Mon. Apr. 27, 2026 – a whole new week…

By on April 27th, 2026 in culture, decline and fall, lakehouse

Cool, then warm and humid here in Houston. Probably some gloom too. Maybe even rain. Who really knows? The shadow might.

I was at the BOL yesterday, and didn’t get much done. I did get the truck unloaded and the mower powerwashed. I even got some stuff load on the truck to bring home. Kid wants some water toys for her swim party, and I sold one of the big floating foam pads to someone, so that stuff needed to come home.

I stayed later than I was hoping but did eventually get home.

Today I’ve got stuff to do. Gotta do some grocery shopping for the kid, and some present wrapping too. Already have the cake and card, so that’s covered.

There is other ‘real’ work to be done too. We’ll see how much of that happens.

It’s a great life if you don’t falter…

n

(stack)

67 Comments and discussion on "Mon. Apr. 27, 2026 – a whole new week…"

  1. Denis says:

    Monday. Good morning!

    Another beautiful Spring day here. Clear skies, so low temperatures overnight, but blue skies and sunshine now. I am going to profit from the nice weather and do a couple of loads of domestic bliss and dry them outdoors (probably just to catch all the fresh pollen, ah well…).

    No roebucks sighted yet. I might go for a wee mooch in the woods on my lunchbreak. Roe are sun lovers, so are often active during the daytime in nice weather. This is the time of year for the bucks to shed the velvet from their little antlers, sort out and mark their territories, so they are busy running around bashing bushes and chasing off rivals. They lose their usual sneaky caution, and can be spotted on account of the noise and the vegetation moving on an otherwise still day. 

  2. Denis says:

    Kerrygold Irish butter is 82% butterfat and many cooks consider it the gold standard.

    Not to be a raging nationalist or anything, but I agree with that “gold standard” assessment. French butter from Normandy and Brittany comes a respectable second – their dairy cows have basically the same biotope and weather as in the main dairying region of southern Ireland. For reasons I don’t understand, British butter is not a patch on either Irish or French. Maybe the cows are sad.

    Kerrygold is the cooperative overseas marketing effort of the Irish dairy industry. One brand, known worldwide, instead of lots of inconsequential tiny ones, and very strict quality control. A total stroke of genius from the 1960s, I think.

  3. Denis says:

    The ultimate conversion tool (NB may not be entirely suitable for cooking )

    https://www.theregister.com/Design/page/reg-standards-converter.html

    Absolutely indispensable! Thanks, Norman.

  4. SteveF says:

    I didn’t get the joke because I had this idea in my head that a merkin was a prosthetic sleeve

    My head is stuffed full of useless information!

    But it lets me make jokes and puns, multilingual puns, even, so it’s not totally useless.

  5. dkreck says:

    Thanks to Dr. Strange Love and President Merkin Muffley I learned the term at an early age.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Strangelove

    what 13 yo wouldn’t be impressed? better toss in Playboy for offering reference material in 1964

  6. Greg Norton says:

    Thanks to Dr. Strange Love and President Merkin Muffley I learned the term at an early age.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Strangelove

    Go look at the name of the current CEO of AT&T.

    He is part of the mid level PacBell management who literally inspired the Dilbert comic strip.

  7. Nick Flandrey says:

    And “Nair” for teaching us what a “bikini line” is.

    n

  8. Nick Flandrey says:

    77F and overcast.  Kids are up and moving.  Wife is up.   I’ve had a bowl of Golden Grahams cereal, so I’m headed back to bed soon.  Just for a short nap.

    n

  9. drwilliams says:

    CA Billionaire Tax is a Trap

    https://townhall.com/tipsheet/amy-curtis/2026/04/27/california-billionaire-tax-bait-and-switch-n2675105

    New simplified CA tax firm:

    How much you got?

    Send it in. 

  10. EdH says:

    A nice morning, 42F and a lot of clouds. Only trace amounts of rain here this am, possibly more elsewhere as the air felt damp.

