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Everyone should take his lead and delete old posts on fb.


I've gone back at least ten times. The story element took that long to piece together between repeat visits and online discussion. Also, they've managed to pull some exceptional music performances that normally would have never come here, which has made it worth going repeatedly.


Our courts here in New Mexico got bamboozled by the use of the "Arnold Tool"which is basically the same thing. Anyways, Yada Yada Yada, we're now worst in nation for auto theft because of it and we have no recourse against it unless we want to change our state constitution because our Supreme Court mandated it as it was sold as being more fair. All it did was put repeat offenders on the street the next day. My car has been broken into three times since the change. Garbage in, garbage out.


The Arnold Foundation model was implemented in New Mexico after May 2017[0]. In 2016 Albuquerque was No.2 nationally in Auto Thefts[1], in 2017 (before the model was even in-use) you had risen to the No.1 spot[2].

So this seems quite disingenuous. Auto thefts were a HUGE problem before this, you were No.1 in the nation, and it has stayed that way for six months after the Arnold Foundation model was enacted.

But instead of looking at long term trends you're blaming something that is barely one year old?

[0] https://www.abqjournal.com/1011380/courts-to-implement-new-r...

[1] https://www.abqjournal.com/813721/city-grabs-no-2-spot-in-ve...

[2] https://www.abqjournal.com/1015730/report-albuquerque-area-w...


Er, wouldn't a repeat offense be a red flag for "no release"?

It says so right in the article:

a system to ascertain a suspect’s risk of flight or committing another crime during the trial process

Sounds like your state is doing it wrong?


Sounds like his state is definitely doing it wrong. This is like building a car with square wheels and then proclaiming that cars are a terrible idea.


That sounds like it’s more than just bail though, because they should be wearing a GPS tracker.


Your anecdote about petty theft is so valid


Auto theft is by definition not "petty theft".


Except they didnt steal his car just broke into it.


The best accounting book I've read is called "Double Entry, a history of accounting." pay particular attention to chapter 4, if you want a good primer on basic double entry accounting.


My first job was here at the Chuck E. Cheese here in Albuquerque. I learned an incredible amount from that job, which was good because the job started me at $4.25 an hour and worked me like a horse. Building a place that sucked in kids to play video games was a great idea, and it worked like a charm. The change machines brought in about half of our revenue. It's been twenty years since I worked there but recently went to another one and was surprised to see that the place is run almost exactly how I remember it. I can confirm what others have said about the behavior of parents, generally they were OK but we ended up limiting beer to two after two parties got in a fight with each other. I can see how some places would attract some consistent riff raff. It was a great first job for a sixteen year old.


2016 is the year I began focusing my reading on subject histories and anything that places the western canon in clearer context, so reading Ceasars journal, Plato, stoics, and later writings from Hobbes have been influential.

Histories of accounting (Double Entry, a history of accounting, probably the best thing I read this year), general math (Taming the unknown, a history of algebra), management (A history of management thought) statistics (The lady tasting Tea), computing (The Innovators) education (anything John Taylor Gatto) and recently business law.

The change in my reading from latching onto whatever is new/popular/recommended to delving into the development of basics is one of the better changes I made to my readings, it's creating a richer, more clear, much more useful mental model of the world over the onslaught of articles and books that have X amount of tips on doing Y.


I've worked for a medical laboratory as a courier for eleven years. I don't think all of these jobs will be completely wiped out, for several reasons hit on by people in this thread. Many of the things I do on a daily basis can be automated, (I know because I've been able to automate parts of my job), but other parts will prove to be such a high bar, it will be twenty years before they will be cost effective and/or the technology is created. I worry more about low cost, easy to use scanning technologies displacing my job more than I do automated vehicles, at least in the near term. Retraining those of us who want it really wouldn't be as daunting a task as it sounds. I've been able to listen to thousands of hours of audio while I drive, both audio books and university classes, and I encourage my coworkers to do the same. Most of us understand that this line of work will be disrupted at some point. Places like Uber will lead the front of the change. Business like where I am at, where I handle hazardous materials, and places like ups, which have unions blocking automation, will take quite a bit longer in switching over to autonomous vehicles.


There's a lot more out there than just technology. I'd love to hear from the creators of Meow Wolf, for instance.


Totally. Definitely want to explore digital art as well.


The system works as its designed to. It produces standardized young adults that are compliant to authority. Standardized tests don't really tell us a whole lot about how functional these kids are, outside of how compliant they are. The two (yes two) professionals that helped produce common core, now lecture against it.


Do something completely different. Go on a road trip. Join an art collective. Volunteer to help others. Perspective comes from contrast and new experiences.


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