Slashdot Mirror


User: coolmoose25

coolmoose25's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
271
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 271

  1. Re:Why not go back to consumer sorting. on Recycling Is Dying · · Score: 1

    When the government is representing me, and is supposed to serve me, and then does what is financially good for them to my detriment, yes, it is bad... and wrong.

  2. Re:Why not go back to consumer sorting. on Recycling Is Dying · · Score: 2

    I live in the Hartford CT area and we have Trash to Energy AND single stream recycling. First - Trash to Energy. The poster above was correct about it not being much of a net energy gain. They burn it in an oil fired plant. Cardboard, food waste, etc. all gets burned. The big thing isn't the energy as much as it is that we don't need a dump anymore except for the ash, which is compact and easy to dispose of. The main garbage dump in Hartford was closed years ago. So overall, a good option to lower the volume of landfilled items and that is the main benefit.

    As for single stream, we used to sort it, but now use a large single stream bin. A great improvement all around. Here's why: I toured the recycling center with my daughter's elementary school class. I watched the trucks pull in. This was in the "sort it" days. So a guy would pick up your bin, throw the cardboard with the cardboard, the plastic with the plastic (by type), the glass with the glass, etc. The truck had an opening for each. Anyway, the truck pulls into the recycling center, and the back opens, and the dumper rises, and all of it gets mixed together! I finally asked why, and they didn't have a good answer. So what was the point? It was totally inefficient in that the sorting process the guy did at every house was essentially a useless exercise. And he knew it too, so those sorts were not particularly well done. Bottom line, single stream makes far more sense - sort it at the recycling facility. Don't pay a guy to do it at the curb. Have a truck pick up a big bin automatically.

    Finally, the financial end of this... When we went to single stream, we got a garbage can (95gal) and a recycle can (95gal). We found we were producing more garbage than recycling. So I sent my brother in law, who was living with us to go purchase another garbage can. They explained to him that they would like to sell him a recycling can instead. The town made money on the recycling, and garbage cost them. So he came home empty handed. I told him to go down and buy the extra garbage can - I didn't care what it cost the TOWN... I cared about keeping the garbage out of the recycling. So I sent him back and reluctantly they sold him another garbage can.

    Roll the clock forward, and the town does what government does best. Since they made money on recycling, they announced that anyone who had more than one garbage can would be issued a new recycle bin and they would be taking the extra garbage can that I had paid for away. And recycling would only pick up every other week. And if I wanted to keep my extra garbage can, I had to pay a $150 a year subscription for it. So, they did what made economic sense for them at my expense.

    Of course, my solution to this was simple. I had the same number of cans, it's just one went from Garbage Green to Recycle Blue. So I threw my garbage in the recycle bins. Problem solved for me. And probably part of the reason recycling is more expensive now because of short sighted government workers wishing things were different and turning me into a profit center!

  3. Re: Seems reasonable on Insurer Won't Pay Out For Security Breach Because of Lax Security · · Score: 2

    That, and we must never forget that as much as we may applaud the insurance company in this particular story for calling out poor practices, the primary purpose of a modern insurance company is to take your money and give you nothing in return. Everybody needs to be very aware of that, and be untrusting in all your dealings with anyone in the insurance business.

    As in all industries, there are the good and the bad. I would posit that you are speaking about "bad" insurance companies, not good ones. Not every insurance company dreams of giving you "nothing in return" for your premium dollars. Quite the contrary, if insurance companies never paid any claims, there would be no need for them, and their premiums would dry up immediately. The primary purpose of an insurance is to transfer risk... in effect, pooling it and transferring the risk from one entity to several/many. Believe it or not, this enables many things. Even things like the Ansari X-Prize. The organization awarding the prize didn't have the money to pay the prize, they only had about half of it. They used that to buy an insurance policy, which paid the claim when the prize was won. Regardless, most insurance companies invest in their claim handling capabilities as it is a competitive advantage to have good claim paying history. Doubt it? Compare "The General" auto insurance claims paying vs. USAA or Amica. The latter pride themselves on claim paying. Personally, I have a policy for my house, that recently paid a claim and paid on items I never expected them to reimburse me for. Their claim handler went out of her way to make sure I got far more money than I had anticipated. The bottom line is that its easy to pick on insurance companies, but if you do your research and buy policies from reputable companies, you'll likely have a great experience with them when you have to file a claim. If you go for the cut rate, "The General" type companies, well you got what you paid for.

