florduh
Well-Known Member
uhhhhhhhhhhh let me be clear. I am not "complaining" about Silicon Valley Libertarians begging the government for help. Quite the opposite. I think this is a delightful story. Should probably be moved to the Heart Warming Stories thread.
I'm not even upset about the bailout. The government/Fed did the right thing here. These Tech Bros were just confused. They thought the FDIC insured deposits up to $250,000....
...or, secretly, up to infinity if your company invented an app. Common misconception.
Ayn Rand rather famously only got by in her old age with the assistance of Social Security and Medicare. I'm detecting a pattern here. Namely...Free Market Fundamentalists having their asses saved by FDR.
Added benefit:
I'm not even upset about the bailout. The government/Fed did the right thing here. These Tech Bros were just confused. They thought the FDIC insured deposits up to $250,000....
...or, secretly, up to infinity if your company invented an app. Common misconception.
Silicon Valley Bank unmasks the hypocrisy of libertarian tech bros
They push for small government – until their companies are under threat.
www.newstatesman.com
Thiel himself is so committed to libertarianism that he has established an eponymous foundation to “defend and promote freedom”. He has also invested at least $500,000 into the Seasteading Institute, an organisation that wants to establish a series of tiny, ocean-bound nations, each run according to laws set by their founders. Larry Page, the co-founder of Google, has previously suggested a “limit” on laws to “some set of pages”. “When you add a page, you have to take one away,” he said. But stuck on a sinking ship this weekend, Silicon Valley found itself begging the state for help.
Ayn Rand rather famously only got by in her old age with the assistance of Social Security and Medicare. I'm detecting a pattern here. Namely...Free Market Fundamentalists having their asses saved by FDR.
Floating solar panels could completely power thousands of cities
Why “floatovoltaics” could be the future of solar energy.
www.theverge.com
Researchers found that 6,256 cities across 124 countries could, in theory, meet all their electricity demand from solar panels deployed on nearby water reservoirs. They would just need to cover about 30 percent of the water’s surface with floatovoltaics. The researchers analyzed 114,555 reservoirs around the world using multiple databases and then modeled potential power generation using realistic climate data.
Added benefit:
And since all those floating arrays would block enough sunlight to reduce evaporation, the researchers also projected major water savings. Cumulatively, the panels would conserve about as much water as 300 million people might use annually (or roughly 106 cubic kilometers per year).
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