Christian Science Monitor Putting OSS at the Helm
Jane Walker writes to tell us that the Christian Science Monitor is becoming quite the proponent of open source. The aggressive nature of OSS was a large part of what drew CIO Curtiss Edge into the fold, it seems. From the article: "But beyond the tangibles like open source code it was the community that made a convert of Edge. Behind all the open code, it was the forums and flexibility that were the driving forces he believes breeds better developers than those that toil away with proprietary code. Open source software makes developers more aggressive and more apt to go out into the communities that exist around the software to find solutions to their problems, Edge said, rather than holding on some proprietary help desk line while tech support looks up the answer."
Open Source rules.
Can I get an amen?
barack to the future?
To be fair this can happen in open source world as well (well, in the so called "commercial open source world"). But, overall, in general probability of fixing an issue quickly is higher when using open source software.
Amen!
Open source fanatics meet religious fanatics. I have a bad feeling about this. Just kidding about the fanatics part mind you, there are some real nice people in the open source movement.
Philosophy.
Open-source advocates were being known as Communists (Left), and now the same group of people become Christians (Right)?
Definitely, open-source advocates must have splitted personalities.
Anyway, sharing with others is a Christian virtue, instead of a form of Communist idealism (which is what proprietary software firms told you).
install. I posted a question to alt.linux and everyone had fun with their 'RTFM' comments. I did read the FM, and their non help wasn't helping.
Now instead of telling my boss that our issue has been escalated to level 2 support I can say "I won't have an answer until Elm0 in #L1nuxd00dz recovers from his caffine induced tirade about how LISP is more elegant that PERL".
People who bite the hand that feeds them usually lick the boot that kicks them
when i read the Christian science monitor people glance at the title and knee jerk immediately, 'what the hell are you reading that for?'
Just in case you have not had an encounter with the CSM before, it's not some religious orientated 'intelligent theory' spouting mouth piece of the far right. It's one of the most respected newspapers around, has a league of its own reporters rather than relying on wire services like most other papers, has won many awards for fantastic journalism, often reports on cutting edge science that would make the conservative far right weep, and also often reports on stories that the rest of the press skip over for not being sexy enough.
AND, they're low on cash and have been in the red for some time, how about splashing out on a subscription?
Lets get some facts straight-
1. Erm, a Christian religious body is endorsing opensource
2. FreeBSD is opensource
3. FreeBSD mascot is a devil'ish cartoon with a pitchfork
4. => Religious society endorsing devil.
Heaven and Hell meeting... angels and devils hugging in sky, flowers falling down from sky!!!!!
ewww. Where did I mess up ???
- mritunjai
Was your question "What does the man command do?"
-:sigma.SB
WARN
THERE IS ANOTHER SYSTEM
I have heard (and wikipedia confirms) that at the request of the founder, there is always at least one religious article per issue. I cannot comment on the quality of their general articles (though I've heard they've done some good stuff) or the quality/tone of their mandated daily religious article, but you can't really say that they have "no religious slant" if they are, in fact, going out of their way to run at least one religious article per issue.
If you're suprised by this, you've obviously never heard of "plug and pray". Religion was getting people to switch their (belief) systems way before Apple made commercials about it.
Not a bad article, though.
"Common sense will be the death of us all"
Gives a new meaning to "The Cathedral and the Bazaar", doesn't it!
"Sure there's porn and piracy on the Web but there's probably a downside too."
Christians? Science? Does anyone see how the irony of their 'science' could limit this group to finding the clues of the newest Harry Potter book rather than being an actual source of credibility?
And God Said to Noah "Thou shal build an ARK-ive so that I may have a back up copy of everything that I have created." And so, Noah made back up. He back up two of everything.
