One of the district secretaries (I think that's what they called them) called FOX commentators and told them that after the app "crashed" they reverted to the old "paper ballot and call it in" method. He? had been trying to do that, and they put him on hold. For over an hour. He still hadn't reported in by the time I got tired of watching the BS.
I've seen a corrupt small town sheriff steal an election better than these incompetents. He at least had the deputy take the lockbox with the ballots to a back country road where they thought no one was looking to swap the votes, before turning it in to the county courthouse.
I swear. The Dems can't steal an election, frame a President, or rig an impeachment for shit. Whenever I think of a traditionally Democrat controlled city, the first things I think of are crime riddled cesspools, run by corrupt incompetents. Many Republicans are actually Democrats running under a false flag, so don't think I just hate on Dems.
I got a lot of hate to go around.
I'm sure he's happier. He's JUST an entertainer who gets paid for making people laugh and telling them that their smart. Trump is a world leader with responsibilities
and the certain knowledge that no matter what he does to protect and advance his people's interest, someone that he's working to help will backstab and attack him. Or maybe his family.
[Reposting without mojibake.]
I was a CS professor for fifteen years. Had tenure and everything. I've just completed my third week as a Principal Applied Scientist at Amazon, working from HQ2.
But I wouldn't say I was "poached": that implies impropriety and a lack of agency. I didn't just passively get shot in the head by a poacher/recruiter while grazing peacefully in the savanna. I interviewed, they made me an offer, and I decided it was the right next thing for me. That decision was complex, personal, and *active*. Lucky me that I work in a field (CS) with many great options in both industry and academia.
I was at the University of Wisconsin--Madison, not in Virginia. But I'm not sure why Virginia is special here. Virginia may have promised some number of CS graduates, but any big company recruits all across the country and globe. I don't know how much of the promise of a fresh HQ2 talent pool is specifically Virginia's to provide.
In any case, I'll no longer be training future software engineers and scientists for Amazon to hire. Maybe that's a loss, because after fifteen years I'd gotten reasonably good at that. Now I'm learning how to be good at some other new things, because that's what *I* chose to do. So far, so good.
I was a CS professor for fifteen years. Had tenure and everything. Iâ(TM)ve just completed my third week as a Principal Applied Scientist at Amazon, working from HQ2.
But I wouldnâ(TM)t say I was âoepoachedâ: that implies impropriety and a lack of agency. I didnâ(TM)t just passively get shot in the head by a poacher/recruiter while grazing peacefully in the savanna. I interviewed, they made me an offer, and I decided it was the right next thing for me. That decision was complex, personal, and *active*. Lucky me that I work in a field (CS) with many great options in both industry and academia.
I was at the University of Wisconsin--Madison, not in Virginia. But Iâ(TM)m not sure why Virginia is special here. Virginia may have promised some number of CS graduates, but any big company recruits all across the country and globe. I donâ(TM)t know how much of the promise of a fresh HQ2 talent pool is specifically Virginiaâ(TM)s to provide.
In any case, Iâ(TM)ll no longer be training future software engineers and scientists for Amazon to hire. Maybe thatâ(TM)s a loss, because after fifteen years Iâ(TM)d gotten reasonably good at that. Now Iâ(TM)m learning how to be good at some other new things, because thatâ(TM)s what *I* chose to do. So far, so good.
We all like praise, but a hike in our pay is the best kind of ways.