

Like MS Windows.
Like MS Windows.
Maybe. Thanks for that consideration.
Wow. I’d love to see the USA adopt any of those measures.
Sion Asidon, a founder of the Moroccan branch of the BDS movement, explained, “Roughly every ten days, one of these F-35s breaks down and needs repairs to return to service.
What’s up with that?
That is the worst URL I’ve seen in a really long time. Story was funny though.
Check profile. Fed/snitch/troll/general bad actor.
Did I just hear your inbox explode? Let me hi check your profile rq before I apply!
You moved me to tears, and I’m not even out of bed, yet. Thank you so much for this genuine display of human compassion.
I have the incredible, uncontrollable urge to shout, “Gulf of Mexico!” suddenly.
This is how real troubles begin.
Echos of Ireland.
Yes, I was thinking a lot of us would be valuable in guerilla warfare. Which side would be taken by individuals depends on the individuals.
Except those of us stuck here with no means of escape.
iPhone is extremely overpriced and the workers who produce it aren’t compensated accordingly. I’m not going into why, because it would be extremely time consuming to find and properly document it, but I’m pretty sure we could boil it down to “Apple greed.”
Secondly, I believe most American consumers would prefer quality, as in “want it,” but the bulk of the companies offering it prefer artificial scarcity. It’s not that these companies couldn’t make a lucrative profit without artificial scarcity. It’s that they aim to “hook” as many people into continuously chasing it to keep wages low, and conformity/obedience high.
When would that be?
Vape if you want.
But a closer examination of Fulcher’s career also suggests his accomplishments don’t always add up, according to internal company documents and interviews with 10 people who have worked with him. Fulcher’s Singapore-based telehealth company, RingMD, for instance, went bankrupt after he raised more than $10 million from investors. His attempt to restart it in the U.S. led to litigation with a business partner, who claims Fulcher owes him hundreds of thousands of dollars. And the half-billion-dollar manufacturing facility promoted by the Biden administration appears to be one of a few claims that never materialized. Fulcher’s national security credentials are also unclear. In 2023 he received a master’s degree in nonproliferation and terrorism studies from Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey. One of his professors there, Jason Blazakis, described him as “a bright guy, hard worker.” On his LinkedIn, Fulcher also claims a doctorate of international relations and affairs from Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. But John Bates, who oversees student records at the university told Forbes that “we have no record of this individual as a student.” The South Carolina-based non-profit Fulcher started in 2023, the Palmetto Initiative, stated on its website that it was a U.S. 501©(3) U.S. public charity. But the organization’s employee identification number does not match Internal Revenue Service records. In a statement, Shannon Wiley, general counsel for the South Carolina secretary of state’s office, said the organization was incorporated as a non-profit, but “has not registered to solicit charitable funds in the state of South Carolina.” The IRS declined to comment. Fulcher didn’t respond to multiple comment requests. After Forbes contacted him, the Palmetto Initiative’s website removed mention of it being a charity. On his LinkedIn page, mention of his Johns Hopkins doctorate was updated to state it is “in progress.”
https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidjeans/2025/03/04/pentagon-doge-official-justin-fulcher/
Oh me and my rabbit holes … I got curious and did a quick search which yielded: theaviationist.com/2023/06/09/f-35-and-f-22-successfully-fly-with-common-software-during-innovation-test-project, which led me to https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/BAE_Systems
More rabbit holes …