what do you think?
Congratulations, on the new "most stupid question yet." He thinks it is illegal. The question was a rhetorical device used to point out that (some) people outside also committed crimes, some quite serious. He did so because some silly* person suggested he had a problem with posting photos from outside the Capitol building, as if entering the Capitol building was the only crime committed. (* yes I looked at the user id of that silly person)
Wait, Marjorie Taylor Greene is an extreme leftist? She certainly is getting her panties in a bunch about a company dealing with people who aren't following the rules that said company sets for those using their service.
She is perfectly free to choose another company, say one that is run by a bunch of extreme rightists. There isn't one? She can start one herself, call it conserve-a-twit.
Oh now I see your point, someone having their free account suspended for 12 hours is exactly the same as a company having a paid for web site yanked off the web.
I do not have to tell Chevy where I drive, nor do they get a say in where I go.
Tesla is not talking about limiting where people can drive, they're talking about limiting their ability to use free charging stations. So the proper comparison would be that right from the moment you bought your car, Chevy told you that you couldn't go to their free gas stations.
If an IRS agent can just decide to audit someone that could allow all sorts of abuse. If they can simply report that they discovered that someone owns a sports car but doesn't seem to have the income to afford it, that should be ok.
I wonder if the DMV could forward to the IRS a list of people registering very expensive cars.
So, here's your clue for the day: if the police officer tells you to stop and put your hands up, do it.
You forgot one very important bit of advice. Be white. If you're black then even while doing everything the police tell you to do you still might get shot.
Depending on what you're talking about, people will likely use very different definitions of "best." Forget about "best." What is the metric that you use to define one item as being "better" than another?
Consider comparing apples to oranges. Which is best? Do you mean which tastes better (according to who), which has more vitamins (which vitamins), which is the better value for the cost, which lasts longer, which is easier to grow. I could go on and on, but I think you get the point.
Without a well defined metric, saying something is the best is pretty much meaningless.
Want to be sure that the cameras don't get switched off? Just pass a new law that says that in any case where the body cam was off or the video went "missing" the suspect's testimony will be taken as true and the officer won't be allowed to testify.
One possible upside to adding facial recognition to the cameras is it may make more police forces want to use them.
They want to "educate" you to believe that Windows Store apps are all that there is.
For those who might have already learned otherwise, Microsoft will eventually offer special summer camps for a more "intensive education" to allow students "relearn" what they've learned incorrectly. These will be called Windows Reeducation Camps.
Doubt isn't the opposite of faith; it is an element of faith. - Paul Tillich, German theologian and historian