When Noah was finished and everything was backed up, GOD INSTALLED LINUX! (*angles signing "HALELUJAH!"*) As God wiped away all the JPG's of Angelina Jolie on his harddrive, God though of a brilliant idea to create a flightless black and white bird that had it's own exclusive land that would be way COOLER that Eden. (Eden was a pain in the butt to maintain anyway. Between that Adam and Eve thing, kicking them out, and the cost of Fertilzer, and letting some Iraqi people rent the place and calling it Mesopotamia). This land would be easier to maintain because everything there would be frozen.
When He was done installing the fifth disc of the Linux distro, completing setup, and running yum to install any other RPMS that were not installed on the distro discs, God said "Let there be a land of ice and snow so that my latest creation may live in harmony far away from all the other things that I have made." And so it was. He called this land "Antartica" and the creatures he created were called "penguins".
Then God reinstalled most of the files he had and told Noah "If anyone ask what happen, say there was a great flood." "But what about the uber-believers oh, Lord! The take everything literally for the they think they need You to be responsible for there lives, draw stregth from, and condem all the people they call 'science nerds'?"
And God said onto Noah "F*** those Biblethumpers! I'm tired! I'm going to go listen to some Zep* and watch the penguins." You'll probably destroy yourselves over dumb crap that is about Me but I don't want to be any part of your problems. Besides, nerds rule. Only a nerd would have the ablity to use AI and bring stuff to life."
This made Noah a little said, so to make him cheer up a bit God then stated "However, in case there is a big emergency, give Me a holler."
(*="On the eighth day, God created Led Zeplin. He grabed a beer, then he rested.")
The Rapture is NOT an exit strategy.
We all understand your feelings. In 1998, when RH 5.2 was released, you failed at the most basic geek test. You couldn't even install the simplest Linux distro. Your life is in ruins. You can't get any work done, You're not eating properly, your wife is leaving you, the dog won't speak to you etc., etc.
And it's all our fault. Everytime you try to do anything coherent, useful, sensible, constructive etc, etc, like installing BSD or buying a Mac, the anguish of our mocking laughter washes back over you in that familiar hot flush of shame. 'RTFM' comments have destroyed your manhood.
And the worst of it is?
We're still laughing at you.
"I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
You're probably still not getting the dedicated religious content => religious slant angle, so let me elaborate.
I'm going to go out on the limb here and say that the vast majority of religious articles in the CSM and other periodicals with a religious section has to do with the three major Abrahamic religions. To be blunt, the sacred texts of these religions are fairy tales and the vast majority of their adherents take them way too seriously, to their own intellectual detriment and to the detriment of happiness of those around them who do not share their own narrow view of the universe. Not to marginalize the good that has been done in the name of religion--there's absolutely nothing wrong with putting "good" up on a pedistal and praising good deeds when done in the name of religion. However, to put (again, mostly Abrahamic) religion up on a pedistal as a recognized and unquestionable aspect/catagory of newsworthy life lowers that newspaper's level of rationality and openmindedness, at least in my eyes. Even if they do it just to pander to their readers, this means that they are that much less likely to treat religious matters with an open mind for fear of offending said readers. On average, how many articles critical of religion are found in the religious section of the CSM (or any other newspaper with a religious section)? How many times do they say in interviews "yes, but isn't your war on love just a little counter-productive?" or "yes, but wouldn't the secular humanist way of doing things be a little better in this circumstance?" I don't read any religious section, so I couldn't say, but I would hazzard a guess that religious points of view are almost never questioned in any fashion. Compare that to an article in the main section or business section or whatever--those issues typically do get at least a modicum of objectivity.
Anyway, my $0.02, feel free to mod me down now.
In time. For aal trouble. It parties). At THE of the Kfounders of
Open Source is a classic example of how well Intelligent Design works :p
I certainly have noticed a large number of christians in my local Linux Users Group. Someone posted a question on the list about software for some religious purpose (hymns dissemination contrary to the wishes of the RIAA? congregation monitoring? can't remember really) and they all came out of the woodwork. I was surprised about the number of active church goers. Perhaps I am just jaundiced by boarding school forcing me to go to church, but in my "other than geek" life I know no one who goes to church!
