I guess they are under the false assumption that the platform spreading disinformation is unintentional and undesired.
I guess they are under the false assumption that the platform spreading disinformation is unintentional and undesired.
It’s pretty obvious from the context.
“Environmentally friendly”? No, they use crazy amounts of power.
“High-paying, long-term” jobs? Working in a data center may be in the tech field, but it doesn’t offer what people think of as “tech money” and your opportunity for advancement is slim. Data centers also don’t need to employ large numbers of people. They just suck up space and resources.
Edit:
The data center industry’s demand for electricity is growing so much that it could threaten Washington’s efforts to transition to a carbon-free power grid…
The original bill required each data center to create at least 35 permanent positions at 150% of the surrounding area’s average personal income.
A second bill, approved just a month after lawmakers passed the first tax break, gave recipients the choice between creating 35 jobs or just three positions per 20,000 square feet of server farm space, whichever was less.
Oh look, I was right. Could have told you all that before the state wasted money on this.
This wouldn’t have even made a difference in the assassination attempt.
Octopus, octopuses, and octopodes are correct. Octopi incorrect.
All the fast food workers in Ohio should start making sure that they they get some good bones in there every time they go for fast food chicken.
The politicians who are against it are the vast minority, they’re just extremely vocal and irritating.
Initiated in reaction against the perceived impoverishment of the decorative arts and the conditions in which they were produced,[3] the movement flourished in Europe and North America between about 1880 and 1920.
“Perceived”.
No. That’s still not a citation.
Last month Ron DeSantis, the state’s rightwing Republican governor, signed into law a controversial bill that allows the public to shoot and kill bears for a perceived threat to “a person, pet or dwelling”.
The legislation was drawn up by the Republican state congressman Jason Shoaf, a keen hunter according to his biography, who claimed in February that “bears high on crack” were breaking into people’s houses and “tearing them apart”.
At the time the Guardian was unable to find a single documented incident of any bear in Florida ingesting crack, and Shoaf did not return a request for clarification.
What planet do these people even live on?
Canadians do, too. Though they are a type of American.
The American version, aluminum, actually came before the British version. The British version does sound nicer, though.
Do you not understand sarcasm? Because everybody else seems to have done so just fine so far.
Got to move to Idaho before you start with that talk.
Where the Red Fern Grows