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User: TwistedOne151

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  1. Re:Vote third party on DOJ: Violating a Site's ToS Is a Crime · · Score: 1

    And more here: Two-party system#Third parties. Third parties serve only as "spoilers" or ways to move the "Overton window."

  2. Re:Vote third party on DOJ: Violating a Site's ToS Is a Crime · · Score: 1

    I'd recommend you read up on Duverger's Law, so as to understand why third parties have never, and will never, succeed electorially in America. (A new party has come in only following the disintegration of one of the major two, most recently being when the Republicans emerged following the disintegration of the Whigs before the Civil War.) Your only choice is between whichever is the (slightly) lesser of two evils.

  3. Re:Vote third party on DOJ: Violating a Site's ToS Is a Crime · · Score: 1

    If you think your vote doesn't matter, then why vote at all? As I understand, that's one of the main reasons voter turn-out is so low.

  4. Re:So much for change... on DOJ: Violating a Site's ToS Is a Crime · · Score: 1

    This is, frankly, a stupid suggestion. You forget that the government has tanks, bombs, fighter jets, UAVs, machine guns, etc., and vastly outgund and outpowers the public; a successful armed rebellion is totally impossible , and has been for some time now. Further, an attempt would be counter-productive, as it would only provide the excuse needed to crack down further on the people.

  5. Re:How about a radical suggesion? on Is the Creative Class Engine Sputtering? · · Score: 1

    Oh yes, dearie me, whatever are those oh-so-poor buggy-whip makers and telephone operators going to do? We just have to pay these people for the rest of their lives so they don't starve, since their jobs are gone forever![/sarc]

    Remember, it's the Luddite fallacy.

    Once upon a time, over 90% of human beings worked in agriculture; now it's only a few percent. Were there no longer enough jobs to go around? (Look up the "lump of labor fallacy" and "comparative advantage" sometime.)

    Let me guess, "this time it's different"? That's what Luddites have said every time, and it's been shown false every time.

  6. Re:How about a radical suggesion? on Is the Creative Class Engine Sputtering? · · Score: 1

    So it's like that bit from the South Park episode "Sexual Harrasment Panda"

    Kyle: "Isn't that fascism?"

    Gerald: "No, because we don't call it fascism. Do you understand?"

    So as long as we don't use the s-word, it's okay, then? Whatever you want to call it, you're still talking about paying people to do nothing on a long-term or permanent basis, without trying to get them to do something others are actually willing to pay for ("work"); the money for that has to come from somewhere (TINSTAAFL), and that can only by extracting it from the productive. That is, ultimately, what you are talking about, yes?

    You should also familiarize yourself with the term "frictional unemployment." Yes, old jobs go away, and new ones are created, and through no fault of their own, people end up temporarily unemployed, until they develop new skills. I'm all for a temporary safety net such as unemployment. (You are capable of comprehending the difference between a temporary safety net and permanent subsidy of the unproductive, aren't you?) I'm on disability, myself. However, I'm trying to find work and make my way to getting off assistance, including use of resources from Division of Vocational Rehabilitation (my ideal program; get people retrained, back to work, and no longer suckling the public teat).

    However, I spent time growing up in rural Alaska (in a community without electricity, sewer, or running water). I had classmates (in the single K-12 school) whose parents had been on the dole since before these kids were born. The families all had children spaced uniformly apart in age (the exact spacing that maximized benifits). Most of them dropped out high school and went straight onto the welfare rolls themselves. The effects of this long-term indolence was visibly corrosive. Furniture and toys were mistreated, uncleaned, and discarded; the state would provide new ones. No one was even looking for work, and you'd have to force them to make even the slightest effort to do so. Alcoholism was rampant. Welfare reform did clean this up some, exactly by forcing them to put in some effort at becoming productive human beings rather than wallowing in squalor.

    So, I put to you, if you can make a basic living without having to work, then why would you work? Many people I've known in my life would rather just play WoW all day if they didn't have to have a job to have food & shelter. What makes you think they wouldn't under your system? And how would you keep the rest paying for them to do so instead of joining them?

    And lastly, the recession was mostly due to people, and governments, living beyond their means, racking up increasing debt on a belief that endless growth would allow them to make the payments indefinitely. We're now paying the price, and yes, that means taking a hit to our standard of living, and working for less pay.

  7. Re:Creative Class on Is the Creative Class Engine Sputtering? · · Score: 1

    Because you think that creativity automatically confers wealth.

    No, but I would remind you that something is worth what the market is willing to pay for it.

    Next time you are near a street musician or some street theater, or are listening to some unknown band in a bar/club, stop a while and pay attention to the talent.

    First, I've never seen any street musicians or street theater in the city I live in, nor do I go to bars. And further, simply playing music may be a matter of skill, but not creativity; when someone is playing Mozart on a piano, the only creativity involved was that of Mozart; it is songwriting and composing that is the creative part of music, and from I can hear (the same four chords endlessly repeated), that is very much lacking these days.

