree…
There’s a ton of things that are acceptable for adults that aren’t for children. I bet you can come up with at least three.


You can’t fix those companies because you can’t fix their incentives.
And if we agree…
There’s a ton of things that are acceptable for adults that aren’t for children. I bet you can come up with at least three.


While I can see your point, I don’t think education can stand up to companies with more money than we can conceive that have teams of people making it as addictive as possible and shoehorning in into every aspect of life. If education were enough, nobody would use tobacco, either.
One of the biggest benefits of young people not being on social media sites or having to at least pretend to be somebody else that I see is that their mistakes can be private. Nobody deserves to be publicly shackled to who they were as a 14 year old dipshit.


Your refuse to allow a referendum for all of the rest of us commenters to change your opinion. You see the votes and yet you’re unwilling to change. You leave us no choice but to invade your comments for the sake of all the other commenters you’re oppressing that want you to change your opinion.
🪖🪖🪖🪖🪖🪖🪖 “Let’s go make his opinions better and free his head from the oppressive imprisonment of Buttistan!”


It’s cool to kill a bunch of people if some people want to be part of a different nation but aren’t willing to emigrate there? Get your head out of your ass.


I’m not sure it’s like this everywhere, but many airlines are more focused on financial products (like credit cards) for profit than flights. Here’s something about it, no guarantee of quality, but it’s enough to get the general idea: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/09/airlines-banks-mileage-programs/675374/





Also, the houses are in poorer towns that are depopulating.


Remote hands are extra.


Could it be a good candidate for federation? There’s already a few naming standards that would allow a bit of a common ground. And maybe eliminate a few of the big points of failure.


No no no, you’re trying to be a better place than the US. Stop talking like them.
Budapest Memorandum worked out so great that they need a sequel.