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If they're in the country illegally are they citizens?

That's an easy one. They're people, and still have rights. That's non-negotiable.

If you're in a country illegally, yes you do have rights but the right to stay is not one of them.

Here is the thing

You are all sold this lie that "illegal immigrants take your jobs" or "bring drugs into the country", and you immediately adopt this as truth and don't even bother to fact check this because of your inherent racism.

In reality the vast amounts immigrants that are coming into US are putting 10 times back more into the economy than they are taking because they are all coming here to work. And they work at jobs that Americans don't want because they pay less. Not that there was even an unemployment crisis to begin with, so Americans had plenty of jobs.

The problem with immigration was the asylum process, where there were not enough staff to process all the requests and determine real ones from fake ones. This is why there was a border bill brought up in 2023-2024, authored by a Republican, that had bipartisan support. Trump killed that bill, saying on record that it would help his election chances. So in the end, more people would have been deported if the border bill would have passed than there are now, and there would have been way more filtering on who gets to stay and who doesnt.

All of this is true, none of this is debatable. No, your favorite right wing commentator opposing arguments are all bullshit.

And this is precisely why conservatives deserve no sympathy. Inherent racism is probably due to the shit job your parents did at raising you, which is at least excusable, but the stupidity of voting for someone who gives you the worse outcome compared to what you want, and then claiming its a better outcome, is not.


They are human, that's all you need to know.

No sane country recognizes all the same rights and privileges of a citizen in a non-citizen.

All, no. But many, yeah. The Constitution and many of it's Amendments call out people or persons. The 14th Amendment even specifies what a citizen is, and in the next breath says persons cannot be denied due process by the States, not citizens.

Be specific. Which rights?

ICE is violating my fourth amendment rights as a full US citizen when they demand proof of citizenship on the sole basis of my skin tone and occupation. There is zero constitutional basis for that. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/ice-approaching-people-...

Let's remember that JuiceFS can be setup very easily to not have a single point of failure (by replicating the metadata engine), meanwhile ZeroFS seems to have exactly that.

If I was a company I know which one I'd prefer.


Yea, that is a big caveat to ZeroFS. Single point of failure. It is like saying I can write a faster etcd by only having a single node. Sure, that is possible, but the hard part of distributed systems is the coordination, and coordination always makes performance worse.

I personally have went with Ceph for distributed storage. I personally have a lot more confidence in Ceph over JuiceFS and ZeroFS, but realize building and running a ceph cluster is more complex, but with that complexity you get much cheaper S3, block storage, and cephfs.


I replaced a GlusterFS cluster with JuiceFS some years ago and it's been a relief. Just much easier to manage.

Some users use JuiceFS with CephFS RADOS, as alternative with Ceph MDS.

Apple TV and Music also use Svelte.

And 6 years later it's still as terrible.

Can you even consider Android a singular OS? I personally don't in the same way I don't consider Fedora and Ubuntu the same OS, and there's far more differences between something like HyperOS and AOSP/PixelUI as there is between Ubuntu and Fedora.

Android is an app platform.


App platforms are operating systems.

I think you're confusing CLI tools for React with web components.

Stop using your computer wrong

If it updated the UEFI it could be that somehow the UEFI now starts the hardware wrong (RAM setup maybe?) that causes it to be unstable.

If you have fixed beacons with a known location, couldn't the devices work out their location?

Seems like an engineered solution to rely on "quantum".


As others have suggested: this is a test for military technology. When the enemy has jammed your fixed beacons you can't work out your position from them. Probably nobody will do this on a train (and they have other technology anyway), but for an airplane this is a real problem.

The signals bounce off the tunnels a lot

Is there any benchmarks between engines that record memory usage?

How many of these engines are chasing benchmarks at the cost of increased memory usage?


I captured max RSS size while running benchmarks as a rough approximation, but it's not exposed anywhere. If you go to the repo, you can run `./bench/compare -f rss_mb -lT bench/amd64/*.json` to see a table in the terminal. No big surprises there, Java engines (Rhino, Nashorn, GraalJS) are most memory-hungry.

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