But also the only place to get American goods in lots and lots of countries. I believe they're also duty free.
DrQuickbeam
found the bird
To be more specific this is a Simple Resolution, definition here: https://www.senate.gov/legislative/common/briefing/leg_laws_acts.htm
I also recommend a plugin for going around paywalls like RemovePaywalls.com on Firefox desktop/mobile.
Point being, this is like making a single day of mourning for the Senate not for the nation.
This is the phone they announced: https://murena.com/shop/smartphones/brand-new/hiroh-phone-powered-by-murena-pre-sale/#android-without-google
It's a resolution not a bill, only Republicans voted on it.
https://www.axios.com/2025/09/18/charlie-kirk-national-day-remembrance-senate
Pano Scrobbler
Don't get too caught up in nuance and small strains of academic philosophy here. The difference is clear:
Egalitarianism is a philosophy that asserts equality among all people. An egalitarian holds the belief or principle that all people are equal and should be treated equally.
Feminism is a social movement born out of the pervasive and systematic disenfranchisement, oppression and abuse of women, which holds to an egalitarian philosophy of equal rights between men and women. A feminist is an advocate for the equal rights of women.
One is an abstract idea that influences modern humanism, liberalism and democracy. The other is a struggle to make that ideal a reality, that has a different face in every different time and place that it's happening. Both are virtuous.
I've been using Firefox mobile since they enabled extensions on it a little over a year ago on my Pixel 9 and haven't had any performance issues with it. My only complaint is that it doesn't handle form auto fills, or opening links associated with apps as well as chrome, but I think that's because of chrome's inherent ties into the OS. I prefer Opera on desktop for the UI and features.
Quantum computing yes, with qubits. But also tenery computing with trits, and probabilistic computing with p-bits. Analog computers probably fit in this category too.
Probabilistic computing will probably become big before quantum computers, because it's a natural fit for probabilistic LLMs. Lots of work being done in this hardware field with photonics, neuromorphic and thermodynamic chips.