For anyone that hasn’t read it: https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/library/national/unabom-manifesto-1.html
Pretty darn Fair rating actually
They have a GitHub
https://archive.is/2024.12.09-181441/https://github.com/lnmangione
I couldn’t access his GitHub profile yet, but I wonder if his GitHub Gist have something… I dunno… Maybe a manifesto hidden within the code snippet (through steganography or ciphered message).
He doesn’t seem that subtle. I think it would be right there for us. He didn’t care if he got caught.
Interesting if only because this suspect being touted on social media as being the shooter is giving off Uni-bubba vibes
lost a star for writing “You can’t have your cake and eat it too,” in the wrong order
Which way did he write it?
In case anyone doesn’t know, “can’t eat your cake and have it too” is the correct order because once you eat it it’s gone and you can’t have it.
Except it doesn’t, the most popular order is nonsensical and Ted was right about it.
If someone asks you what you did yesterday, do you usually list events at random, or do you list them in chronological order? Sentences with multiple clauses are ordered by timeline by default.
So, of course you can have a cake and eat it too, you just won’t have a cake anymore at end of the sentence. What’s impossible is to eat the cake and still have if after that.