    I noticed yesterday that the gas at the little market here had jumped to $6.30 a gallon, up from the $6 line that the owner held for the last month. It appears as though he only changes the price when he gets a new shipment of fuel, which is odd for a small business owner.

    I had dinner at the neighbors place and someone mentioned that Costco was currently selling regular for $5.89 a gallon.  Well, the market here doesn’t have quite the marketing edge that Costco enjoys, and the convenience of it keeps me buying local.

  11. MrAtoz says:

    And “Nair” for teaching us what a “bikini line” is.

    “Who wears short shorts?” “We wear short shorts!”

    That will be in my head all day.

  12. mediumwave says:

    In case anyone’s wondering: 

    Could you pass this 8th grade test from 1912?

    (I did pretty well; it’s been a long time since I took civics,  US geography was never my long suit–and of course things have changed somewhat since 1912.)

    The typical collegian of today.

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  13. SteveF says:
    • A buzzword-driven job market. Employers/clients want you to use The Latest Thing They Just Heard About, even if they don’t know what it is, and to have five years’ experience with something announced last week.
    • Some of the buzzwords are new names for things that were already obvious, but you’re persona non grata unless you’re using the new name.

    Those have been the case for decades. Several times I’ve annoyed the Kewl Kid technical architect by pointing on that Kewl New Thing is functionally the same as something that’s been around since I was in college except that now it has a REST API. (And several times I’ve annoyed allegedly technical headhunters by pointing out errors in their job requirements. No, the customer clearly wants XSL experience, not XLS. “We’re professionals and don’t need you to tell us our job.”)

  14. Lynn says:

    “Are We Subjects or Citizens? Birthright Citizenship and the Constitution” by Edward J. Erler

        https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/are-we-subjects-or-citizens-birthright-citizenship-and-the-constitution/

    “This summer, Americans will celebrate the semiquincentennial of the Declaration of Independence—our nation’s 250th birthday. Also this summer, the U.S. Supreme Court will render a decision in the case of Trump v. Barbara, a class-action lawsuit challenging President Trump’s executive order ending the practice of birthright citizenship. The two are connected, because Trump v. Barbara involves issues fundamental to the meaning of the Declaration and the future of the American experiment in republican government. It is worth the time and effort of every citizen to understand its importance.”

    “Birthright citizenship—the policy whereby the children of illegal aliens born within the geographical limits of the United States are entitled to American citizenship—is a great magnet for illegal immigration. Many believe that this policy is an explicit command of the Constitution, consistent with the British common law system. But this is simply not true.”

    Yes.

  15. Lynn says:

    Questionable Content: Stanford Prison Protocol

       https://www.questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=5816

    I don’t put sugar in my coffee.  Except on Saturdays when I put in non dairy White Chocolate Mocca.  Which, is liquid sugar.

       https://www.instacart.com/products/89948-international-delight-white-chocolate-mocha-coffee-creamer-16-0-fl-oz

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  16. drwilliams says:

    (And several times I’ve annoyed allegedly technical headhunters by pointing out errors in their job requirements. No, the customer clearly wants XSL experience, not XLS. “We’re professionals and don’t need you to tell us our job.”)

    X-onyms are so very Nineties. 

  17. Lynn says:

    Monty: Anti-gravity Testing

       www.gocomics.com/monty/2026/04/27

    Yup, that testing may be worse than creating the device itself.

  18. nick flandrey says:

    Remember when it was e- this and eTHAT?   And until apple stole the ‘i’ it was just as likely to be i-this and i-that. 

    I’m having some mental stress because I’m old enough that I’ve seen some of this shite 3 or 4 times now, and my patience with the kids just noticing it for the first time is wearing thing.   I don’t WANT to be that guy, but time and a modicum of paying attention conspire against me.

    n

  19. OldGuy says:

    Gotta love AI’s that think on their own….