  4. Re:because there are no repercussions. on Why Gmail Has Better Security Than Your Bank · · Score: 1

    It is easy to leave a bank. Just turn off your direct deposit and take out all your money. You don't have to visit the bank to do that... you can take all your money out via a check, leave a buck or two just to make sure it clears, and you're out. Oh yes, the bank will not like this. They will charge your account a service fee. And there won't be any money in the account to cover the service fee. And so they will charge you an overdraw fee. But at the end of the statement period, many banks will see your negative balance, and then deposit a "credit to avoid account closure"... they will do this forever. And each month, they will mail you a statement, that probably cost them several dollars to create, and then pay postage to mail it to you. And each month, you get this piece of paper saying that your account balance is 0.00. And you get to see their computers dutifully charge the fees, and then post the credit. And all of it costs them money. I have an account that has been like this for about 10 years now. I just throw the envelope away now, but it always brings a smile to my face to see that they are essentially wasting all their own money and will never ever recoup it. Revenge is a dish best served cold.

  5. Vilify the Police on Once Again, Baltimore Police Arrest a Person For Recording Them · · Score: 0

    This is what it has come to. The cop used to be your friend, right? But now he's not. Well, the cops didn't change, we did. In the old days a copy could say "Stop or I'll shoot" and if you didn't stop, he shot you in the back... Look at "It's a Wonderful Life"... Bert the cop does that to George (but misses)... no question back in the day, the cops could say "get on the ground" and you'd get on the ground. Now, we don't... we won't... go ahead, shoot me... you'll do time in prison Mr. Cop... you'll go down for 2nd Degree Murder. Watch "Cops" and see people who think they'll negotiate their way out of being dumped on the ground and cuffed. And it's all on the cop to make sure he is polite, doesn't use excessive force (which will be decided later, possibly by a jury) and that when someone spits in his face, he doesn't retaliate... Just put that as an additional charge that the prosecutor will drop in exchange for a plea.

    I guess what I'm trying to say is that we're asking cops to do everything all the time now... In addition to protecting us, and bringing in the bad guys, and finding them, we want them to use kid gloves and we've tied their hands over and over again. So we are getting exactly what WE deserve, a bitter police force, who feels that the people are not behind them, and thus they move from serving and protecting us to serving and protecting themselves. Congratulations everyone... you got the police force you deserve. You don't like it? Well further tying their hands, throwing them in jail, etc. is just gonna make it worse. Rock on, morons.

  6. Torso Barbie on "Barbie: I Can Be a Computer Engineer" Pulled From Amazon · · Score: 3, Funny

    In my house, computer engineer Barbie would have ended up just like all the other Barbies in the house... naked, legless, armless, and often headless in the bathtub. We affectionately called them all "Torso Barbie"

  7. Re:But DC is different,no? on Marijuana Legalized In Oregon, Alaska, and Washington DC · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually, what they are trying to do is find out if you are an addict and are going to be using at work. The rationale is that if you can't stop using any given drug for the 30 days it takes to clear your system, then you cannot control your additiction... different drugs have different times that they remain detectable in the body. But none more than 30 days. So if you can't quit using during your job search, then you can't quit period, and thus are an addict. I, on the other hand, don't much care if you've used mary jane in the past 30 days, so when a candidate flunked his test for being "dilute" twice, my HR people recommended that I didn't hire him. I asked if they were mandating that, and they said no. So I hired him. OTOH, the company I work for today doesn't test. A woman had to be let go because used sharps (needles) started showing up in the ladies room... she was using heroin WHILE AT WORK. So go figure...

  8. Re:Nonsense. Again. on Black Swan Author: Genetically Modified Organisms Risk Global Ruin · · Score: 1

    I lost track, were you talking about GMO foods or anthropogenic global climate change? Ironic isn't it? To hear the anti-GMO crowd cry about how they aren't allowed to dissent, while I suspect there is a strong correlation between those folks and those who believe in anthropogenic global climate changes crying out "settled science!"

