hackingdreams

hackingdreams t1_jcqgk4a wrote

They really want people to return to the offices so that their investment in said offices makes sense.

Employees saying "no" is what's causing them to have to choose to sell them instead.

I don't understand how this is inconsistent - if you had a car you haven't driven in two years, might you list it for sale rather than continue to pay registration/car payments on it?

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hackingdreams t1_jcnik2d wrote

So far they've blamed (just off the top of my head): Black people, LGBT people, Women, Biden, and now remote work.

The actual factually known cause: a liquidity crisis caused by social media, enabled by the Republican repeal of banking regulations.

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hackingdreams t1_j9kcpml wrote

When you're linking to the New York Post and someone is quoting an "anonymous source"... you're pretty much straight up saying that this is manufactured.

All links to the New York Post should be autoremoved from any reputable news channel. They are a tabloid.

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hackingdreams t1_j1kq22l wrote

By... not showing up? NGOs are charities and aid organizations. No government ordered them in there, you know, hence the whole "Non-Government" part of NGO. They can choose to leave just that easily.

Their money is better served in a country where the government is trying to get its shit together and pull its people out of poverty, like any one of 15 nations in Africa.

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hackingdreams t1_j15h837 wrote

Large debris will take a couple of years to deorbit.

Debris that small will be in orbit for hundreds of years because they have almost no surface area for which to feel a drag force against - it's almost purely a function of the microgravity at that point.

Other ASAT tests were done at lower orbits on satellites already decaying for the most part.

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hackingdreams t1_j15guup wrote

And all it takes is a fleck of paint less than 0.5mm to make that hole.

This is why you don't shoot satellites in the orbit of other satellites. Space might be big, but with nearly no drag things do not spread out very much, and even the teensiest tiniest pieces can do tremendous damage if they hit just right.

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