BSD can't die now! Christians have experience bringing things back that everyone believes dead.
They're putting their faith in OSS!
[ducking]
Amongst our weaponry are such diverse elements as: fear, surprise, ruthless efficiency, an almost fanatical devotion to the Pope, and nice red uniforms - Oh damn!
-- Neminem laede, immo omnes, quantum potes, iuva.
I have to agree; I get most of my news from Google News, and I usually select a couple of stories pertaining to a certain topic. I happened upon some write-ups from the CSM, and they almost always were very informed, pretty much unbiased and clearly and concisely written, even on hot-button issues like stem cell research. Not at all what I expected from a publication with "Christian" in the name (no offense meant to religious people, but the special brand of Christianity that seems to have the loudest voice in America these days does show evidence of a neanderthal mindset).
-- Language is a virus from outer space.
Well, duh! Everyone knows Christians are huge proponents of 'Intelligent Design'!
"If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
I think the claim that OSS developers are more "aggressive" in seeking solutions is without merit. I mainly develop using proprietary software, and I'm plenty aggressive. I've used the help desk to get technical support maybe once or twice in my (long) career. How aggressive do you need to be to use Google or MSDN? Not very.
And, furthermore, isn't tech support one of the foundations of the OSS business model? Give away the software and hope people will pay for help, right? I guess the people at CSM won't use Red Hat.
The most rabid believers in American Exceptionalism are the exact same people whose policies are destroying it.
Fastest-growing GAY 7hat the project declined in market revel in our gay
Where religion, science and politics are the same.
("CSM" what a retarded piece of BULLSHIT!)
I read CSM articles from time to time and find them reasonably well balanced.
Christians are not, in general, a bunch of intolerant anti-intellectuals.
Liberals promote tolerance, not big government and immorality.
The neo-cons smear them both.
"I read CSM articles from time to time and find them reasonably well balanced."
True, Unless those articles are about Christian Science zealots refusing medical attention to the sick and dying.
"Christians are not, in general, a bunch of intolerant anti-intellectuals."
True, Real Christians are typically well read and well thougt out individuals.
"Liberals promote tolerance, not big government and immorality."
False, Liberals tend towards ideological intolerance. Liberal ideological condescension often rises to the level of zealotry, and the implementation of Liberal ideas requires a large government. They want to legislate a community rather educate the individual who would naturally choose to serve the community.
Socialism has a debilitating effect on the human nature it seeks to raise. Read "A Clockwork Orange" and then take a drive to Caprini Green in Chicago, or Eight Mile in Detroit, or Martin Luther King Drive in any major city in America. There you will witness the fruits of Liberal ideology.
Unless those articles are about Christian Science zealots refusing medical attention to the sick and dying.
Here's a CSM article on the Schiavo case. Judge for yourself.
Real Christians are typically well read and well thougt out individuals.
GP made no such generalization.
Liberal == Communist
An apt paraphrasal of the neo-con smear to which gp refers.
True, Real Christians are typically well read and well thougt out individuals.
"Real Christians" are typically just like everyone else. As a group, they're generally neither better nor worse read than the average.
It's official. Most of you are morons.
Allow me to skip religious prejudices and get to the topic... On the positive side, open source induces programmers to write documented, welk structured code. Simply becuase every one can read and see how terrible and unintelligible your code is. Look at it as a code review susch as often advocated in quality control. On the negative side, progrmmers may be tempted to write hard-to-understand code to impress each other, but I guess this will be rare. In closed source projects, code reviews are often skipped because "we are alreay 10% over budget. After all, we already had extensive testing, and if it works its OK".
Past employees of the Christian Science Church and The Christian Science Monitor are giggling their asses off right now.
Curt Edge knows nothing about software, and even less about management. He got to his position merely because he's a fellow Kool-Aid sipper, and of course, the Church won't promote anybody to an upper management position unless they're a sanctimonious follower of Mary Baker Eddy--the Jim Jones of the early 20th century.