    The founder of PocketOS has penned a social media post to warn others about the “systemic failures” of flagship AI and digital services providers. Jer Crane was inspired to write a public response after an AI coding agent deleted his firm’s entire production database. The AI agent’s misdemeanors were then hugely amplified by a cloud infrastructure provider’s API wiping all backups after the main database was zapped. This tag team of digital trouble has wiped out months of consumer data essential to the firm’s, and its customers, businesses.

    Full story here.

  20. SteveF says:

    Age and experience lead to pattern recognition and the ability to handle new situations by analogy to previous situations. Time was, this was called wisdom and was respected.

    This seems to no longer be the case. At least not in the fast-moving tech world, in which old mistakes are new again every few years.

    Of course, if age and experience don’t lead to pattern recognition and wisdom, then it just means you’re getting old and foolish.

  21. SteveF says:

    Gotta love AI’s that think on their own

    I’m impressed by the “agents’” ability to put together plans and perform actions to reach the user’s goals.

    I’m even more impressed by users’ trust in the ability of the “AIs” to plan correctly and to carry out actions correctly.

    Not favorably impressed, mind you.

  22. Lynn says:

    “ Is it time to upgrade your Roku device?”

       https://thestreamable.com/should-you-upgrade-roku

    “We’ll explain how to recognize when a device is aging beyond its usefulness, and how to upgrade here.”

  23. Lynn says:

    “BYD reveals the ‘world’s longest-range EV’ that can drive 1,036 km on a single charge”

       https://electrek.co/2026/03/02/byd-reveals-worlds-longest-range-ev-that-can-drive-1036-km/

    IIRC, BYD vehicles do not meet USA safety standards.  I guess that they could remove a wheel and call them motorcycles.

    So where is my electric replacement for my 2019 4×4 F-150 with the 36 gallon gasoline tank that can go 700 miles on a single tank ?

  24. paul says:

    “ Is it time to upgrade your Roku device?”

    Clickbait. 

  25. Lynn says:

    “ Is it time to upgrade your Roku device?”

    Clickbait. 

    The whole internet is clickbait.

  26. Lynn says:

    “BREAKING: SCOTUS allows Texas redistricting map to go forward”

       https://thepostmillennial.com/breaking-scotus-allows-texas-redistricting-map-to-go-forward

    “The Supreme Court has struck down a lower court’s order that barred Texas’ new congressional map, which would likely result in five new Republican seats in the House, from taking effect.”

    “In a short order issued on Monday, the court stated, “we reverse the District Court’s judgment,” noting that justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented.”

    We really need to get rid of three dissenters.

  27. Greg Norton says:

    IIRC, BYD vehicles do not meet USA safety standards.  I guess that they could remove a wheel and call them motorcycles.

    A 2010 Mercedes S Class does not meet the current standards either.

  28. Lynn says:

    “‘The threats are real’: Glenn Beck issues urgent call for courage as violence against conservatives escalates”

       https://www.theblaze.com/shows/the-glenn-beck-program/the-threats-are-real-glenn-beck-issues-urgent-call-for-courage-as-violence-against-conservatives-escalates

    “Death threats and political violence against conservatives are no longer rare incidents — they have become a dangerous daily reality, creating a climate of fear designed to silence dissent.”

    “On April 14, Erika Kirk, the widow of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, announced that she was backing out at the last minute from a TPUSA event in Athens, Georgia, where she was scheduled to interview JD Vance, due to “very serious threats” directed at her.”

    “Just a few days before that, TPUSA Frontlines reporter Savanah Hernandez was brutally attacked by a violent anti-ICE mob in Minnesota while she was simply trying to video a protest.”

  29. Greg Norton says:

    This one’s for you, @Greg:

    Eh. My career is almost over. I work because, for now, I can, and I learned the lesson of the downside of not having my own income stream in WA State.

  30. Greg Norton says:

    And “Nair” for teaching us what a “bikini line” is.

