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" ... And why not? Crowder seemed to be on the verge of making a preposterously large pile of problems disappear. ... "
" ... Few believe the upcoming two-Test series between Pakistan and Australia will be competitive. Compounding the difficulty, Australia has not lost a Test at the Gabba - the site of Thursday’s opener - since 1988. An upset is perhaps fanciful, Pakistan at least will do what it traditionally does best - unleash an exciting, preposterously young quick. ... "
" ... Originally released on the Xbox, Metal Wolf Chaos had you take on the role of Michael Wilson, the 47th President of the United States of America in a preposterously powerful power armor as he fought against his maniacal Vice President Richard Hawk and his coup d'état forces. ... "
" ... Pritzker critics accuse him of delaying re-opening in order to, by worsening the state’s economy, ensure that the federal government has no other choice than to provide bailout money, or, yet more extreme, that he wants the state to suffer in order to ensure Trump loses his re-election campaign in the fall. That’s preposterously conspiratorial, to be sure, but a marker of frustration and lack of trust in the governor and his decisions, especially among those downstate. ... "
" ... This isn't exactly wrong, but implicitly involves doing something very stupid. That is, it's absolutely true that if physicists gave up on a super-expensive new particle accelerator and did nothing else, the money would just disappear, but that's not really what the anti-accelerator side is asking for. What folks like Hossenfelder are calling for is for the physics community to make a rational assessment of the relative value of different projects, and direct their efforts toward securing funding for things that will work. The idea isn't just to pack up our toys and quit the field, but rather to direct the resources and political capital that would be spent on obtaining those hypothetical billions for an accelerator (which, remember, is not a sure thing) to instead secure funding for projects that have a better chance of paying off. It might not be possible to obtain the full amount that would be spent on a new accelerator, but it seems preposterously unlikely that there would be zero extra money available if CERN were to decide to advocate for something other than ever larger colliders and direct its considerable political resources toward securing funding for that. ... "