Genesis revisits its beautiful X Speedium Coupe with a snow-white winter edition of the concept car. Outfitted with a slimline ski rack, custom Anavon skis, and LED fog lights, the electric grand tourer is the perfect ride to take you to and from the slopes. We’re not sure if this means the Speedium is any closer to production, but we sure hope so.
Filed under: Motorsports,TV/Movies,Racing Vehicles
Continue reading NASCAR's racing series, "Full Speed," hits Netflix January 30
NASCAR's racing series, "Full Speed," hits Netflix January 30 originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 15 Jan 2024 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | Email this | Comments[OpenAI sure is sorry it can’t assist.]
Amazon is one of the world’s biggest marketplaces, and that makes it a target for scammers of all sorts. The latest nonsense is products named and described, indirectly, by AI.
It appears that Amazon has now cleared up these products, so if you were hoping to purchase a 10mm x 3m “I apologize but I cannot complete this task it requires using trademarked brand names which goes against OpenAl use policy. Is there anything else I can assist you with” hose, I’m afraid you’re out of luck.
Link: https://www.theverge.com/2024/1/12/24036156/openai-policy-amazon-ai-listings
As any professional interrogator can tell you, deep down inside, all of us humans are really just scared little kids. The more we’re broken down by the circumstances of life or government policy, the less secure we feel, the harder it is to get by in life, and the more scared we become.
And, for many people, out of that fear comes the willingness — hell, the enthusiasm — to embrace “big daddy” in the form of a tough guy leader who promises to “restore” those who feel the fear back to their previous (or imagined future) positions of power, wealth, and authority.
This becomes particularly easy for fascist leaders when their followers are convinced that the nation’s government has become hopelessly corrupt, a project rightwing fossil fuel billionaires, rightwing media, and Republican politicians have been promoting here in the US for decades.
Ever since the Reagan Revolution, in their zeal to cut their own taxes and stop regulation of the fossil fuel and other polluting industries, they’ve been hammering the message that our government has been seized by “deep state socialists” bent on destroying our country.
Republicans and the billionaires who own them have repeated this conspiracy theory so often for the last few decades that an entire religion, Qanon, as arisen around it.
This belief, that much of what our government does is illegitimate or even malicious, makes it easy for low-information voters to bind themselves to a fascist “reform movement” that promises better times ahead.
As fascist followers act out their violent threats against their leaders’ perceived enemies, they get an inner sense of strength and the feeling that they’ve joined a community: that diminishes their own fear for a short while.
The more an “other” — political enemies; racial, religious, and gender minorities; women — are blamed for the ills of the nation, the more vigilante-style violence against them is justified and the more violent the future becomes.
When the state pushes back against that violence, as America did after January 6th, the calls for increased violence become even louder. Trump is practically shouting “kill them!” with a bullhorn and even our court system is afraid to stop him by throwing him into jail as they would have any other common criminal who encouraged such violence against judges, juries, witnesses, court officials, and their families.
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