Best Super Tuesday Candidate for Technology?
Petey_Alchemist writes "With Super Tuesday coming up and the political field somewhat winnowed down, the process of picking the nominees for the next American President is well underway. At the same time, the Internet is bustling through a period of legal questions like Copyright infringement, net neutrality, wireless spectrum, content filtering, broadband deployment. All of these are just a few of the host of issues that the next President will be pressured to weigh in on during his or her tenure. Who do you think would be the best (or worst) candidate on Internet issues?"
Popular Mechanics' Geek The Vote '08 has a nice rundown of each candidate's tech policies.
Airplane Photos, Airline News, Planespotting Guides
I was impressed by Obama's technology issues page:
http://www.barackobama.com/issues/technology/
The summary points are:
* Ensure an open Internet.
* Create a transparent and connected democracy.
* Encourage a modern communications infrastructure.
* Employ technology to solve our nation's most pressing problems.
* Improve America's competitiveness.
The list is pretty much "policy speak" but the detailed initiatives indicate a good grasp of the issues and a reasonable stance on the direction we need to move.
If Obama is good enough for xkcd then he's good enough for me.
I imagine Huckabee is the worst on technology issues unless of course they were mentioned in the bible.
And Vint Cerf agrees with him.
The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
- Only person running that voted against the Patriot Act(s)
- Only person running that voted against Sarbanes-Oxley
- Opposes the DMCA
- Opposes the national ID card
- Has never voted to raise taxes
- Returns a portion of his congressional budget to the treasury every year
- He is a Republican who opposes the Iraq War on moral and economic grounds
There's a lot of FUD out there about Ron Paul, and there are a lot of fanatics on the internet who work against him sometimes, but if you look at his voting record over the last 20 years it speaks for itself.
This is a good guy who opposes the big government mentality that so many here on Slashdot rail against.
Support IRV and there really will be no such thing as a wasted vote. Right now, however, the spoiler effect is very very real.
I agree with what Locke said above. The Libertarianism we are all used to seeing everywhere is a formula: 1) gubmit == evil, 2) market == good, 3) supporting the market absolutely will ultimately lead to a meritocracy that doesn't need any gubmit at all except to enforce contract law, police, and national defense. Which is indeed a batshit crazy formula. No amount of quotes from Hayek, Mises, Rand, or the Cato Institute will turn the street libertarianism that is spouted all over the Internet into tested and successful public policy. Nor can you re-define "free market" at will. "Free market" strictly means in America unregulated capital. Forcing corporates to pay for externalities is precisely the purpose of regulation, and if you think regulation is OK then you aren't really a free marketer. I would suggest YOU look into modern socialist democracies as these come much closer to your idea of what a free market means.
If Paul has no chance, it will be because his positions are interesting at best, and laughable at worst. I like libertarian approaches to a lot of things, but there are some things that a government has to provide if it doesn't want the nation to slide into feudalism.
Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
You know, I'll bite on your cointelpro bullshit.
Nothing that Ron Paul has ever said or done is in anyway supportive of racism. He has for many decades supported individual Freedoms and Liberty which are concepts that are diametrically opposed to racism. Racism cannot exist when you have Freedom ideals that treat individuals as such and not as part of a group. Racism comes from creating groups of people and judging likewise.
Furthermore, Ron Paul is the republican candidate with the most support from minorities. It has been pointed out time and time again and unless you start accusing non-caucasians of throwing their support behind a racist candidate in some uninformed way (yeah right) you have no argument.
Everything that Dr. Paul has ever done and all the ideals he stands for seek the end of racism. The entire accusation was constructed by professional counterintelligence personel. The same types who run scenarios on stealing elections and what would happen if they were to assassinate Ron Paul.
Unfortunately for them anyone who actually looks into it or even just hears his side of the story will realize it's a joke.
Also, calling a respectable candidate who's served in congress for 20 years and has a respectable record a "batshit crazy racist loon" is quite possibly the worst ad hominem attack I have ever heard in my life. It shows you have no ground to stand on to debate his views without distorting them and have to focus on attacking the man.
But it's ok, the vast majority of people see through your games little cointelpro agent and we'll be knocking on your door soon demanding you pay your dues to our society.
Liberty.
Registered at GoDaddy, hosted by Pair, running Server: Apache/1.3.37 to redirect http://barackobama.com/ to http://www.barakobamaa.com/ which is running Server: PWS/1.2.18.
PWS is supposedly Win98's Personal Web Server... which probably means Barack's web admins have a rich sense of humor.
-- @rjamestaylor on Ello
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article2461415.ece
So Bush wasn't president at that time?
Or here back in 2004: http://www.tompaine.com/articles/overcoming_the_bubble_economy.php
The deficit is actually $9 trillion, not $7 trillion, and that's a full year ahead of schedule. What ever happened to "the buck stops here?"
And I guess Bush never said this back in 2002, which was the signal to lower loan standards http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/06/20020618-1.html - my comments in italics ...
You can be sure he won't, he would leave that to the states, meaning the telcos would have 50 governments to try to bribe, rather than one.
It doesn't say anything about murder in the Constitution, either...
Hence his position on abortion. Why do you need federal laws on murder, when you have states that can form extradition agreements? (I am not a US citizen and have never visited, I don't know anything about what extradition agreements may already be in place)
FWIW, Paul's interpretation of the Constitution includes, for example, no separation of church & state except perhaps no authorization of a state church itself. If Arkansas wanted a state church, though, that would be OK, since the Constitution doesn't "specifically" prohibit it. Indeed you are correct. A matter already attended to when the people of Arkansas decided on their constitution. If we try hard enough, I'm sure we can come up with something that you and I both agree should be done by the federal government (in our respective countries) however it is my personal conviction that this ought to be accomplished by amending the constitution rather than ignoring or reinterpreting it.
http://marriedmansexlife.com/
You're kidding, right? I would have thought the connection is obvious:
1. Have health insurance under current employer
2. Cannot afford own health insurance
3. Therefore if starting own business, lose health insurance