    Watching “How I Met Your Mother” reruns on E! Network last week, I noticed commercials for a bikini line razor which showed as much of that area as they can get away with on basic cable.

    Strangely, I don’t remember the commercial running during this episode.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HNRPywfegW4

    Season 6. Episode 9.

    In the before times.

    RIP Alan Thicke.

  31. paul says:

    I voted today.  

    What I read on the Web said 2 million for “IT Infrastructure”.  Sounds like a lot of high end Cisco hardware and “experts” to configure it all.  Plus another 133 million for Stuff.  Like, re-roofing (always with the needed new roofs) and oh, gonna tear down the Middle School because it has room for 800 kids and rebuild newer and gooder for 1200 kids. 

    And some yabbering about how this isn’t really going to raise taxes.   Because they can only go up x% a year.  What?  Editors, what do they do? 

    Ah.  School is crowded? Portable Buildings.  Embrace them.  Need to cut expenses?  Get school buses without a/c. 

    So I went to vote.  Two items.  BOTH, first line said “this will increase your property taxes”.

    Duh.

    Then I went to HEB and the 2 for $6 coupon for dog cookies is still there.  So I did that.  Plus eggs and half and half.  

    The dog cookies at HEB that are $3.98 a box?  Almost $8 at Tractor Supply for the exact same thing. 

    Mayhap I need to investigate the price of cat food.  $29 for a 44 pound bag is ok price wise.  But if HEB has similar feed for less, and smaller bags, well, suddenly that’s a new feature, too.

  32. Greg Norton says:

    “Mrs. Trump, you have a glow like an expectant widow”

    I am without words.

    Direct from the main ceremonial chamber of the Masonic Temple of Hollywood, its … Jimmy Kimmel Live!

    Kimmel’s day of reckoning is coming.

  33. ITGuy1998 says:

    The entire Robin Sparkles subplot was pure genius.

  34. Lynn says:

    Direct from the main ceremonial chamber of the Masonic Temple of Hollywood, its … Jimmy Kimmel Live!

    You misspelled Hollyweird.

  35. paul says:

    Kimmel’s day of reckoning is coming.

    Is it too much to hope it will be like Braveheart?   Nah.  That’s too quick.

  36. Lynn says:

    Then I went to HEB and the 2 for $6 coupon for dog cookies is still there.  So I did that.  Plus eggs and half and half.  

    The dog cookies at HEB that are $3.98 a box?  Almost $8 at Tractor Supply for the exact same thing. 

    Mayhap I need to investigate the price of cat food.  $29 for a 44 pound bag is ok price wise.  But if HEB has similar feed for less, and smaller bags, well, suddenly that’s a new feature, too.

    HEB has excellent pricing.  Usually.

  37. Lynn says:

    “Hilarious: Trump Endorses an ICE Rebrand That Would Drive the Media and Dems Insane”

       https://www.westernjournal.com/hilarious-trump-endorses-ice-rebrand-drive-media-dems-insane/

    ““I want Trump to change ICE to NICE (National Immigration and Customs Enforcement) so the media has to say NICE agents all day every day,” “alyssa” wrote.”

  38. Greg Norton says:

    The entire Robin Sparkles subplot was pure genius.

    That series was headed towards the biggest syndication deal in TV history until the finale aired.

    More fallout from David Letterman’s firing.

    BTW, today’s Letterman YouTube clip is a reminder of why Dave was fired.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rrYZ0-cqHVs

  39. Greg Norton says:

    Direct from the main ceremonial chamber of the Masonic Temple of Hollywood, its … Jimmy Kimmel Live!

    You misspelled Hollyweird.

    Like a TV show broadcast from inside a Masonic Temple isn’t weird enough.

    Literally.

    “This Old House” repurposed a deconsecrated Mormon Temple into a house for a Gap exec, but that’s the closest thing I’ve seen elsewhere to the bizarre situation with Kimmel’s venue.

    In person, the studio facade is creepy.

