Building housing isn't a right wing idea.
jtrek
“Public space in Paris is chaos,” right-winger Rachida Dati said recently
No right winger is worth listening to. I know nothing about Dati, but I am confident they are full of bad ideas.
Dati’s proposals for the city include making it cheaper to park and getting rid of the low-emission zone in the city centre.
As foretold.
Every right wing idea is bad, and people proposing them should at best be laughed out of the room.
Ok clearly it's not literally about making CDs and people saying "just make your own streaming service" are both missing the point and vastly over estimating the capacity of the average person.
The important part that's largely missing from today's music environment is the personal touch and investment. Many people, as the author says, just comfortably coast through an algorithmic smoothie of familiar music. That is inferior to a friend saying "I made you this mix" and then you actually listen to it, attentively, more than once.
It doesn't have to be a CD. It can be a zip file. But the intention and focus was important.
I'm an outlier in that I never let "the algorithm" choose what plays. Sometimes I still make mixes for friends, though lately they've just been a collection of links. That process of choosing is meaningful. My friend still listens to the mix I made for them when their job laid them off, sometimes.
I feel like a lot of companies don't do things the good way not because the good way is hard, or the bad way is cheaper, but because management is stupid. Stupid or sometimes apathetic.
This is a horrible idea and everyone involved in its conception and implementation should be barred from working in technology ever again.
Some people love their country like a child loves their parent. Uncritical. They can do no wrong and are the best ever. Don't be like that.
Some people love their like like a peer loves a peer. You see their flaws and want them to be the best they can be. Be like that, even when it's uncomfortable and difficult.
I've been saying that for years. Now I have about 250 albums drm-free on Bandcamp. A good chunk of that money went to the people making the music, too.
I know there are people out there paying a subscription to Spotify who listen to the same dozen albums over and over, too.
We know. The problem is a lot of idiots want trump as a dictator.
The problem is capitalism. Specifically, the consolidation of power in a small number of decision makers.
Break up the big companies. Stop letting them do mergers and acquisitions. You don't even have to do something radical like dismantling capitalism entirely.
How did this get normalized?
The average user doesn't know or understand technical details, and don't believe they have any power to change anything
Also capitalism means a small number of assholes make most of the decisions for reasons that benefit them
I don't understand why you'd want an AI browser to begin with. Most web tasks aren't hard.
Democrats aren't especially left, so I'm not sure you can really look at states controlled by the democratic party as a fair comparison. The US doesn't have much of a left. Many democrats are conservative, especially when its things close to home (eg: nimbyism, "i like black people i just don't want to live next to one", etc).
We have outliers like Mayor Mamdani who want to build more housing, but he's notably a DSA member. He does have policies for housing which are more effective than "fewer regulations and the market will solve it".
As such, if the argument is "Conservative controlled areas have fewer regulations, and thus more housing gets built", that's a very tenuous argument. The right wing ideology at play isn't "We should build more housing" but rather the usual "No one tells me what to do" attitude endemic to right wing thinking.
Furthermore, conservative areas tend to be sparser, which makes for more room to build, with fewer restrictions New York City is already dense. Adding more stuff is going to be more difficult and complicated than adding another building to Tumbleweeds, AR.
Lastly, if you did somehow prove that "conservative solutions to the housing crisis are good, actually, and aren't just deregulation and capitalist market solutions", I guess I would have to update my statement to "Almost all right wing ideas are bad". But as I'm not convinced this is the exception, I stand by my original claim.