“Driven” suggest more than half of total pregnancies,
Less than 20% of a total is “significant”?
The amount the percentage represents is irrelevant. A billion people could be involved, but if the total is 7 billion, it’s not going to be a significant part of the total trend.
In the terms of your analogy, this is about 3 people out of 20 pedaling a (weirdly long) bike and steered by all of them (somehow). Would you say that group of 3 are driving? Or would you concede it’s the two groups of 6 that are mostly driving the bike?
Your “words wholly” includes more than whatever you think it does.
My point has always been about this study
Has it? I think you’re far less clear and careful with your words than you think you are. You’ve been arguing from the start that less than half of something isn’t and can’t be significant. We aren’t even discussing the text in this study that you can read in the screenshot:
More than half the drop of America’s total fertility rate is explained by women under the age of 19 now having next to no children.
What you’re saying now about “the traditional driver of USA birth rates” isn’t reflected in your other comments.
Your numbers are all over the place and don’t really make sense for what you’re talking about. 3 plus two groups of 6 would only be 15 out of 20, so where did the other 5 people go?
But more to the point, if those 3 stop pedaling, or pedal harder than everyone else combined, or apply the brakes, or tip the bike over, any number of other things they could absolutely change the speed/direction of the bike.
Yes. For example, 60 million people in the US (less than 20% of our total population) is a significant amount of people.
In the original there are 50, 16 rows of 3 plus 2 more.
I may not be good at giving it a number, but I can usually see how far apart two things are.
I really don’t think CSAM is a fake crime, but we can’t all be libertarians.
Wouldn’t you know it, there’s a wikipedia article for that. I personally have used 7digital and bandcamp, but qobuz has been mentioned several times in other comments and hdtracks seems like it might work after you create an account.
They might be the most common because they’re the easiest, but there are also still plenty of people actually paying for the games. I’ll never be convinced that piracy is an actual threat to making money. Piracy has never been easier, just see /c/piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com for proof, and yet pretty much all forms of entertainmment are as profitable as ever.
It shouldn’t be that hard, gog.com manages to do it
When you say red pill, do you mean this one?
The concept of red and blue pills has since been widely used as a political metaphor in the United States, especially among online hate culture, where “taking the red pill” or being “red-pilled” means becoming aware of purported political biases inherent in society … The supposed truths revealed to those who refer to themselves as “red pilled” often include conspiracy theories, as well as antisemitic, white supremacist, and misogynistic beliefs.
Do online multiplayer video games count as a commercial use? I kind of like those
Even if it’s a joke, how wrong are you?
Apparently Australia only got around to it last year, but they’re requiring it to be implemented a lot faster.
If by “new” you mean decided a decade ago and implemented 6 years ago, then yes.
I never watched the show, but I did visit its wiki page.
It looks like they did 6 races against public transportation, and the car won 5 of them. They also did 2 four way races between car, water, bike and public transport, and car and bike were the two first place winners.
What? But they’re flushable*, it says so right on the package.
* if your municipality allows it. No municipality does.
Windows 11’s Recall feature is on by default on Copilot+ PCs
Disabling the AI snapshotter requires a trip into Settings for ordinary users
Over the weekend, The Verge’s Tom Warren posted (on twitter) screenshots showing Microsoft’s latest Out-of-Box Experience (OOBE), in which the Recall feature can’t be turned off unless the user opens Settings after completing setup.
Now, it’s possible things have changed in the last few days, but I wouldn’t really expect them to based on the last time I used windows. I also didn’t know this before I tried looking it up, so I’ll admit I’m a little biased against microsoft.
But the real question is, what documentation are you looking at where you’re pulling all this information from? Can you provide a link?
I wouldn’t expect the economics of private jets to work out either, and yet…