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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • That was my initial reaction, thinking China MUST hold more treasury bonds than anyone else, right? Turns out that’s typically Japan ($1 trillion), and the UK has generally held roughly the same number as China (both in the $700B range). Maybe the US anticipated and had contingencies ready if it was just China doing the selling, but when the other big holders started a slow bleed, it might’ve given them pause? Dunno.

    We also don’t know who held what more recently than January and I don’t know if the data gap is the usual lag or if the the people who do this work at the Treasury department got “DOGE’d”.

    Bottom line, it’s been fun to think about but I don’t think we should put too much stock in conspiracy theories originating on Substack.


  • There’s a theory being batted around without too much evidence (hold tight, Snopes is on it) that Mark Carney talked European and Japanese leaders into accumulating US Treasury bonds, and then slow-selling them to make Trump squirm once he imposed the broad-brush tariffs to spook the T-bill market.

    The theory sounds mostly plausible in that Carney was in Europe for closed door meetings with European leaders shortly after being designated PM, and that Trump backed off so quickly and used the language of “the bond market is tricky” to justify the change in direction. Dropping demand for T-bills leads the Fed to increase yields to keep the borrowing taps on, means expensive borrowing for them, means no money for tax cuts for billionaires.

    On the other hand, the story originates from a twice-fired shock-jock’s Substack.

    But it sounds like something a wicked smart Harvard/Oxford educated economist would dream up and pull off…

    ¯\(ツ)


  • The deceased girl’s father insisted that measles helps build up a person’s immune system.

    So here’s the thing…and I know that everyone here knows this, but it doesn’t.

    Measles causes immune amnesia.

    It’s pretty sneaky - integrating into respiratory tract macrophages, and avoiding destructive phagocytosis by binding directly to certain membrane receptors, and then being transported to lymph nodes where B and T cells get infected by the measles virus too. These memory B and T cells contain the memory of past infections, and when they’re destroyed (because they’re infected), you no longer have the ability to quickly ramp up a response to past infections and you get to start all over from the start.

    So even if their other kids survived, their chances of dying from another infection goes up. It takes somewhere between 2.5 and 5 years for that risk to come back to baseline.

    The infection itself might not have been “that bad” (despite killing one of their children) but the mortality risk isn’t over by a long shot.









  • As a beginner, it’s perfect for me with a small refractor with ALL the accessories (cooled astro camera, filter wheel, auto focusser, guide scope and camera, ASIAir).

    Sure you can spend more now on something fancy like a strain-wave, but those prices are much higher and unless a big heavy scope purchase is imminent, get the GTi, use it with what you have or nab a small refractor, and pick up your next mount on the used market when it’s time for much less. It really makes things easy.






  • DrinkMonkey@lemmy.catoFuck Cars@lemmy.worldMurica
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    2 months ago

    So the thing for me isn’t the temperature nor the depth of the snow. It’s sharing space with cars and contending with the very real possibility of falling and getting my head crushed like a grape.

    I quite liked using my fat bike in the park through the snow. But on a road with cars on ice? There’s a reason I sold it.

    Also, I would literally sweat going downhill on that thing.