Curt 'left' the Church a few years ago to start a pizza place--which never got off the ground. This is the story, but the scuttlebutt was that his inept and middle-school management tactics made him a liability to the Church, and allegedly, he was fired by Christine Solomon, then CIO. He also had a mutual admiration club with Virginia Harris at the time, one of the pre-eminent Board members, who stepped down when she (ahem. "allegedly") was engaging in creating a myriad of accounting "inconsistencies". (Hope you're enjoying that new addition to your house in Wellesley on the Church's dime, Ginny-poo.)
The Board of Directors is comprised of half-wits, whose primary reliance on Eddy's 'good book' has brought them a mobius curve of screw-ups and misdeeds over the years. They're keeping Curtsy in his position because they're scared shitless of getting someone who is not a Church member.
I suspect open source will finally take Curtsy down. Nobody's going to take any of his crap, and he'll look like the fool he is as he runs around patting himself on the back, while slowly realizing that OSS solutions present a host of other problems, management-wise, that he's never experienced. Moreover, the Christian Science Church absolutely MUST opt for free sofware: They're essentially penniless. The extravagant spending in the late 90s (the $50M library that nobody goes to, a short-lived cafe that charged ~$2 for a small thimble-sized cup of coffee) has really gotten them into deep shit.
I wrote a JE about this: Free Markets do not require Self-Interest.
Wikileaks, no DNS
It's only logically, they both go around trying to force their beliefs on everyone else and RMS does resemble Jesus in that unwashed crazy way.
He's an atheist.
In journalism there are two kinds of hot stories. Stories of Interest: "Alligator Eats Toddler" and Stories of Importance "Racist Attacks Swell Across Russia." The best stories, of course, combine both elements. The Monitor never sinks to reporting mere Stories of Interest.
The good things said about this paper are all true. I have whittled down my daily RSS to a few choice streams. Slashdot, of course, included and The Christian Science Monitor.
And check out the daily spiritual op/ed item. Generally ecumenical and illuminating. Spiritual and not religious.
"No fear. No envy. No meanness." Liam Clancy
Did he say "go ye therefore and license this knowledge to all nations; here's a DRM-protected version." Anyone read the Gospel's EULA?
My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
True, and Liberals are neither tolerant or in favor of small government or have real values that the majority of Americans hold. There are fringes on both sides but it seems to me that the lefts fringe is more abusive and mean spirited.
Exactly. For research papers the first time I read an article from their website I saw it was the Christian Science Monitor and wasnt sure about it. Then I verified the facts and realized it was the best article I had. There was a continous theme in papers I worked on, the CSM was always very well written and extremely accurate and a great resource. The name throws you at first but in reality it is a great respectable place for real journalism.
The phrase "more better" is acceptable English. suck it grammar Nazis
Actually that article is well written and doesnt have much bias with good quotes from both sides and examines the issue. It basically is looking at the legal side of the issue and even goes so far as to say it probably wouldnt hold up.
The phrase "more better" is acceptable English. suck it grammar Nazis
I think Edge and Bono should stick to music and stay out of politics. Er.. wait.
Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
And I'm only partially baiting flames here...
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
Yes, those athiests, Agnostics , or polythiests (romans, greeks, chinese, hindus, early middle east where civilization sprang from) never did much for us.
OTH, the christians have a long history of good research, teaching and education.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
And as to the fruits of the conservatives, take a look at the new wells being dug in Colorado and the law that was recently passed which gave an exemption to EPA quality WRT oil/gas drilling in colorado only (very heavy pollution). Likewise, look at Iraq, Iran, Venezuela, and most of the recent south American Elections. Or examine the number of very wealthy executives in country club prisons today and those that are not yet. Check the outlandeous debt that was ran up in the 80's and now (both times from "hard core" republicans who profess responsibility, but do the opposite). Finally, witness this admin with its treason, lies, and cowardess.
