Maybe it works, but in some countries it probably works better than in others. The US and Turkey are 2 examples I know where people are extremely nationalistic. In The Netherlands, most people consider those kinds of nationalistic behaviour seriously overdone and are only nationalistic when the royal family has something to celebrate or the national soccer team is playing.
Traitor to a repressive regime like the US is hero to most of the free world (and even to most of the not so free world).
Who cares anyway wether you are a "patriot" (whatever ones definition for that is) or not? Is that such a big deal in the US? I couldn't care less wether my government called me "unpatriotic" and most people also wouldn't give a damn.
What they report here in Europe about American petriotism is something I would not want to be anyway.
Underpaid workers are MUCH better than slaves from the employers perspective: slaves are expensive property, you have to provide sufficient food and medical aid if they become ill. Cheap laborers are easily replaced by others and are much cheaper.
There is no really left party in the US as far as I can see. The two largest are very right wing (democrats) end extremist right wing (republicans). I don't know how left the American socialist party really is, here the party who calls itself social democrats and even the combination of green and former communists have also embraced the economic aspects of neoliberalism.
You don't give that much to Egypt, and besides most of it comes back as revenue for American weapons they (have to) buy with it.. Better would be to stop giving anything to Israel and cut the enourmous budget of your war department (you really can't call that "defence" anymore) in half or less.
Re:I'll tell you what helps too
on
Rooting SIM Cards
·
· Score: 4, Insightful
Who cares? The providers have the encryption keys anyway, wether they are single DES or AES. So the government can get access too if they want them and do all kind of nasty tricks. Who else will use it? Some hacker who wants to call expensive paylines using your simcard doesn't buy $100,000 worth of equipment to pull it off only to gain $1000.
Fortunately, entrapment is illegal in a lot of countries. And "intent" is not always what counts. I read that that in The Netherlands someone who was having sexually oriented chats with a police officer posing as a child was cleared in court. The judge said that because the police officer was over 18 he did nothing illegal, and that he may have intended something illegal didn't make it so.
To make the car comparison: if I intend to drive too fast and believe I do so dus to a defective meter but in fact I am driving at a legal speed I can't get a ticket.
I knew the health care system in the US was ridiculously expensive but that this is allowed... Even in the new healthcare system proposed by the neoliberal party in the Netherlands insurance companies have to offer the same price for the basic insurance for everybody. Taxing some more than others would cause uproar. Some are suggesting to let smokers pay more but the usual response that in that case it would also be fair to let them pay less for their retirement pension usually cuts that off.
Of course I'm not surprised. Goebels would be proud to see how well his lessons were learned and laugh on the irony of how his victors would call themselves moraly superior.
Justice? In the US? I bet they will have him tried in a military secret court with someone like Roland Freisler (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Freisler) as a judge.
If the Russians really want to deliver him safely to Venezuele they can take him there by a nuclear submarine that can stay below the surface the whole trip. I seriously doubt that even an nation as aggressive as the US will attack a Russian submarine in international waters. If they would even find out before he mysteriously shows up in Venezuela.
It was a test to see how they would react if they want to get Snowden to safety. Leak false information and see if the plane would get into trouble. Now thy know how the US and its poodles will respond they can think of something better.
Just pay them by sending cash in an envelope. Plain and simple, anonymous (which Bitcoins are not) and no banks needed. Opening all letters by hand is far to labour-intensive so they won't do that, and the US will find it much harder to spy on other nation's snail mail anyway.
That depends on the local laws. I remember here someone who thought he bought marihuana in The Netherlands was arrested for it when he crossed the Belgian border, but they had to drop the charges when it turned out he was cheated on and had actually bought legal dried vegetables.
OK, I should have been more clear. Of course it is applied to wavefunctions and measurements, but the derivation of the uncertainty principle can be done completely without those concepts.
Robertson proved in 1929 already the general form of the uncertainty relation. It has nothing to do with Fourier transforms, wavefunctions and disturbance by measurements, but only with the operator character of (some) quantum mechanical observables. I got the proof from this textbook by Stephen Gasiorowicz, unfortunately they skipped this important result from the latest edition (that circulates on internet in the usual places). More information can be found in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncertainty_principle#Robertson.E2.80.93Schr.C3.B6dinger_uncertainty_relations
From Quantum Physics by Stephen Gasiorowicz, ISBN 0 471 29281-8
It is important to note that the uncertainty relation
was derived without any use of the wave concepts or the reciprocity between a wave form and its fourier transform. The results depends entirely on the operator properties of the observables A and B.
Maybe patents expire after 20 years, but doesn't Monsanto press contracts on farmers that essentially forbid them to grow their own seeds? And such contracts seem to be even enforcable, legaly or by threat of costly legal cases.
Now that the western governments are getting at a point where resisting them can be perceived by the public as a freedom fight instead of terrorism.
If you strike me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine.
He said he'd stop the illegal prison in Guantanamo Bay. He didn't even seriously try to.
That doesn't matter, the NSA knows who he is anyway.
Maybe it works, but in some countries it probably works better than in others. The US and Turkey are 2 examples I know where people are extremely nationalistic. In The Netherlands, most people consider those kinds of nationalistic behaviour seriously overdone and are only nationalistic when the royal family has something to celebrate or the national soccer team is playing.
