I don't see it discussed in this article. But I recall reading another article suggesting that US Christianity is becoming more fundamentalist, which has been a driving force in pushing many people out, while leaving those that remain more extreme. The net effect is that while Christianity is shrinking, fundamentalism is growing. Coupled with fundamentalism becoming an increasingly political movement [0], and you see the current US.
Being Jewish, I've noticed a similar thing. Overall, people I grew up with have mostly shifted away from the religion (although still tend to consider them Jewish as a cultural marker). But those who are still actuvely religious tend to be more religious then their parents are.
[0] In the sense of governmental electoral politics.
Legally yes. Practically, the people handling the FOIA request do not know about it and do not have access to it, so they will not look at it when responding to a FOIA request. Also practically, if you submit a FOIA request for operational details of military action, the response will be no, and every judge you stand before to challenge that no will side with the government.
Literacy is also about English (at least as commonly reported in the US). About 1/3 of functionally illiterate adults in the US are foreign born. I have never seen literacy stats that measure "literate in any language".
Or that you are self aware about being bad at punctuality.
If we are diagnosing people over the Internet based on their memes, my first instinct is to say that OP suffers from time blindness, likely caused by ADHD.
Not to say that there are not people who are late as a narcissistic power play. But it is far more common for people to simply not be good at being on time.
Sure, their language is mutual intelligible with English, but if an Englishman comes over here and asks for some chips, they're going to get a bag of crisps. They'll mess up verb conjunction on a bunch of collective nouns.
And bless the souls of my Australian mates who come here and call everyone a cunt.
There's a continuum between nothing ever changes ever, and through away everything and start again from scratch. In practice, actual little-c conservatives are often called incrementalists, because no one is all the way to one end of the spectrum.
The point here is that Conversatism is not actually a conservative ideology. They actually want to change a lot. In fact, the current administration might be the least conservative one we've had. They are much more in the "move fast and break things" camp, which is at the opposite end of the spectrum.
I think what happened with conservative movements, is they tend to adopt genuinely conservative positions. But then as the world changes around them they are conservative in updateing their positions, so end up having a collection of regressive positions.
The actual conservatives in America's current political environment is the conservative wing of the Democratic party.
Just public key cryptography. All your actual posts and comment history are already shared. What is missing is a way to authenticate yourself to anyone but your home server. If the protocol included every profile having a public key, you could then use that to authenticate to any server. And managing that private key is no more complicated than managing your private key in a block chain context.
Non public info like subscriptions is a bit more complicated, because there is an actual policy question of who you share it with. You would either need to make it publicly available, keep a copy yourself, or have your home instance give it to you/the other server at the time you want to migrate.
I work in a high security industry. You'd be amazed at what you can do if you are willing to ignore the process. Our real defense against insider threats is attribution, law enforcement, and incident recovery. By the sounds of it, that is exactly what happened.
India has a population of 1.4 billion people. There being 3 horrific stories within a day does not say much. You seeing 3 such stories says more about your media than India.
I guess Biden has started to be a bit more careful about how he phrases things now, after the "Israeli" deal he announced a while back, that was immediately rejected by Netenyahu.
Mostly potassium salt, although with some other recipe changes to account for the different flavor.
The good news is that potassium is well understood nutritionally. Most Americans do not get enough of it. To a first approximation, it is anti-sodium health wise, so it is a double win in that it both reduces sodium intake, and counters the effect of a still high sodium intake.
Unironically, yes. A common substitute for table salt (sodium chloride NaCl) is potassium salt (potassium chloride KCl).
The good news is that the health problems with table salt is the sodium, not the chloride. Potassium actually has the opposite effect on the body, so a higher potassium intake would actually help treat a high sodium intake.
The us also has a $14,600 standard deduction that effectively adds a 0% bracket and increases the lower thresholds by that amount (people in the higher thresholds would probably itemize, decreasing their effective tax even further).
The IRS does index the tax brackets for inflation.
No, we don't know that. First, not even the military claims that all of the detainies orchestrated 9/11 (which is a much stronger claim then merely being involved).
Second, do we really trust the portion of military that violated domestic law, violated international human rights law, lied to congress about it, and fought for decades against bringing cases to trial?
Is it more likely than not that a given inmate there is a terrorist? Probably. But that is not the standard for indefinite imprisonment.
Egypt has been an ally for decades, even if public opinion in Egypt has forced the government to keep the relationship out of the spotlight. Anyone who claims that Israel has no friends in the region is woefully out of date. The region is bipolar, and Israel is firmly in one of the two camps.
The crazy thing is that most of the 9/11 comparisons have been coming from Israel and proponents of the way Israel has been handling this.
I seriously do not understand how someone can look at the history of the US's response to 9/11 and come away thinking it supports Israel's actions. Although, in fairness to Israel, at least they got the (quasi)country correct.
Also, the US has been regularlu conditioning its weapons supplies to Ukraine on them not being used in Russia proper; while calls to put any conditions on Israel's usage of them have been a complete non-starter.
I don't see it discussed in this article. But I recall reading another article suggesting that US Christianity is becoming more fundamentalist, which has been a driving force in pushing many people out, while leaving those that remain more extreme. The net effect is that while Christianity is shrinking, fundamentalism is growing. Coupled with fundamentalism becoming an increasingly political movement [0], and you see the current US.
Being Jewish, I've noticed a similar thing. Overall, people I grew up with have mostly shifted away from the religion (although still tend to consider them Jewish as a cultural marker). But those who are still actuvely religious tend to be more religious then their parents are.
[0] In the sense of governmental electoral politics.