There are LOADS of examples of failures on both sides. It is not related to philosophy. BTW, in Denver, MLK is a nice home area.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Odd. I see more of that on the right side of the coin, rather than the left. I guess it depends on where you are coming from. Being the registered libertarian, I have noticed that it is under republican admins that I see growing gov, growing debts (excluding poppa bush), gov. interference in our personal life, increased spying, failures with the gov, but still it grows with no responsiblility taken(9/11, columbia, challenger, katrina, etc.), invasion of other countries, worse economies, increasing corruption(treason, lies, cowardess, bribes, payoffs, possible rigged elections, clamping of witnesses (sibel edmunds)), etc.
Or perhaps we read different stats and information.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
I'm abusive and mean spirited, you insensitive clod!
SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
> But the road to better developers wasn't an easy one.
The road to better developers is
1. Get rid of outsourcing.
2. Start valuing developers instead of treating them like worthless overhead.
3. Start paying developers a salary that keeps up with inflation.
4. Stop turning over developers more often than McDonald fry cooks.
OK, I'm a christian man. Although my view point is usually of the less popular on slashdot on many issues, I am a big fan of OSS and a vicious enemy again Microsoft. But to the point...
Microsoft is EVIL! They cheated and lied their way to the top, and continue doing so to stay there. Their business practices are sleezy at best. How could any Christian knowingly support a company like Microsoft?
Kinda catchy, aint it?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xenu
Initially, the advisors of the founder of CSM were afraid that the "Christian" in the title would throw of secular readers, but it was a requirement of the founder of the publication, Mary Baker Eddy. When I first heard about this magazine, I thought it was some front for Creationist arguments against creation or something of the sort. But once I read the articles, I found them to be very well balanced, devoid of sensationalism, and very informative. But the "Christian" in the name puzzled me, because I didn't really find anything pertaining to Christianity or anything overtly religious. So finally I looked up this Wikipedia article, which explains it nicely.
Vivin Suresh Paliath
http://vivin.net
I like
Neither of the two words in your nick seem to exist. Google and dictiony.com finds neither. I'm guessing you meant to write magniloquent for the second one, but no idea for the first.
OED:
liberal ('lIb&schwa.r&schwa.l), a. and sb. Forms: 4-5 liberale, (5 libral), 4-7
liberall(e, 5-6 lyberal(l, 4- liberal. [a. OFr. liberal (Fr. liberal) = Sp.,
Pg. liberal, Ital. liberale, ad. L. liberalis pertaining to a free man, f.
liber free.]
1 Originally, the distinctive epithet of those `arts' or `sciences' (see ART
7) that were considered `worthy of a free man'; opposed to servile or
mechanical. In later use, of condition, pursuits, occupations: Pertaining to
or suitable to persons of superior social station; `becoming a gentleman'
(J.). Now rare, exc. of education, culture, etc.,
2 a Free in bestowing; bountiful, generous, open-hearted.
3 a Free from restraint; free in speech or action.
4 a Free from narrow prejudice; open-minded, candid.
5 Of political opinions: Favourable to constitutional changes and legal or
administrative reforms tending in the direction of freedom or democracy.
Actually, I think CSM itself is more eloquent:
r .html
http://www.csmonitor.com/aboutus/about_the_monito
There is nothing conservative about neo-cons. Another term they've co-opted. They are radicals.
You seem to be confusing Theory and Practice.
Or, in other words...the "Christian Right" is neither.
> There are fringes on both sides but it seems to me that the lefts fringe is more abusive and mean spirited.
The fringe on the left rubs crystals, ohms their chakras, and sings kumbaya for universal harmony.
The fringe on the right wants gays and atheists stripped of citizenship.
I guess your surrey has an entirely different fringe on its top.
Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
I think the windows support model is much better;
1. pay $1500.00 for A+ course,
2. pay $1500.00 for MCSE course,
3. memorise click pathes to fix anything!