Traitor to a repressive regime like the US is hero to most of the free world (and even to most of the not so free world).
Who cares anyway wether you are a "patriot" (whatever ones definition for that is) or not? Is that such a big deal in the US? I couldn't care less wether my government called me "unpatriotic" and most people also wouldn't give a damn.
What they report here in Europe about American petriotism is something I would not want to be anyway.
Underpaid workers are MUCH better than slaves from the employers perspective: slaves are expensive property, you have to provide sufficient food and medical aid if they become ill. Cheap laborers are easily replaced by others and are much cheaper.
There is no really left party in the US as far as I can see. The two largest are very right wing (democrats) end extremist right wing (republicans). I don't know how left the American socialist party really is, here the party who calls itself social democrats and even the combination of green and former communists have also embraced the economic aspects of neoliberalism.
You don't give that much to Egypt, and besides most of it comes back as revenue for American weapons they (have to) buy with it.. Better would be to stop giving anything to Israel and cut the enourmous budget of your war department (you really can't call that "defence" anymore) in half or less.
Who cares? The providers have the encryption keys anyway, wether they are single DES or AES. So the government can get access too if they want them and do all kind of nasty tricks. Who else will use it? Some hacker who wants to call expensive paylines using your simcard doesn't buy $100,000 worth of equipment to pull it off only to gain $1000.
> Fly over to Amsterdam and buy ~10 kilos of Marijuana (it's legal there!).
No it's not - an amount for personal use is free, and that is defined as X grams (don't know the exact number). 10 kg is certainly more than that.
Fortunately, entrapment is illegal in a lot of countries. And "intent" is not always what counts. I read that that in The Netherlands someone who was having sexually oriented chats with a police officer posing as a child was cleared in court. The judge said that because the police officer was over 18 he did nothing illegal, and that he may have intended something illegal didn't make it so.
To make the car comparison: if I intend to drive too fast and believe I do so dus to a defective meter but in fact I am driving at a legal speed I can't get a ticket.
I knew the health care system in the US was ridiculously expensive but that this is allowed... Even in the new healthcare system proposed by the neoliberal party in the Netherlands insurance companies have to offer the same price for the basic insurance for everybody. Taxing some more than others would cause uproar. Some are suggesting to let smokers pay more but the usual response that in that case it would also be fair to let them pay less for their retirement pension usually cuts that off.
Of course I'm not surprised. Goebels would be proud to see how well his lessons were learned and laugh on the irony of how his victors would call themselves moraly superior.
Justice? In the US? I bet they will have him tried in a military secret court with someone like Roland Freisler (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Freisler) as a judge.
If the Russians really want to deliver him safely to Venezuele they can take him there by a nuclear submarine that can stay below the surface the whole trip. I seriously doubt that even an nation as aggressive as the US will attack a Russian submarine in international waters. If they would even find out before he mysteriously shows up in Venezuela.
It was a test to see how they would react if they want to get Snowden to safety. Leak false information and see if the plane would get into trouble. Now thy know how the US and its poodles will respond they can think of something better.
Just pay them by sending cash in an envelope. Plain and simple, anonymous (which Bitcoins are not) and no banks needed. Opening all letters by hand is far to labour-intensive so they won't do that, and the US will find it much harder to spy on other nation's snail mail anyway.
That depends on the local laws. I remember here someone who thought he bought marihuana in The Netherlands was arrested for it when he crossed the Belgian border, but they had to drop the charges when it turned out he was cheated on and had actually bought legal dried vegetables.
OK, I should have been more clear. Of course it is applied to wavefunctions and measurements, but the derivation of the uncertainty principle can be done completely without those concepts.
Robertson proved in 1929 already the general form of the uncertainty relation. It has nothing to do with Fourier transforms, wavefunctions and disturbance by measurements, but only with the operator character of (some) quantum mechanical observables. I got the proof from this textbook by Stephen Gasiorowicz, unfortunately they skipped this important result from the latest edition (that circulates on internet in the usual places). More information can be found in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncertainty_principle#Robertson.E2.80.93Schr.C3.B6dinger_uncertainty_relations
From Quantum Physics by Stephen Gasiorowicz, ISBN 0 471 29281-8
It is important to note that the uncertainty relation
(Delta A)^2 (Delta B)^2 >= \langle i[A,B] \rangle^2 / 2
was derived without any use of the wave concepts or the reciprocity between
a wave form and its fourier transform. The results depends entirely on the
operator properties of the observables A and B.
And removed any taste from it to such a level where many people were no longer interested in buying them.
Maybe patents expire after 20 years, but doesn't Monsanto press contracts on farmers that essentially forbid them to grow their own seeds? And such contracts seem to be even enforcable, legaly or by threat of costly legal cases.
Maybe 2 extra countries in Asia didn't want any US corn anymore, but a lot of countries, like the whole EU, already didn't want it even before this.
He probably knew already what that board would not do.
Yes, unfortunately they edited out the traitors that spied for the US. We should have known who to round up and give a one-way ticket to the US.
Now that the western governments are getting at a point where resisting them can be perceived by the public as a freedom fight instead of terrorism. If you strike me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine.