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We could fund roads (and everything else) using a progressive income tax, so that everyone pays and the wealthiest would pay the largest share.

Not opposed, but to achieve this with the current election cycle cadence will take at least 5 years, if not longer (Congressional cycles). Also, I think Medicare for All is a more pressing use of tax revenue than pouring good money after bad into sprawl infrastructure that will continue to decline in use as rural America hollows out and people keep moving to urban cores. To observe this, overlay predicted rural America population decline with road infrastructure, which you can also use to forecast which road infrastructure we should retreat from maintaining over time.

“Everyone wants civilization but nobody wants to pay taxes” is a hard concept to solve for, most especially when those with nothing or no tax liability (very roughly the bottom 60% of Americans) advocate for the wealthiest from a failed mental model.


I tend to agree — but is there any data on this?

That only works if you don’t receive any real communication where people expect a response, right? I think that is the case for most people.

If you don’t actually communicate with email then Inbox Infinite seems the way to go. You only go in to search for a confirmation code or receipt for something. This is how I observe most people using email.


Same. Both my personal and work inbox are currently empty. I think it’s easier than ever now that spam filters are so good.

I don’t have notifications enabled. I triage the inbox 1-3 times a day, outside of checking for an expected email. Triage means responding then archiving, deleting, or snoozing. It’s pretty easy so I’m always baffled by people who have thousands of emails in their inbox. I get the feeling they just don’t take action or don’t receive any real communication.


> It’s pretty easy so I’m always baffled by people who have thousands of emails in their inbox.

Because it's easiER to have thousands of emails in your inbox.

Half-jokes aside, it's not as easy for everyone. I can speak only for myself, but maybe I can explain.

My mind abhors chaos, but it abhors dealing with chaos even more. It doesn't like dealing with emails, triaging them is a pain when I could be doing something interesting instead. My mind gets repelled by my email inbox, I have to force myself, and I mean FORCE myself to do things with it.

Then there's the chance of getting sucked in by an email that is not that important but takes a lot of time, but somehow my mind latches onto it and needs it done right now. So, even just dipping in for a quick check can escalate.

Some days it's easier, but it's heavily dependent of other circumstances that keep changing.

All of this (and more) makes it very hard to establish a routine around it. And because dealing with emails repels me so much, for work I usually go through periods where I start with a clean inbox, then stuff accumulates until I get fed up enough to put on my rubber gloves and clean it again. My personal email just accumulates.

That being said, I still get things done, of course. It just looks messy, which btw is very different from the code that I write and like to surround myself with, which is sparkly clean.

I hope that shines a light on why other people's inboxes might be different from yours.

I also find myself baffled by other people's habits and behaviors sometimes. I think these differences often boil down to that different people find different things easier or harder than others. But it's quite hard to keep that in mind, let alone what it might actually feel like to be in somebody else's brain.


I will say that I do have thousands in my personal email... only in that I had it for close to a decade before I started deleting just about all new emails, if there weren't a few important emails that I hadn't archived outside email (license keys, etc) that I should, but maybe don't have outside email, I'd probably nuke it all.

For work, I'm pretty close to inbox zero... I'll mark unread if I need to followup and cannot at that moment, or if it's related to a yet-uncomplete task I'm waiting on from someone else. But at least once a week it's all empty.

I also tend to only check a couple times a day, and my personal email a couple times a week... similar no notifications. If it's important it will be IM, Text, or heaven forbid an actual voice phone call.


Not to mention that their notifications are useless. How do they know when new emails arrive?! It’s more work if you have to constantly go in and monitor instead of waiting for a push that says “here are three new messages”

Randomized controlled trials show LDL consistently drops with lower saturated fat intake, and randomized controlled trials show LDL strongly correlated with coronary risk. It’s one of the best-established causal relationships in nutrition science.

The American Heart Association’s narrative is based in observed clinical relationship between saturated fat intake, LDL, and coronary events.


Yeah, even alert/warn/info would be an improvement.

I hate the concept of “errors” in general. They’re an excuse to avoid responsibility, and ship broken software with known undefined behavior.

The very notion of an error basically means “there was behavior I chose to not handle and do anything about but which I knew would happen” which is essentially just negligence.


I love everything about this – the little touches like the logo, the content warning, etc. Thank you for bringing some joy to my day.

You're welcome! I'm so glad you enjoyed it

Same. But it took learning to ignore everything every manager was telling me: Go faster, ship before I'm ready to ship, proceed without agreed-on and documented requirements, listen to product instead of customers, follow code conventions set by others...

What’s wrong with POST’ing a report?

POST to /reports with the query parameters in the body. Respond with bookmarkable, cacheable /reports/id and GET /reports/id

And that’s only necessary for huge, complex queries. If filtering some resources doesn’t fit into the URL you might want to rethink what you’re doing.


The October CPI report was canceled and delayed because they couldn't retroactively collect data during the period of the government shutdown.

You may be interested to know of MIT's Billion Prices project, which scraped the Internet to calculate a CPI. It mostly aligned with BLS numbers, so I'm not sure if it's really worth the effort to repeat. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIT_Billion_Prices_project


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