AlimJaffer
|
2 months ago
|
on: Minneapolis driver shot and killed by ICE
As a Canadian - south of the border terrifies me for what's coming next. Republicans have devolved into a NK style 'dear leader' group that is terrified of crossing Trump. 1930's Germany is here
AlimJaffer
|
1 year ago
|
on: US Ends Support For Ukrainian F-16s
... have you ever been to Europe? A failed state - keep drinking that Fox News koolaid.
AlimJaffer
|
2 years ago
|
on: Bank of Canada raises its interest rate to 5%
They could at the very least not import 1M a people a year (many of whom come here to study at diploma mills that result in no real career skills and considerable debt) at a 38M population, and limit corporations and non-citizens from buying property.
It's on the provinces to get rid of zoning and speed up development of new housing starts, but the Feds are pouring gasoline onto a house on fire with no regard for the rest of us. We wouldn't have such a significantly declining birthrate if people could afford to have children of their own in Canada.
AlimJaffer
|
2 years ago
|
on: Bank of Canada raises its interest rate to 5%
No chance this crushes the 'bubble'. Record immigration, developers have greatly reduced housing starts, and people will do anything to keep their mortgage as asset prices continue to rise.
There's no political will at any level (muni, provincial, federal) to build housing, remove zoning, to reduce immigration to reasonable levels, and it's starting to feel hopeless.
Average rent for a 1br in Vancouver is $2250 - an individual following the 30% rule needs to make 90K/year to justify that. The system is broken and we'll continue to hear platitudes from the government, and that goes for both the Libs and the Cons.
AlimJaffer
|
3 years ago
|
on: Letter SBF sent today to FTX employees
AlimJaffer
|
3 years ago
|
on: Immigration accounts for over 94% of Canada’s population growth in Q2 of 2022
As with many western countries, there's a rising sentiment against immigration due to the lack of infrastructure provided to the existing citizenry. Housing in Canada is some of the least affordable in the world, our health care system is deeply underfunded, competition for spots at post secondary is rising as the institutions accept more international students as they're cash cows, and we're slowly seeing a rise in populism with the the Conservative Party electing Pierre Poilievre who is a Trump-lite figure who rails on about being for the working class while simultaneously voting against dental coverage for poor children [1].
It genuinely feels like the political class has abandoned its people and has sold out to special interest groups entirely. We import tons of TFW's (temporary foreign workers) to appease the corps to have cheap labour, and these TFW's are often treated terribly by the corps. As a first generation Canadian who is the child of refugees, I really do worry about the future of this country. I know tons of couples who are putting off having kids entirely because of the bleak economic picture in our major cities. We need immigration due to the low birthrate, but there's significant resentment from those who want kids and simply cannot afford them which is pushing down our numbers further.
[1] https://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/ndp-calls-out-poilievre-and-...
AlimJaffer
|
3 years ago
|
on: Supreme Court Overturns Roe vs. Wade
Except that contraception prevents conception from ever occurring? Your analogy is fundamentally flawed, and there's no point in arguing in good faith with people who equate contraception to murder.
AlimJaffer
|
3 years ago
|
on: Supreme Court Overturns Roe vs. Wade
Well said. Too much of the debate on here is around logical fallacies rather than the direct impact this will have on women - particularly those who are poor and unable to travel for safe abortions in other states.
Banning abortion only makes access to safe abortions harder - if the right wing want to reduce abortions, making contraceptives freely available has been proven to dramatically reduce the abortion rate as evidenced in Colorado[1].
[1] - https://www.yesmagazine.org/social-justice/2019/06/05/aborti...
AlimJaffer
|
4 years ago
|
on: Names of Canada truck convoy donors leaked after reported hack
King is literally a founding convoy organizer who calls the shots and has a massive following and influence on the convoy members. His videos get 100's of thousands of views and he influenced the convoy 'manifesto' that they created to try to overthrow the government. Your comment shows you have done zero research into the matter. He's a vocal white supremacist who believes Islam has taken over the government to kill white bloodlines. You can find many videos of him saying this to be broadcast to his following.
