Robin_net

joined 9 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

I do find it extremely odd they chose to build this project in the desert of one of the most oppressive countries in the world. If I had to guess why it is happening in Saudia Arabia, I would guess they are trying to green wash their image, and possibly make it seem like Saudia Arabia is a super futuristic place that people should visit.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

There's going to be a free online arcade whether game companies allow an online library or not. Companies can spend billions of dollars taking down emulators and unauthorized game distributors and ways to make playing games in unauthorized ways harder, but it will always be a game of whack a mole. Game companies should focus their time and resources on making legacy titles accessible, whether that means creating a deal with online libraries or selling the files directly to the consumer for a reduced cost. At the end of the day, game companies spend more money trying to prevent people from playing legacy titles than they make on the legacy titles, so there is no benefit to the consumer or the company.

I think there's a fear by companies that a rerelease or remaster won't make money if the original is available for free, but the reality is that people will happily buy a remaster or remake if it's good despite already having the original game.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 months ago

I 100% agree that they should have gone further with the many things they accomplished during their super majority. A universal healthcare system would have been better, they could have gone further with digging the average American out of the recession, etc.

However, it is disingenuous to pretend they did/do "nothing meaningful". ACA expanded healthcare to millions of people who couldn't get insurance at all, expanded Medicaid and Medicare, and it lowered healthcare costs. That's pretty meaningful and a major success even if it wasn't universal healthcare.

I think it's also disingenuous to compare democrats who make small progress forward to Republicans who are actively trying to roll all of our laws back to the 1800s. Again democrats aren't ideal, and really we need a more progressive major party in the US because they don't go far enough, but it's better to make any progress forward than it is to fully regress.

Democrats not being progressive enough is an issue we can fix in time, but it will take decades of hard work (and continuous work even after we succeed). We need to start helping more progressive candidates with their campaigns and even personally running campaigns during local, state, and national primaries. It would also help for us to push for major election reform while we work towards getting progressives elected. It is unacceptable we only really have only two major parties and really only one choice during general elections.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 months ago (2 children)

The last time they had a meaningful majority they spent their time (72 working days) on ACA (a major healthcare reform), pulling us out of a recession, appointing two supreme court justices, and so much more. They are known as the most productive Congress since Lyndon B Johnson was president. The last official majority they had they spent their very thin majority cleaning up after Donald Trump and dealing with COVID.

Democrats don't get strong majorities for long periods of time like Republicans do, and they are expected to fix every issue plus clean up after the newest national disaster that Republicans created. Maybe if we gave them time and a strong enough majority they would get more done.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 2 months ago (5 children)

Conservatives have been purposely tanking uncontroversial legislation so that "Biden doesn't get any wins". Do you genuinely think it is possible for the current legislature to pass bills that would fix something as complex as the housing crisis?