What do you mean that you should do it one leg at a time? The end result is the same.
But the claps are in the wrong place
The default web UI also shows it
I searched through Lemmy posts with that word. Half of them have people asking the exact same question, and based on the answers, I'm going to conclude that no one knows.
One guess that seems plausible is that it's an AI hallucinated word that's showing up a lot because they're using AI to generate the captions.
You seem to be trying to solve a different problem. People who are working full time should be able to get all the necessities. It's definitely a problem that they don't. But if you believe that everyone should be able to feed/house/clothe themselves, including people who don't have stable incomes (e.g. are in between jobs, busy caring for disabled folks, are disabled themselves, or going all in on building a bootstrapped business), then we need a system that doesn't require you to have money in the first place to get the benefits.
How does this suddenly make $110k jobs available to switch to?
I don't think it does. Did I say something that implied this?
I still use it to rescue state bread. Either that, or if I need a harder/warmer surface to spread things on.
Plenty of arguments given here for why it's unlikely to happen, but I'd like to provide a slightly different perspective of how I think UBI would ideally be implemented.
I think UBI should come with abolishment of minimum wage and a uniform decrease in everyone's income from work (e.g. if UBI is 1k per month, then reduce everyone's income by approximately 1k/month), so there wouldn't be an obvious overall increase in everyone's income. Workers now have more leverage to negotiate wages because they don't need to worry about dying if they lose their job, and that should push up their wages to wherever is appropriate for their line of work. So overall, it'll probably lead to a bit of inflation, but through the the same mechanism that inflation has always occurred rather than telling your landlords that everyone has an extra 1k for you to take now.
Does this make sense? Good or bad idea? Discuss.
All my honey at home is 80-85% sugar. Internet confirms this number. I'm not seeing facts here.
Secondly, the comment implies that dilution doesn't make a difference because the concentration is already low. Soda is also 20% syrup and 80% water. How do you think it'll taste if you make it 10% syrup and 90% water?
My non-deaf and non-mute baby also does hand babbling and will sometimes try to mimic us when we sign. Normal baby behaviour.
True. It's very obvious when you look at the "E".
If you disagree with the article, I'd like to see something a bit more substantiated than "it's bad".