I’m Hunter Perrin. I’m a software engineer.

I wrote an email service: https://port87.com

I write free software: https://github.com/sciactive

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • I live in California, and I’ve been on SDG&E, PG&E, and SoCal Edison, and they all work the same as what you’re describing, with multiple different pricing schemes depending on usage and hours. Wherever you live in California, you usually only have one company to choose from, but I’ve never had only one plan to choose from. Maybe you lived in a very niche part of California, but that’s definitely not how it works in San Diego County, Riverside County, Santa Clara County, San Mateo County, or Alameda County.

    As far as solar, that’s the same everywhere. My dad is on SDG&E, and he sells his solar back to the grid when he doesn’t use full capacity.

    In my thirty six years in California, I’ve experienced a handful of blackouts. The last one was in 2012. How often does Texas have blackouts? I remember most of the state going dark just a few years ago. And now again. It may not be all of the state, but it’s enough that it’s newsworthy.


  • He said, “we were then a right to work state and we changed it all”. The “we” in this context refers to the people of Delaware and more specifically, the Labor movement he just referred to in the earlier clause in that sentence, not Joe Biden. He’s probably referring to Delaware passing the law that added language to the Delaware Code that explicitly allows employment contracts that have a union membership requirement. I can’t find any information on whether Delaware had laws banning closed shops before, but explicitly allowing them in law is a major accomplishment for labor.

    Regardless, it would take quite a stretch of the imagination to think based on what he said that he’s claiming that “He Repealed Delaware’s ‘Right-to-Work’ Law”.