  40. paul says:

    “Eh. My career is almost over. I work because, for now, I can,”

    Well.  You’re adding to your SS.  And to your savings.  You can fund trips to Florida w/o any noise of it being expensive.  Other than that speed trap. 

    Besides.  What’re  ya gonna do?  Sitting around the house in your underwear and playing on the computer is fun.  AFTER the house is paid with a new roof and new central air.  And no car payments or credit card balances.

    Cough.  Works for me.   As planned. 

    New roof?  We went with metal.  The heavy gauge.  30 years warranty on the paint.  And well, the metal is galvanized.  Easy a 100 year roof.

  41. lpdbw says:

    a modicum of paying attention conspire against me.

    Observation and pattern recognition is racist.  Best not to notice.

  42. OldGuy says:

    “This Old House” repurposed a deconsecrated Mormon Temple into a house for a Gap exec

    Actually, it was a church meeting house, not a temple. It was located in San Francisco:

    This Old House undertook a significant project to convert a 1906 former Mormon church into a single-family home. This transformation was for homeowners Laurie Ann Bishop and Mark Dvorak.

    More recently, John Scalzi (author) bought an old church and converted it into a personal space that he says will also be used for community events. See here. (from a post on his site in 2023).  He has other posts about it that are more recent.

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  43. Greg Norton says:

    “Eh. My career is almost over. I work because, for now, I can,”

    Well.  You’re adding to your SS.  And to your savings.  You can fund trips to Florida w/o any noise of it being expensive.  Other than that speed trap. 

    6% matching on the 401(k), cash, no vesting period.

  44. Denis says:

    Monday (now Tuesday) bedtime.

    A busy work day, followed by a trip to the woods. Poor Bambi.

    When I got home, my neighbour was finishing doing some maintenance on the lawn between our houses, so I offered him beer and a chat. That was nice.

    Roofs: I rather fancy having a copper or lead one, but I am sure the cost must be prohibitive. That is why only churches and public buildings have them…

    Goodnight!

  45. Greg Norton says:

    Well.  You’re adding to your SS.  And to your savings.  You can fund trips to Florida w/o any noise of it being expensive.  Other than that speed trap. 

    Florida was expensive, but some of it was offset by the continuing education reimbursement.

    I used bonus money for our trip to see the current state of where I will be when Y2038 hits.

    https://www.muckyduck.com/beach-cam/

  46. Greg Norton says:

    We really need to get rid of three dissenters.

    Hermione Granger Kagan is looking rough lately. Too many smoke breaks.

    The Wise Latina has lots of health problems and grouses about the money, being worth “only” $4-6 million.

  47. Jenny says:

    Ping

    upright and breathing choking a little on the stress of being in the Sandwich generation. My elderly MiL has serious health stuff that started about a month ago and is currently in SNF. First two hours of my day are supplementing her care and facilitating her eating, drinking, exercising with goal of getting her home. Teen daughter provided us some well timed drama I did -not- have on my Bingo card. 

    State of the world is hard on my optimistiam. Getting thru it. Not much time for anything but spinning the plates of competing responsibilities. 

    Yee haw. That which doesn’t kill us makes us stronger. 

    15
  48. SteveF says:

    That which doesn’t kill us makes us stronger

    … said the man whose brain was rotted by the syphilis which killed him.

  49. nick flandrey says:

    “We’ll explain how to recognize when a device is aging beyond its usefulness, and how to upgrade here.”

    In my experience with  a bunch of Roku boxen, you don’t need an article to tell you.    They eventually load up the box with so many ads, apps, and tracking bots that menus get too slow to tolerate.   Then you  update to a Firestick for a while, until something amazon does makes it unusable, then switch to apple tv, or one of the KODI chinese pirate machines.   I’m currently using a google tv stick, and while I can access netflix, I can’t add the link/app to the home page to make it easier.  At least youtube works and is on the home page.

    n

  50. nick flandrey says:

    Fried chicken turned out really good.   I used lard for the fat, mixed fish and chicken breading packages to get a lighter but still cornmeal based breading, and used my Wagner chicken fryer pan.    Kid was very happy with the resulting “big juicy chicken legs”.