  9. Re:Reading a synopsis of the novel ... on Could We Abort a Manned Mission To Mars? · · Score: 1

    WAY more went wrong on Apollo 13 went wrong than one thing... yes - there was one root cause of the other problems, but there were a multitude of problems that were only revealed because of the that root cause problem. You're putting a huge number of things like O2 depletion, main engine malfunction, CO2 scrubbers, Electrical power disruption, water production, etc. into that one event - which was a tank exploding - at the root

  10. Re:It's OK to attack mythology and superstition... on Drought Inspires a Boom In Pseudoscience, From Rain Machines To 'Water Witches' · · Score: 1

    I'm a Christian. I was raised Christian but ended up becoming an agnostic. Then I saw a Nova about the Shroud of Turin, and started researching it. It turns out the information on the shroud is a 2D hologram of 3D information. It is encoded onto the cloth, but the cloth is not painted. Something turned the cloth a different color without the use of pigments. Fast forward through all the options and it turns out the most logical explanation is a burst of radiation. And tracing back the path of that radiation, you'd have to conclude the radiation came from within the body that was covered by the shroud. So what was the source of the radiation? I believe it was the energy from the resurrection.

    The essence of being a Christian is that you have to believe that a guy died on a cross, was stone cold dead, not sleeping, not in "suspended animation", not hibernating, but dead dead dead. And then 3 days later, he came back to life. According to Jesus, it's best if you just accept it on faith. But as an engineer, I needed the proof... so even though I'm a doubting Thomas, I have come to believe that he is risen. And I have a much higher than normal IQ, and am not easily impressed with magic tricks, tarot cards, and psychics...

  11. Wonders on Buzz Aldrin Pressures Obama For New Space Exploration Initiative · · Score: 1

    The other day, I googled the 7 Wonders of the World... we talk about them from time to time, and marvel at them, but the list is far from agreed... there are the 7 wonders of the ancient world, and newer wonders often mentioned such as the Taj Mahal. There is a list of wonders put forth by civil engineers, and the Golden Gate bridge is on that list.

    What I found most interesting is that human footprints on another world isn't even considered. And when I think of wonders, I have to believe that walking on the moon makes all other human wonders pale in comparison. I, too, was absolutely enthralled by the space program and the Apollo missions. I've watched Apollo 13 like 20 times. I was too young to remember the first moon landing and Armstrong's first steps. I do remember being in kindergarten and being hustled into a cafeteria so the entire school could watch a moon landing on a 19 inch black and white television. I remember building a model Saturn V rocket with my dad, with all the stages were removable. For one of the launches, I dutifully discarded the stages as the rocket took off, and I remember thinking the mission was doomed to failure, having seen 90% of the rocket gone in the first 10 minutes. How could they have made such a mistake I thought...

    Anyway, fast forward to today, and I have several friends who are convinced the moon landings were faked and have an elaborate conspiracy theory supporting their assertion. My daughter even explained to me that the cameras wouldn't have worked in space (she just got done with a photography course where they posited this theory). Historians claim that the whole thing was just a cold war artifact. Lots of people make the argument that the money would have been better spent on social programs (as if we had just added the Apollo funding to the supertanker of money already spent on such programs would have just made the difference, and we'd be living in a utopia now if only our swaggering leaders had just thought of the children!)

    Rarely mentioned is the fact that having humans walk on another world is perhaps the greatest achievement mankind has ever accomplished. It is more often written off as a publicity stunt. Lost is the inspiration a generation got from that endeavor. And that generation is getting old now and the state of the world and the indifference to the achievement discourages me and others of that time no end.

    Getting off this pale blue world is a thing our society should value highly, as like it or not, the longevity of our species depends on it. And while we are currently in the wooden sailing ship stage of our ability to explore space, that should in no way discourage us to continue to push those boundaries. Humans should walk on Mars. We should capture and study asteroids. We should send probes to Europa in search of life. We should do these things, as Jack said, not because they are easy but because they are hard.

    Meanwhile, Nasa's funding is abysmal in comparison to all of our other spending. A tiny fraction of our budget, seemingly shrinking every year. I am depressed.

  12. Ammonia is nasty stuff on New Chemical Process Could Make Ammonia a Practical Car Fuel · · Score: 2

    Most people are familiar with the Ammonia that you buy in a store... but it is not Anhydrous Ammonia... it is diluted in water, and even so, you don't want to take a big whiff of the stuff, it will knock you on your butt. Anhydrous Ammonia is pure Ammonia... It requires hazmat suits to transfer that substance from container to container (fuel pump to fuel tank in a car?). It's possible that you could distribute a more dilute formula to "gas" stations, but the effect would be dropping lots of water on the roads as you used the fuel. Do we have enough fresh water for this? Perhaps. Not to mention that the more dilute you make it, the more of it you will have to cart around per mile. Anyway, it is much more likely to cause accidents than gasoline. Don't believe me? Ask a farmer how much he likes using the stuff...

