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The US is keeping aircraft in allied bases in Cyprus, and a permanent one in Turkey. Haven’t seen anything about Afghanistan. Iran’s attacks make sense to some degree.


to all degrees


> Haven’t seen anything about Afghanistan.

Yeah, that's because about the Taliban took it over about 5 minutes after the US left Afghanistan a few years ago. It was a complete mess.


I think you’re confused on the difference between these, and what an administrative warrant is in particular.


Trying to draw a distinction between the secret FISA court and administrative warrants from DHS is shaving the baloney a little thin.


Despite all its other warts, the FISA court is (A) an actual judicial-branch court (B) created by legislation and (C) the justices cannot be removed on direct Presidential whim.

In contrast, "administrative warrants" are more like an executive-branch manager writing a memo, where an unscrupulous President could get them removed in a day for not writing the "right" memos.


You think fisa is the good one? They're widely recognized as rubber-stamp courts.


Fisa doesn't have to be good for these phony sheet of paper warrants to be worse.


You’re comparing apples and oranges. These administrative warrants are very limited in scope. They are closer to the subpoenas that even ordinary civilian lawyers can send third parties in the course of litigation. They don’t give the government the power to bust into Google’s data center. The target has to respond or else challenge the warrant in court, but ordinary civilian subpoenas function the same way.


That's not at all what I've been hearing from reports of people getting these. They find that they're not at all targeted. They frequently don't even know who the target is. The officers get asked for a warrant and they might produce a bullshit piece of paper which is really just a memo.

Anyway, it's not "me" comparing these alleged apples and oranges, I am replying deep in a thread of other people making these comparisons.


That’s the same as the subpoena I could send you if you had information relevant to a litigation. And you have to give it to me or else go to court to quash the subpoena. But the key difference with judicial warrants is that judicial warrants can be enforced immediately while subpoenas and administrative warrants require the cooperation of the target or else going to court to enforce the subpoena.

It’s weird but the legal system has an extremely broad view of when third parties can be forced to provide information relevant to litigation. Subpoenas date back to ancient Rome: https://commerciallore.com/2015/06/04/a-brief-history-of-sub...


Sorry, it's pretty clear that you like what ICE does and you're working backwards with what you think is a legal argument that justifies it. What ICE is reportedly doing has absolutely nothing in common with a lawful subpoena.


I do like ICE, but this point about administrative warrants is a rant I’ve been doing since the Obama administration. The only thing new is that these tactics are now being used for immigration enforcement.


> > Despite all its other warts, the FISA court is [a real court]

> You think fisa is the good one?

Is this an accidental fail to comprehend, or a deliberate strawman?


They flashbanged a family of American citizens and put a baby in the hospital


These are wars in the colloquial sense, not wars between countries, come on


It doesn’t, reread the limitations section.


For toy and low effort coding it works fantastic. I can smash out changes and PRs fantastically quick, and they’re mostly correct. However, certain problem domains and tough problems cause it to spin its wheels worse than a junior programmer. Especially if some of the back and forth troubleshooting goes longer than one context compaction. Then it can forget the context of what it’s tried in the past, and goes back to square one (it may know that it tried something, but it won’t know the exact details).


That was true six months ago - the latest versions are much better at memory and adherence, and my senior engineer friends are adopting LLMs quickly for all sorts of advanced development.


They’re not bad, it just depends on how much you process them. Oven baked fries for instance, are not far removed from normal oven roasted potatoes. Par boiling and then deep frying them in fats will release more nutrients than you would get from a normal baker. Slicing paper thin and perfectly frying is an industrial process that most people can’t replicate at home.

I honestly think home cooked potatoes are going to be perfectly fine in most ways.


>Slicing paper thin and perfectly frying is an industrial process that most people can’t replicate at home.

It's baffling how for some people, the only way they can explain why chips are unhealthy is "industrial process", when the explanation is pretty obvious: thin slices means more surface area, which means more oil absorption and burnt bits. If you replicated the thiness at home somehow (which isn't hard if you have a mandolin), it'll be equally as unhealthy, maybe more if you factor in that your temperature control wouldn't be as precise.


Why would industrially or restaurant made ones be any nutritionally worse? Processing is processing no matter who does it and processing does not automatically make something less healthy or raw meat would be healthier than cooked.


Maybe go try to meet some truly poor people and understand their story. It might provide you enough context for this discussion.


You are claiming sophistication is quality, it is not.


Works great for me on Frigate. I am doing object detection on 3x 4k streams and it’s only 20% utilized.


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