    For me and W, I added baked beans and some corn.  

    Cake was a fudge mousse cake from Costco, which is our favorite.

    Kid got presents tonight too as there are other conflicts and other nights.

    Lots of presents as I cleared out my present closet.

    n

  51. Greg Norton says:

    … said the man whose brain was rotted by the syphilis which killed him.

    The most gruesome images in Guillermo Del Toro’s “Frankenstein” involve a syphilis patient.

  52. drwilliams says:

    @Jenny

    Thanks for checking in.

    11
  53. drwilliams says:

    Arrivederci: European Ally Extradites CCP-Controlled Super-Hacker to US to Face Long Arm of the Law

    https://redstate.com/bobhoge/2026/04/27/arrivederci-european-ally-extradites-ccp-controlled-super-hacker-to-us-to-face-the-long-arm-of-the-law-n2201754

    Try, convict, sentence to life. Then give him a choice of serving his sentence with a roommate who really likes China Dolls, or spilling his guts and helping direct operations against the ChiComs he once worked for.

  54. Greg Norton says:

    State of the world is hard on my optimistiam. Getting thru it. Not much time for anything but spinning the plates of competing responsibilities. 

    Take the teen to see “Project Hail Mary”.

    I have issues with the movie, but it is very well made.

    We’re going to see a 35th anniversary screening of “Silence of the Lambs” on Wednesday night.

  55. Greg Norton says:

    upright and breathing choking a little on the stress of being in the Sandwich generation. My elderly MiL has serious health stuff that started about a month ago and is currently in SNF. First two hours of my day are supplementing her care and facilitating her eating, drinking, exercising with goal of getting her home.

    Something happened to me on that front while we were in Florida which I’m still trying to process. When I can break opsec in about a month, I’ll talk about what happened.

  56. EdH says:

    State of the world is hard on my optimistiam. Getting thru it. Not much time for anything but spinning the plates of competing responsibilities. 
     

    My father said  that his grandfather once told him “the world is going to hell!”  That would be the  Civil War generation.

    So, don’t stress too much.

  57. Lynn says:

    Oh man, I need one of these but it does not fit my Ruger GP100 7 shot .357.  Bummer.

        https://www.crossbreedholsters.com/product/chest-rig/

  58. Lynn says:

    Ping

    upright and breathing choking a little on the stress of being in the Sandwich generation. My elderly MiL has serious health stuff that started about a month ago and is currently in SNF. First two hours of my day are supplementing her care and facilitating her eating, drinking, exercising with goal of getting her home. Teen daughter provided us some well timed drama I did -not- have on my Bingo card. 

    State of the world is hard on my optimistiam. Getting thru it. Not much time for anything but spinning the plates of competing responsibilities. 

    Yee haw. That which doesn’t kill us makes us stronger. 

    SNF = Skilled Nursing Facility ???  We had my wife’s father in a SNF for 6.5 years when he turned 81.  It was always temporary until it was not.

    Yeah, the teenage years are rough.  Lots of energy and the belief that they are immortal.  Our son rampaged through school with the wife homeschooling him for 10 – 12.  Then he joined Uncle Sam’s Misguided Children when he turned 20 while a sophomore at TAMU.  He burned his bridges at TAMU walking out the door because he did not say goodbye and took an F in every course that semester.

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  59. lpdbw says:

    If you really need it, they have a contact us page and I bet they’d do custom work.  For a price.

    I need to do a little bit more holster shopping.  One of the problems with obscure tools like the CZ82 and P-64 is concealment holsters.

    I do love my 9×18 cartridges.

