Poverty is a choice.
A choice made by billionaires and the politicians they purchase to take the wealth working people create.
I think I have a new example to teach “actual malice” with but it might be misleading about the quality of evidence needed!
The Pope has the opportunity to do by far the funniest thing here…
An underrated addendum to the Bowling Alone story is that North America's largest bowling operator (Bowlero) is a publicly traded company whose business model involves buying mom and pop alleys, shutting down the leagues, and trying to attract casual, higher paying, one-off players.
It's bonkers to hire law students for what are essentially post-graduation jobs during their 1L year.
The sheer volume of relentless cruelty this administration unleashes on a daily basis is overwhelming but this is next-level vile.
The focus of critiques about pharmaceutical monopolies is generally on PRICE. But this case is a compelling example for problems of SUPPLY: it's not a great world when one company controls global supply of a drug and can just refuse to sell it to people who need it. 7/
My own take: this additional language--especially if added to the core text in order to address concerns about the breadth of the license--should mean what UW says, but it would be better to have that explanation from Canvas. IMO, you do need reasonably broad language just to do modern hosting