  13. Abortion then? on Oklahoma Botched an Execution With Untested Lethal Injection Drugs · · Score: 1

    I'd like to know how many people who are advocating AGAINST capital punishment on this forum are FOR abortions including late-term and partial birth abortions. My wife, who changed her views after we got married pointed out to me that being against capital punishment was inconsistent with being for abortion. I thought about it and realized she was right. So I changed my stance. I'm now PRO Capital Punishment. But if your view is inconsistent (Against CP and For Abortion) then ask yourself this: "If I'm against a person who committed terrible crimes being executed, then why am I for allowing an innocent life to be terminated just because it isn't breathing air at the moment, but would if delivered to term or near term?"

  14. Basic Got Me My Career on 50 Years of BASIC, the Language That Made Computers Personal · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I started working on computers in the early 80's... The first one I used was a TI 99 4a. It had tape drives and a TV set as a monitor, and a horrific keypad (note: not keyboard). Then my brother got a PC Jr. and I started hacking with that and then went off to college. As an engineering major, I learned FORTRAN on punched cards. I hated it! Swore I'd never have a job where I used computers.

    Then my brother got the family to chip in and buy me a Tandy 1000a. It came with DOS, Deskmate, and Basic. I started programming in Basic using the concepts I had learned in FORTRAN. By the end, I think I had dumped about $5,000 into that computer. Printers, memory upgrades, floppy upgrades, hard drive, monitor, etc. And still was able to do amazing things with Basic and with BAT files.

    My first job was with Arthur Andersen. COBOL. Batch COBOL. 2.5 years of it. Learned it in 6 weeks, and spent the rest of my career there either coding it or writing tech specs for it.

    Went to work at an insurance company coding SqlWindows, a now obscure 4th gen programming language. But hey, it was Windows programming. Spent 10 years there in a variety of roles.

    After that I set up my own web development shop... Wrote classic ASP which is essentially Basic for the web. And then went to work at another insurance company, writing, you guessed it, Microsoft VB.net. Granted, VB.net was a far cry from the original basic, and probably would have been better off learning C#. But that was Microsoft's strategy with .Net - recycle old VB programmers and old C programmers using the CLR. At the end of the day, not much difference between C# and VB.net. Now I don't code anymore, I'm a VP at that insurance company. But I owe a lot of my career for having a tool like Basic available to me in my formative years. Sure, it teaches you some bad coding habits. But just like anything else, you learn from that, and others, and classes (and objects for those who like puns). Those who say that you can't be a good programmer after having learned basic are either elitist snobs or idiots. Sometimes you have to do it wrong first to see how doing it right makes all the difference. So Happy Birthday Basic - I love ya' baby.

  15. Re:Extradition from Sweden is easier on Assange's Lawyers: Follow Swedish Law, Interrogate Him In the UK · · Score: 2

    "How could anyone reasonably expect him to willfully submit to that? It seems highly likely he would end up rotting in a US jail for life, unheard and unseen."

    You are obviously not from the US so let me explain this to you. Our Constitution guarantees a right to a speedy trial. If JA wants a speedy trial, he'll get one, and will not "rot in a US jail for life" unless he was convicted and given a life sentence (Which in the US translates to roughly 10 years depending on your age and the leniency of your parole board)

    What you are actually thinking about is Guantanomo, where I will agree we have imprisoned enemy combatants (ie. Prisoners of War) who are not subject to the Constitutional projections that would be extended to JA, like any other US resident...

  16. Re:At least it wasn't an Aztek on Slashdot PT Cruiser Spotted In the Wild · · Score: 1

    I bought a PT Cruiser for my daughter when she was in high school. It is a convertible. Her requirement was "convertible." It was by far the cheapest available. Bought it new for $17,500. It was the last one they had in Connecticut. Other than me breaking the seat belt buckle, which caused the airbag system to fail, and a crankcase sensor that needed to be replaced, it has been uber reliable and trouble free. Never stranded anyone, ever. Has 60,000 miles on it now, and have only done brakes, tires and oil changes. Maybe I got the only good one.

    We call it the "Barbie Car" because it looks like one, especially when you drop the top and the roll bar sticks out like a barbie car handle. A friend said that every time he sees it, a little piece of him dies in side. It is a very maligned car. Yet it's basically a Neon with different side panels. And she won the category of "coolest car" in her high school year book. All in all, money well spent.