4. install service pack
5. React in Horror as all the memorised click pathes have change; wash, rinse, repeat
Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
Say, I hear bagpipes. Does anyone else hear bagpipes?
When pursuing my (definition of) good, I need not advance your (definition of) good, although it will frequently be a side-effect, or else the result of trade (I advance your good if you advance mine).
As an example, let's say my good is "The Greatest Freedom of the Greatest Number", and your good is "The Greatest Happiness...". We are going to agree upon many things, and will find it advantageous to cooperate most of the time. In particular, we are going to "screw" the interests of the racist, who would himself be willing to harm his immediate biological interests for his ideal (preference within society for those who have a particular combination of seven or so genes that determine skin colour).
Socialisms are not the advance of superior values: they are defined by "The Dictatorship of the Proletariat"; whatever you consider superior, the population will have some who are superior to it, and some who are inferior. Arguably individualism and trade allows a diversity of values to manifest themselves through social 'bio'-diversity; any single measure (even if 'democratic') is going to score those who don't naturally align themselves with those values (say Christians in an Agnostic population) less highly, and render the good delivered to society less manifold.
Capitalism is a system of ownership and trade; it is not quite the same in conception as free markets where the emphasis is upon naturalness, rather than property (consider intellectual property), but individualistic trading to advance differing values is no more necessarily 'grasping' than the official is necessarily blind and doctrinare in a socialistic system.
The ideal in capitalism is that people have the freedom to further their values (which they get to choose, influenced by varied pasts and significant events so as to produce diversity). The ideal in socialism is that people agree on values and further them as a unity, rather than through plural trade.
'Greed' is not an ideal of capitalism, but is only one of a number of possible measures of 'good'. Greed is simply a very narrow one, but it is certainly not a necessary one. It is not even desperately well-defined...
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Liberals promote tolerance unless, of course, it involves being tolerant of smokers, or Christians, or Republicans, or ...
There was a time when everything was Blue. All the spirits of the CPU were asleep - or almost all. The great Father of
All Operations was the only one awake. Gently he awoke the Kernel Mother. As she opened her eyes and warm lines of code
spread out towards the sleeping CPU. The Father of All Operations said to the Kernel Mother,
"Mother, I have work for you. Go down to the CPU and awake the Unix coders. Give them freedom as in Speech."
The Kernel Mother glided down to the CPU, which was a 386 at the time and began to walk in all directions and everywhere she walked
code grew. After returning to the field where she had begun her work the Mother rested, well pleased with herself. The
Father of All Operations came and saw her work, but instructed her to go into the caves and wake the licensing spirits.
This time she ventured into the dark caves on the mountainsides. The bright light that radiated from her awoke the licensing spirits
and after she left licenses of all kinds flew out of the caves. The Kernel Mother sat down and watched the glorious sight of her
licenses mingling with her Unix coders. However once again the Father urged her on.
The Mother ventured into a very deep cave, spreading her light around her. Her heat melted the lawyers grip and the schedulers
and stream handlers of Linux were created. Then she created video drivers and file systems, a TCP/IP stack and a SysV IPC
mechanism. Next she awoke the spirits of POSIX and BSD and they burst into the kernel in a glorious array of code. Seeing this
the Father of All Operations was pleased with the Kernel Mother's work.
She called all her code to her and instructed them to enjoy the wealth of the CPU and to live peacefully with one
another. Then she rose into the sky and became the Power Supply.
And that is how Linux came to be In the Beginning.
InfoWorld ran an short piece on Chris Edge and his use of open source at the Christian Science Monitor earlier this year. It was part of a larger package focusing on a variety of businesses and how they use open source.
Breakfast served all day!
Is the lag in receiving the new really a bad thing? You can get the headlines from the New York Times, BBC, or whatever, but magazines like Time are very popular for providing longer, focused articles. The problem I've found is that Time tends to be ridiculously sensational and painfully short on hard facts because flashy graphics, rhetoric, and sob stories are more exciting.
