As long as you're bisexual in need of illegal money laundering then they don't discriminate.
stifle867
It's great to see the attempt and also an example of what the C4 guidelines are made to avoid.
Notice how many comments are little nitpicks about this and that. Completely stalling the commit and getting further away from the original point of C4 which is to reduce contributor friction and avoid these kind of endless discussions on PRs.
I don't want to be too critical because some of that is a clear lack of understanding of the motivations of C4 which is explained more thoroughly in Pieter's blog posts. You don't want to adopt a contributor guidelines that you don't understand of course.
IMO it's better just to implement it as-is and start using it in practice rather than bikeshedding.
Best practices for minimizing complexity:
- Try out “stacking”
- Simplify software design
I didn't say there wasn't information in there but the above paraphrased quote goes to the heart of what my comment was about.
Firstly, how is purchasing their product considered a "best practice"? It's not generally accepted or the standard superior option by any stretch of the imagination.
Secondly, the option they give to minimizing complexity is to simplify your software design. Ignoring a couple problems with this statement, if they're being honest this should be above the recommendation to "try out stacking".
It doesn't have to be that deep. You can give it a quick read and take from it what you will, but it is an ad for their product more so than it is an article that contains broadly useful information. They have every right to do so and maybe their product really is tremendously great but I'm just calling it how I see it.
It's the fact that there is no extradition treaty in place that would give a legal basis to get him back making it not so easy. Also, the justice department only agreed on letting him out on bail only because they could thought they could manage the flight risk by imposing travel restrictions. It says all this in the article.
This part is my opinion but seeing as he helped launder money for terrorist groups, many of which are based in that region of the world, combined with the other resources at his disposal, there is a definite risk that he has a "change of heart" and attempts to evade his sentence.
Knowingly and willfully laundering hundreds of millions of dollars for Iran, Syria, North Korea, Russia, and people engaging in the exploitation of children is definitely villainous. More so than Trump.
If it's an official commentary you can usually find them via torrents if you download the disc rips. It's usually not the most popular torrent for that movie as the file sizes tend to be much larger.
Yeah it was just a joke about the cliches of the true crime category. To be fair I don't watch true crime myself.
She would have left a strand of hair at the scene that they DNA test then the whole case gets busted upon. That's how it works in the shows anyway
Ah yes, the classic Australian tribal war dance
New Zealand is technically part of Australia anyway (when you have something we want to claim).
That's truly as lightweight as you're going to get. Cool little script.
Even if he's being honest about his intention of coming back voluntarily it's still a flight risk as there's the possibility he doesn't come back, changes his mind, etc. No extradition and he has the resources to avoid it anyway.
China has no say in letting it happen. The company is not based in China. He is a Canadian citizen and resides in the UAE. He was born in China but it's a little late for them to get involved in that.