Yeah they do, I’m just pointing out that the law doesn’t say a business has to. Sorry, being pedantic
Yeah they do, I’m just pointing out that the law doesn’t say a business has to. Sorry, being pedantic
The people getting up in arms are upset because they see it as a slippery slope. First just the idiots pay for subscriptions, then it creeps into the lives of everyone. And eventually it’s harder to avoid the bullshit than just pay, and the whole market becomes more predatory. Like if the idiots give companies an inch, they’ll eventually take a mile
Sadly I think they’re legally allowed to not serve gay people in certain states. The minimum is just hiring gay people :(
Yeah, probably wrong. There’s not a bunch of third party info on the environmental impact this factory will have, and no evidence anyone was bribed. If it makes you feel better, this isn’t their first factory and I couldn’t find any negative news about that factory either. Community leaders were supportive though, and a bunch of jobs were created.
I did find some articles about the positive environmental impact sodium batteries have from production, to relative ease of recycling, if that makes you feel better.
I can think of an America specific reason to not block all communication with the outside world in a school. Even if every room has a wired landline that worked and was accessible to students and teachers
I haven’t looked into it too much or done it myself, but I heard of https://creativeheartwarrior.com/pages/filament-recycling
Looks like they currently only take filament as a donation and not as an exchange.
Edit: also found https://printeriordesigns.com/pages/recycling
(Again, haven’t personally tried)
No where does that source say Biden tried to shut down the Internet. The closest is this part
Also I can’t take a site seriously when one of their sources they link to is the Twitter user “End Wokeness”
There are some parts I agree with, but there’s plenty there that’s right wing dog whistles for “I want to say hateful things and have no consequences” free speech