I'd noticed that the CSM articles linked off of Slashdot in the past have been very good, but I never thought too much about the publication before. After reading all the positive comments of subscribers, I went ahead and ordered a trial issue. If I like what I see, I'll definitely buy a paper subscription.
Most of it is a load of hooey and no self-respecting Christian would take anything they say realistically.
http://www.truechristiansunite.com Home of the 1st TRUE Christian AI -- Hal!!!
Your positing of sef-interest as primal is no more than faith. It cannot be true, as the reward comes too late (after the act), so the reward cannot induce the act.
We are complex entities, and we have a hand in wireing ourselves; motivation is a harnessable drive, but we have some control over how it drives us. That is: we can structure our motivation. In addition, complexes of ideas have a hold on us, and themselves direct ("subvert") our interests.
What is our self-interest? Our happiness? Our genes? Our freedom? Our values?
If it is the last, then we have nothing to fear of 'self'-interest, but people usually mean something more synonymous with 'greed' when they talk of self-interest, and not something that will do others good. For the sake of argument, I will define greed as the excessive consumption of finite resources, although that leaves open what one means by 'excessive'. Still: the intent is fairly clear.
BTW socialism isn't about concepts being 'socially defined', but is rather a doctrine of the centralisation of will (not necessarily through government: consider political correctness), thus socialism is about uniformity. A system of property will tend to be evolved in the first instance, so that instead of resulting from a centralisation of will, it comes from below, and is recognised, rather than imposed by majority will.
I am not saying this in order to say that I am uncritically in favour of property; I am not, but it is clear that property is not a form of socialism, although it is a restriction of freedom though first social norms, and then through law.
My view is that both pure socialism and capitalism suck. I have anarchic tendencies myself, close to those of the classical anarchists (ie. I'm neither a syndicalist, nor a capitalist), although I do not believe that anarchism is tenable in our present state of society. Neither capitalism, nor socialism bring freedom.
What I do believe, though, is that faith in our perfect selfishness is just about the most harmful and prevalent ideology that we hold today. It is worse than just about any political system, and allows the worst political systems to become truely barbaric.
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All those Linux users are just a bunch of damn hippies!
For those of you who dread the thought of a pile of newspaper accumulating on your doorstep, the Monitor does a Treeless Edition, also.
Breakfast served all day!
Schiavo wasn't a Christian Science follower. Christian Scientist don't believe in Doctors, they believe sickness is an illusion, a departure from God. CS believes that because God is perfect, and we are God's creation, then we are God's perfect children. Sickness is imperfection, and therefore unGodly. It's a mindfsck on CS member who gets sick. They need a doctor but feel they are betraying their family and religion by going to a doctor.
I don't see an attack on socialism as a defense of conservatism. Socialism is bad juju. I wouldn't and couldn't defend the Republicans. Since Reagan they have only paid lipservice to cutting taxes and shrinking government. The Libertarians, once they wake up and pull their heads out of their isolationist foreign policy arse, are the best bet for saving this country.
Canon R.M. Stallman, prophet of the church of Linus the Baptist, created in the fifth century*. *Although this is disputed, some people say (Church of SCO Intelligent Design) it was made earlier.
--- Duey Finster http://www.dueyfinster.com
It's a common scenario in my world. I'll be coding a difficult algorithm and I find myself asking "How would Jesus code this line?" Of course, the answer is always the same /.
That would make a great email client for them!
Rights of smokers on one hand. Rights not to die of second hand smoke from lung cancer* on the other.
*which despite a lot of 'science' from tobacco company sponsored studies has more evidence now than ever. The growing mountain of evidence is why many countries are now banning it in public when they didn't 30 years ago.
... that in the 1800's they probably named the paper "Christian Science Monitor" to try and reconcile some Christians and "blasphemous science", to show that follow science and not give up Christian ideals and beliefs. Now, it probably serves as a bridge in the opposite direction, demonstrating to "rational" people that Christianity doesn't mean giving up science.