    (and one more "perk"... it is a 2008 bought in 2009, right before Chrysler went belly up. So it has an unlimited powertrain warranty. I plan on keeping that car until the only thing that is left is the engine and transmission. Hopefully I'll bankrupt Chrysler with engine/transmission replacements through 2035)

  17. Creationism is the tip of the iceberg on Map of Publicly-Funded Creationism Teaching · · Score: 1

    It's just one school issue... not all of them. For instance, I live in the northeast. No creationism taught here. OTOH, the liberal nirvana of the People's Republic of Connecticut goes too far the other way. Take US History as an example. Non-exceptional students get taught US History in two blocks. The first block, the era of small government in the US is taught in 8th grade. It is taught largely as a fairy tale. I've read the book, cover to cover. It's slanted in too many ways to mention. It has ridiculous sidebars - with extraneous and/or irrelevant topics in US History put there to be "politically correct."

    Meanwhile, the era of big government, Reconstruction through Today is taught in 11th grade. The focus of this book is things like the robber barrons, with little to no acknowledgement of the standard of living those "robber barrons" brought to the US. It shimmies right up to the notion that WWII for the US was started because the US cut off exports of oil and steel to Japan, instead of the fact that the Japanese bombed pearl harbor. The book glosses over the battles in the Pacific, and instead concentrates on the internment of Japanese Americans and the "questionable" decision to nuke Japan.

    I insisted that both of my daughters take AP US History in high school so that they learn the entire history in one year, one devoid of this kind of historical revisionism that our school system foists on our children. Sadly, most of the students get the slanted version, and think that its reality. I doubt Slate will do an article on that, or the hundreds of other things I saw happen on my 9 years on the local board of education.

  18. Swords and Plowshares on Program to Use Russian Nukes for US Electricity Comes to an End · · Score: 1

    ...and they shall beat their swords into plowshares... That's what $14 Billion can buy.

  19. From the people who brought you... on First Images of a Heart Injected With Liquid Metal · · Score: 1

    Melamine laced pet food and baby formula... Awesome... can't wait to try it!

  20. Re:AnandTech.com, TomsHardware.com - Beware! on Ask Slashdot: What Review Sites Do You Consult For IT Equipment? · · Score: 1

    OTOH, Tom's does monthly reviews of CPU's and Graphic Cards... WRT these reviews, they often stop at around the $300 mark, especially in CPU. They will explicitly say that buying a CPU higher than their highest recommended CPU is governed by the law of diminishing returns, and that essentially you should only go to a more expensive CPU if you are "compensating for a shortcoming" shall we say? I'm often building fairly low end machines, and Tom's does a fair job at giving such configurations a fair shake. Their system builder marathons always have a $500-600 entry and they will show you performance per dollar. Often, I start with one of those configurations, and sometimes tweak their CPU choice as often I'm using embedded graphics rather than discreet. This is for a typical user in my house who is just surfing the web, using Office, etc. I've also built a fairly high end machine for my daughter that was purpose built to do video editing and post production. Tom's gaming recommendations helped there enormously, as high end gaming and video editing are similar in their graphics needs. Still, for about $1000 I built a machine that is as high as the spec recommended by her video production teacher. And I did that about 6 months before she took the class. When I let him know the specs on her machine, he just smiled and said she'd have no problems, except that she'll be spoiled when doing work at home compared to the anemic computers they had in school. So provided that you really read the articles and you make common sense adjustments, you can save thousands of dollars over time. And all of this wonderful advice comes free of charge. Amazing.

  21. Re:Anecdotes aren't statistics on Imagining the Post-Antibiotic Future · · Score: 2

    Here's another one... My brother had a cut on his foot. He dressed the wound daily, with a topical antibiotic and new bandage. Long story short, he was dead within a week. Sepsis kills more people in the US than any other disease. Take antibiotics away, watch that number skyrocket. It will finally be too hard to ignore, as is happening today.

  22. Re:Apple vs. Other Devices on Not All USB Power Is Created Equal · · Score: 1

    I only paid $1 for it, you insensitive clod! Seriously though, the thing has worked like a charm for over 2 years now... no car fires. No zombie apocalypse. Works for everything except Apple... hasn't damaged any device plugged into it. ...but yeah, it's the usb dongle that is the problem...