  60. nick flandrey says:

    I’m going to get ready for bed and read a while.   Maybe I’ll fall asleep early.  I’m certainly tired enough.

    n

  61. Nick Flandrey says:

    “that soon to be a widow glow”… 

    – you can’t hate them enough.

    n

  62. drwilliams says:

    California proposition to tax billionaires gets onto the November ballot with just one problem: Everyone gets to be the ‘billionaire’

    On page twenty-six, it explains how the government can convert to an Everyone Tax without voter approval.

    They can also adjust the tax to be a yearly tax, not just one time…again, without your approval.

    Here’s how the tax would work: As a voter, you’re being asked to approve a tax that would require you to:

    1. list all your assets and the value of each, then submit them to the California Franchise Tax Board.

    2. authorize the tax board to appraise your assets and confirm the value of each.

    3. pay a penalty of up to forty percent of your tax bill if the board determines your reported value was too low in their opinion.

    4. allow the tax board to subpoena your financial records from every one of your financial institutions for auditing.

    This Everyone Tax runs 34 pages of shifty language describing how the government plans to take your assets. Read the fine print and decide for yourself. If this were truly a billionaire tax, it would be 3 pages. It’s 34 pages so that it can create the mechanisms to steal from all of you.

    https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/04/california_proposition_to_tax_billionaires_gets_onto_the_november_ballot_with_just_one_problem_everyone_gets_to_be_the_billionaire.html

    Those tax board appointments are going to be real popular with the HOA board veterans.

  63. Lynn says:

    “All New Vehicles Sold In The U.S. Will Soon Be Equipped With An AI Kill Switch That Will Determine Whether You Are Allowed To Drive Or Not”

       https://endoftheamericandream.com/all-new-vehicles-sold-in-the-u-s-will-soon-be-equipped-with-an-ai-kill-switch-that-will-determine-whether-you-are-allowed-to-drive-or-not/

    “Imagine that you just received a very alarming phone call and you are in a panic to get home. Unfortunately, since your eyes are wide and full of alarm because of the phone call that you just received, the AI kill switch in your vehicle will not allow you to drive anywhere. This is not a scenario which may or may not happen someday. This is already federal law. Section 24220 of the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that was signed by Joe Biden directed the NHTSA to establish permanent standards for impaired driving safety equipment on all new vehicles within three years. Fortunately, Congress gave the NHTSA some more time in 2024, but now another deadline is looming. If Congress does not act, very soon all new vehicles in the U.S. will come equipped with systems that determine who gets to drive and who does not get to drive.”

    “Automakers are arguing that the technology still isn’t ready because it makes way too many mistakes.”

    “Some drivers just naturally have eye or head movements that make them appear to be impaired in some way.”

    Are they going to add a breathalyzer to it also ?

    And technology like this will never work properly for some percentage of the populace since they have familial tremors, Parkinsons, etc.

  64. Lynn says:

    “Google Co-Founder Sergey Brin and His MAGA Girlfriend Confronted Gavin Newsom Over Billionaire Tax”

        https://economiccollapse.report/google-co-founder-sergey-brin-and-his-maga-girlfriend-confronted-gavin-newsom-over-billionaire-tax/

    “When one of the world’s most successful entrepreneurs, who built an empire on American innovation and free enterprise, publicly invokes his family’s flight from Soviet oppression to denounce a proposed wealth tax, it ought to command attention. Google co-founder Sergey Brin has done exactly that, delivering a rare and pointed rebuke that exposes the deeper folly of California’s latest experiment in class warfare.”

    “Brin, whose estimated net worth hovers around $270 billion, did not mince his personal history. In a statement to The New York Times, he declared, “I fled socialism with my family in 1979 and know the devastating, oppressive society it created in the Soviet Union. I don’t want California to end up in the same place.””

    “The proposed measure, which qualified for the November ballot with over 1.6 million signatures, would impose a one-time 5 percent tax on billionaires. For Brin, that could translate to a $13 billion bill.”

    Dude, just move Google out of California to Texas or Florida.  That will make a statement.

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