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Wanting our government to treat our neighbors like human beings rather than vermin is not "partisan brainrot", it is actually a clear-eyed reaction to both the current circumstances, and human history over the last 90 years.

Signed, a Jew with a personal background in these matters.


The parent to this thread was head of dev experience at Netlify, so she it's presumably familiar with it!


Jetbrains tools - specifically, PyCharm & Intellij IDEA - support this (gutter alignment) via the "Joe Celko" code style. With that enabled, you can autoformat you SQL to follow that convention.

Oddly, DataGrip doesn't provide this option.


Would it be rude of me to ask you to open an item on https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/ for this please? I'm just a curious JetBrains DataGrip user.


California law provides some protection from discrimination by employers based on political affiliation or activities. NY state and Washington DC have similar statutes.


But it’s not “affiliation” nor “activities.” It’s “is their stance on topic X compatible with ours?”

Still terrible. Still not illegal.


Can you share a link to this study?


I recall seeing it, but I can't seem to track it down at the moment. It was a study done by Europeans, concluding that China was eating about 83% of the tariff cost. The remaining 17% hits the US consumers.

Of course, that 17% can sort of be returned to the American consumers via reduced taxes or increased federal spending. The jobs are nice too.


This study reached a different conclusion: http://www.princeton.edu/~reddings/papers/CEPR-DP13564.pdf


Do you use Twitter? Threadreaderapp is ubiquitous. You're seeing posts from people who use the tool, not marketing from the tool's authors.


This might be valid if we were discussing an internal, proprietary software project.

We're talking about an open source project used by millions of people that has gotten CONTINUOUSLY better over the course of decades - to the point where it is now - arguably - the best of its kind.

Given this track record, I think postgres devs are entitled to use whatever management-speak euphemism they like. In this case, the idiom's original meaning/intent seems apt.


"security in depth". This is the kind of problem that can't be solved via specific technology choices, or technical standards.

Instead, it's a matter of understanding that most attacks involve several pivot points; and that these pivots are possible because we treat internal networks as if they are "safe spaces" where we can let our guard down.


mxtoolbox indicates that SPF for telus.com redirects to "_spf_telus_com.nssi.telus.com", which designates "_spf.google.com" as an authorized sender.

That's why the SPF check doesn't fail.

However, in the year 2018 I'm shocked that Gmail would put messages that fail dmarc into users' inboxes.


It's not being sent from any of the IPs listed under _spf.google.com, though.


Yep - I received precisely the same message, among 3 others. They all had the same "Message-ID" header as your example.


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