  23. Apple vs. Other Devices on Not All USB Power Is Created Equal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm an Apple Abhorrent... I don't use any of their products, not even an Ipod. I'm an Android/Windows guy. But my daughter decided she had to have an iPhone and bought it with her own money. I have one of those little plugs you put in a cigarette lighter in the car. My car has two up front, one that is ignition keyed, the other is always on. The dongle is in the one that is always on. And I have a standard USB cable to charge phones and other devices from it. It charges all of my Android phones fine. It charges the GPS fine. It charges pads like the Galaxy Tab and the Nexus fine. It won't charge my daughter's iPhone, even with her white Apple USB cord. To this situation, my daughter tells me that the little dongle I have is a POS. I smiled and was reminded, yet again, why I won't buy Apple products.

  24. Re:Blockbuster failed like Sears on How Blockbuster Could Have Owned Netflix · · Score: 1

    Don't count Sears out. They own K-Mart now, and they do have a flawed but fairly comprehensive website. They need to capitalize on their strengths, which is NOT apparel. That is their bugaboo... they ceded apparel when they did the "Go Goolagong" campaign.

    So what are their strengths? Tools and Appliances. Bedding. Automotive. They can win in those spaces easily if they concentrate on them. My tractor and snow blower are both Craftsman. Sure, Craftsman is crap lots of people will say. Well I say it isn't. At the low end, $1100-$1800 for a tractor, and $650-$1200 for a snow blower, they are selling the SAME product that you will get anywhere else regardless of name brand (including Deere, which doesn't make its own low end stuff anymore, but still charges you like they do). I replaced my circa 1970's Craftsman tractor with a 2000's model that has a hydrostatic drive, cast iron axles, and a B&S engine. It is bulletproof so long as you change the oil. The hydrostatic drive is sealed, and never needs new fluid. Will it die in 10 years? Maybe. Will it die in 15 years? Probably. But I paid $1200 for it, so about $100 a year. My snowblower has been rock solid too, with the notable exception of last year, when it would not run when wet. In the spring, I figured out what had happened... A mouse had taken up residence in the cowl and had chewed almost all the way through the ignition wire. The replacement part for that was readily available from Sears, and I installed it myself. Runs like a champ now, and frankly, that wasn't a quality issue and would have happened to any other brand of snowblower I bought. So I'm a big fan of Craftsman power equipment and their tools because parts are readily available. When you buy the whatever brand from Home Cheapo, not so much. And in the end, all these are built by one of two manufacturers and are rebranded for each store.

    When your battery dies on a Sunday, where do you go to get it fixed? Sears is open, and they have your battery, and its overpriced but is decent quality. I've taken to replacing them myself now that my family has a whole fleet of cars, but if I only owned one or two, I would just go to Sears and get the battery done there. Tires? Some of the best prices on tires. Competitive with Walmart even. I bounce between Walmart, Sears, and Firestone for tires. Again, Sears has a strength here.

    I know I'm coming off as a fanboi here, but I would NOT like Sears to disappear. I've bought a lot of stuff from them - Appliances I often buy at their scratch and dent warehouse... My fridge sits in an alcove, you can't see the right side at all, and only the top half of the left. So when my fridge died, I bought one with a huge gouge down the right side. I can't see it. And the thing has water, ice, all the bells and whistles, and I paid like $600 for it. Again, drifting into fanboi-dom, but I want Sears to survive.

  25. Re:Furloughed workers on "War Room" Notes Describe IT Chaos At Healthcare.gov · · Score: 1

    Okay... I've had it with the "you should spend less money on the military" as the answer to the US problems, while talking about how we spend too much and tax too little... Let me guess. You're from Europe?

    It takes a lot of hutzpah to say something like that when you've lived and slept under the blanket of security the US has provided to you for decades. Yes, perhaps we SHOULD spend less on the military - lets start by closing all US bases in Europe. Europeans are so much smarter than us, why would the US need bases there? After over 60 years since the end of WWII, can't Europe take care of itself?

    Well, maybe not, considering the fact that you let the Balkans burn down while hurrumphing that "someone" should do something. It took Bill Clinton to bomb them into peace. And that was in your own back yard.

    Again, I think you're right and have a point. Lets NOT deploy a missile shield in Europe. The Russians will be happy. And when Iran finally gets its nuke and can lob it in to Geneva... well no great loss, right?

    We can learn from your outstanding economic wisdom. It's not like there are any problems with government spending in Europe... right? Oh, hold on... is Greece and France still in Europe, or is it just the Germans now?

    So we are agreed... The US should go home. We'll let you all handle that whole IslamoFacism thing... and you can make sure China doesn't take over the world... and Putin will sell you all the gas you need... no worries there. Have fun... if you need us, just send an email to US@wedontgiveafrackanyore.com. We'll get back to you real soon.