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Comment Re: Do the math (Score 1) 203

Yeah it seems to align with what you expect in India (I originally wrote India and China, but China has far more reliable electricity than the USA).

It is not the case that 9.1% of the population is without power at any given moment, it is that over the course of a month (30 days) at some point in that month 0.1% of the population experience a power outage.

Admission that the USA is now a 3rd world state, that people accept that 0.1% of the population are without power at any given time.

That is not a reasonable representation of the U.S. power grid - the statistics have been misrepresented or misinterpreted by you.

Comment Re: But you don't understand! (Score 1) 203

Note also that R administrations in many states have killed Medicaid funding

Please, elaborate - as I understand it, the R administration is kicking ineligible recipients off Medicaid. If you are healthy, have no dependents, and no special, extenuating conditions, you are removed as ineligible. Likewise, if your status in this country is, as the kids say, "undocumented", you have no place on Medicaid.

There are federal funds to provide charity care, but that's separate from Medicare.

Comment Re: Where are the power outages? (Score 1) 203

U.S. is 350M people, EU is 450M, if you want to get your parties in a bunch over Ukraine, exclude it - oh, wait, Ukraine isn't part of EU - so let's compare EU to US, relatively speaking, how often are there power outages in the EU?

I recently visited Italy, apparently they chose to do things like not run AC on very hot days - perhaps because their citizens are used to following gov't orders they all simply go along with gov't policies and mandates regarding power usage?

Comment Re: Worthless fucking statistic. (Score 1) 203

Wait a minute - the U.S. power grid serves 350 million people, the EU has about 450 million people - not a perfect match, but possibly comparable.

We can talk about power outages in Germany cs a similar state in the U.S., but we can't compare German power grid to the entire U.S. power grid (Germany has about 1/4th the population of the U.S.).

Let's try and compare similar population/geographical bodies, OK?

Sure, I'll concede that at least once a month, somewhere in America, suffers a "major power outage", based on either duration or population impacted, but can anyone reasonably argue that the EU has fewer than one "major power outage" per month? Really?

This is really a pointless metric...

Comment Re:Interesting Challenges (Score 1) 65

Presumably it can help fill undesirable shifts by offering higher pay, but it would seem like you need a huge pool of people to make it work.

You need a huge pool of available workers, and work needs to be fairly generalized - easily interchangeable. Candidates need to be able to drop in to almost any available position with minimal training.

With hundreds of potential workers competing for a limited number of shifts, this will let the employer avoid raising wages, as there will always be someone willing to work for the lower rate, given a large enough pool.

In this very specific example, I wonder what the impact was in this town when a couple hundred full time jobs w/benefits suddenly turned into twice as many part time jobs you had to scramble to get and came without benefits?

Comment Re:The difference between blue collar and white co (Score 1) 65

Today, babysitting a cnc isn't as easily translated into a measurement of productivity.

What? You really can't imagine a way to measure the productivity of a factory line worker (as in your example, someone "babysitting a CNC")?

Uh, how about widgets per hour/shift?

Blue collar workers, as you refer to them, aren't typically compensated just based on their time on the factory floor - the extreme counter-example to your assumption would be an Amazon warehouse worker or driver, whose productivity is constantly monitored over several metrics...

Comment Re:So Not Shocking (Score 1) 65

I believe that more "gig workers" are hustling trying to turn an easy to get job (food delivery, ride share driver) into something resembling a living wage because they can't find other, better-paying, more stable work, than are students, retirees, and empty nesters trying to make a few bucks in their spare time. I have no proof, but that is my impression based on my experience.

Comment Re:So Not Shocking (Score 1) 65

They are cheering on a system that yes, allows a worker to supplement their income, but also gets a large share of the needed factory work done by workers who don't put in enough hours in a week to qualify/earn subsidized healthcare benefits.

The employer, according to the summary, fills about half their available shifts with workers doing less than 30 hours/week - that is the threshold for requiring subsidized healthcare.

I would be very interested to find if it is the workers that choose to work fewer than 8 shifts/week or if the employer limits who can work more than 30 hours/week...

Comment Re:So Not Shocking (Score 1) 65

Healthcare is the motivation, not simply appealing to workers desires for flexible hours.

Today, in any given week, about 450 flexible workers — roughly half the pool — pick up shifts at the [GE Appliances] plant, with workers putting in an average of 24 hours a week.

With roughly half the workers working less than 25 hours a week, the employer is off the hook for subsidized healthcare - if all shifts were covered by 40 hour/week workers, healthcare costs would more than double versus this massively-flexible part-time labor scheme.

"Flexible, app-based scheduling lets large pools of part-time workers choose four-hour shifts and even select the type of work they prefer,"

Another key part of this arrangement is the interchangeability of the work offered - when a production worker can be taught any position in, say, a half-hour, then that opens the door to extreme flexibility. In high-skill environments, let's say a doctor's office, the roles of nurse, receptionist, scheduler, billing specialist, and of course doctor, are not so easily interchangeable (it's a silly example, but it demonstrates my point).

Comment Re: Going to be interesting in CA (Score 1) 105

The money to be raised is already budgeted as a separate fund for a specific purpose. It is not intended to be general funds nor is it intended to be ongoing funding.

That sounds great, did they also budget for a third of the targeted billionaires leaving the state to avoid the 5% wealth tax? I think not - CA thinks it's so special they can try and seize 5% of billionaires wealth and they'll stick around! LOL, other states have sunshine, and beaches, and lower property/income taxes...

Comment Re: Leaving. Billionaires or billionaires' money? (Score 3, Insightful) 105

Sure the billionaires can leave CA. No loss there, because their money will stay there.

The 5% tax is a wealth tax.

The wealth tax is paid by individuals that reside in the state.

When the individual moves out of state, like to Florida as a Google founder did, they are no longer a resident of CA.

Being a resident of FL, they do not owe CA the 5% wealth tax.

The billion dollar company (like Google) may stay in CA, but the state can't collect the wealth tax from the billion dollar corporation.

Comment Re: Wait...? (Score 1, Insightful) 105

The amount of Venture Capital flowing into a state is not proof that billionaires aren't leaving the state. One has nothing to do with the other.

Although a campaign for a new tax on billionaires has convinced some ultra-rich residents to shift to other states and businesses often complain that high property and energy costs and an anti-business regulatory regime make it too tough to make money in the state, the inability of the top talent, companies and investors in AI to set up elsewhere shows California's enduring attraction.

You really think AI companies can't setup elsewhere? Somehow we are building AI datacenters all across the country, do you really think the professionals in the field HAVE TO STAY in SF to access their datacenter in Ohio or Virginia? Really?

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