AlimJaffer
|
4 years ago
|
on: Names of Canada truck convoy donors leaked after reported hack
As a Canadian I humbly request Americans stay out of our politics, particularly when it comes to influencing them via monetary donations. Get your own house in order, don't encourage wannabe insurrectionists who had a manifesto to take over the government in blatantly undemocratic ways.
AlimJaffer
|
4 years ago
|
on: Instagram ads Facebook won't show you
I've run ads on FB before, but this is an incredibly simple article to share with my non-technically minded friends and family as to why these services collect too much data. We need more of these simple and concise posts to share outside of the tech-bubble we live in.
AlimJaffer
|
5 years ago
|
on: US agencies call for pause in Johnson & Johnson vaccine
Medical professionals are often taught these days that aspiration is not necessary for IM injections, particularly in commonly used sites such as the delts.
From the CDC [1]: Aspiration before injection of vaccines or toxoids (i.e., pulling back on the syringe plunger after needle insertion but before injection) is not necessary because no large blood vessels are present at the recommended injection sites
[1] https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/hcp/acip-recs/general-recs/admi...
AlimJaffer
|
5 years ago
|
on: The company behind the NBA’s NFTs is valued at $2.6b
NFT's generally don't make sense to me, but targeting a specific real-world market is a rare use case that seemingly makes sense. The patterns already exist in terms of Fantasy Sports, betting on sports, collectors sports cards, etc.
NFT's representing a tweet or image are pointless and all about bragging rights for the ultra wealthy, but attacking an existing billion dollar+ market in the sports and gambling space with a new twist does appear to have merit.
Anything digital being scarce is typically artificial for sake of, but in this case it's for the meta of the 'game' that they're playing and is ironically a centralized version of crypto that so many crypto people tend to rail against. Yet it's insanely popular.
AlimJaffer
|
5 years ago
|
on: Getting Started with Signal
I've managed to do the same as well - the pushback has been minimal at best. I'm more surprised at how many "X is on Signal!" messages I've received from completely non-technical friends.
AlimJaffer
|
5 years ago
|
on: FTC Sues Facebook for Illegal Monopolization
I could get behind this if the current ones actually followed regulation. FB are so entrenched that they don't have to follow the rules as they've demonstrated with Cambridge Analytica among a myriad of other issues with their platform.
AlimJaffer
|
5 years ago
|
on: Biden wins White House, vowing new direction for divided U.S.
Agreed. One of the factors that makes HN superior to the likes of reddit is the lack of overt karma farming which reduces the quality of discourse.
AlimJaffer
|
7 years ago
|
on: Fixing the Internet for Games
As someone who works in the games space, I find this to be an interesting proposition. My primary concern revolves around similar 'net neutrality' aspects - more and more of the internet is becoming pay to play, this just further entrenches that theory if you want the best networking for your games as a studio.
AlimJaffer
|
7 years ago
|
on: Amsterdam's Plan: If You Buy a Newly Built House, You Can't Rent It Out
When that's your comparison, almost every city in the world is more affordable compared to the Bay Area. Europe, barring London, is typically much more affordable in my experience (extensive transit systems helps as well). There's a reason cities like Berlin are hot spots, they're not just culturally fantastic, they're affordable for all working classes.
AlimJaffer
|
7 years ago
|
on: Colombia’s Plan to Welcome Millions of Venezuelan Migrants
Same here. As someone who lives in British Columbia, I always conflate the two.
AlimJaffer
|
7 years ago
|
on: Unity: Updated Terms of Service and commitment to being an open platform
I've been following this rather closely as a company who provides backend services (so we're classified as a 3rd party service)to studios in the industry, many of whom use Unity. I'm rather surprised by this about-face, especially considering Unity had the upper hand in negotiations with Improbable. Pleasant surprise, and a much needed one in the games industry where locked-down tech is often the norm.