    Why? Do you have no skills whatsoever? Aren't you good at what you do, or any hobby of yours? Myself I can't draw worth a damn, I'm a pretty awful piano player, a fair singer, but boy I have a talent for abstraction that stuns everyone around me. I built my wife a garden, complete with stairs and storm drainage system and electrical wiring, deck, stone floor, planters - a place she is absolutely in love with. Am I a landscaper or a contractor? No. I'm a doctor. But it seemed logical to me what should go where, and building is fairly simple. I insist that everyone has latent talent somewhere. Maybe you just haven't found yours yet.

    As for me, I've been unemployed almost two years, and the only job I've had since graduating college over six years ago is math tutor. I'm good at memorization and solving (calculus level) math exercises; the sort where there is only one right answer, and one only needs to apply the right algorithm; no creativity involved. I don't even have the kind of mathematical creativity to find new theorems or tackle the unsolved problems. As for hobbies, I mostly just read.

  8. Re:Creative Class on Is the Creative Class Engine Sputtering? · · Score: 1

    If every human being is creative, why have there always been so many starving artists/musicians/actors/etc.? Contrary to the "everyone has a novel in them" nonsense, most people have very little creativity. And before you ask, I count myself firmly in the uncreative group. I have no artistic talent of any kind, and I know it.

  9. Re:How about a radical suggesion? on Is the Creative Class Engine Sputtering? · · Score: 0, Troll

    Why? Because socialism fails every time it is tried, and due to immutable human nature, always will. And make no mistake, your proposal, which amounts to forcibly taking money from the productive to support the lazy and indolent, is the very essence of socialism. As they say, if you subsidize something you get more of it; if you subsidize people to sit around and not work, you get more people not working. Then, you get the people who are working seeing more and more of their money stolen and given to layabouts; they will increasingly become bitter and resentful, either doing their jobs with less effort (and concomittant decline in quality), or giving up and joining the unproductive themselves, requiring yet more to be extracted from the workforce that remains. The inevitable result is poverty and collapse, as seen with the fall of the USSR. So no, it's not "worth a shot." It's a "cure" worse than the disease.

  10. Re:Teleportation? on First Secure Quantum Crypto Network Up and Running · · Score: 1

    I think we'll discover that the universe really is a mess of hacks and spaghetti code, personally.

    Spaghetti code, perhaps written with a Noodly Appendage?

  11. Re:Muslims believe that the earth is flat! on The Flat Earthers Are Still With Us · · Score: 1

    Well, not all of them believe the earth is flat; there's the physicist who debated this flat-earth "astonomer" on Iraqi TV, but yes, it's a good reminder that there are quite a few muslim flat-earthers.

  12. Re:first post on Bootleg Tron 2 Trailer Is Out In the Wild · · Score: 1

    I'm only 27, but that two years apparently makes a big difference: Tron (along with "Short Circuit", "D.A.R.Y.L.", and "WarGames") was one of my favorite childhood movies. It also has many of the core elements of a good cyberpunk story (good hacker against evil corporate suit, a rogue AI with ambition, a lot of action in cyberspace), and was essentially the start of 3D CGI in movies. Here's to hoping they can do something comparable for today.

  13. Re:Someone actually read the constitution? on Patent Appeals System Under Constitutional Attack · · Score: 1

    Actually, when you consider that the choice SCOTUS will face if they take this case would be between trying to devise this sort of legal contortion to weasel past a clear-cut argument, and overturning hundreds of cases worth billions of dolars in total, we reach the obvious conclusion that there is no way this will be granted certiorari; the Supreme Court will thus simply sidestep the issue.

  14. Re:That leap of logic already applies in the US on UK to Ban Possession of Certain 'Violent' Pornography · · Score: 1

    I recall this case where two Florida teens were prosecuted for producing child porn by privately videotaping themselves engaging in "unspecified sexual behavior"; note that the sex itself was perfectly legal.

  15. Re:It ain't ... on Ten Weirdest Types of Computers · · Score: 1

    6 XOR 12=10 (in binary, 0110 XOR 1100 = 1010).

  16. Re:And? on UK Police Want DNA of 'Potential Offenders' · · Score: 1

    Ah, yes. Moving the Overton Window.

  17. Re:1st censorship death sentence on Internet Censorship's First Death Sentence? · · Score: 1

    No, that's a ridiculous extreme, and a straw man arguement. There are positions between "the invasion was a mistake, we never should have gone in!" and "nuke 'em till they glow, and shoot them in the dark!"

    I would still argue, as do many I know, that the ROE were too tight during main operations; and would also point out that "nation building" is not a job for soldiers (at least not soldiers alone), for, as many have pointed out, militaries are optimized for one purpose: to break things and hurt people. If we'd done a little more of that earlier, we'd have quite a bit less of it to do now.

  18. Re:1st censorship death sentence on Internet Censorship's First Death Sentence? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'd also add on the fact that during the military campaign we not only dropped two nuclear weapons (killing mostly civilians), but performed the single largest conventional bombing attack in history against their capital city. We thus demoralized not only the government and military, but the civilian populations as well. (In this vein, I'd also point out the bombing of Dresden in Germany).
    Contrast with these our modern, pinpoint strikes and massive restraint seeking to minimize civilian casualties.
    To sum up, you cannot build up a new system until you've fully torn down the old one.

  19. Re:Lol : "some international" or "country neutral" on ICANN Writes US Government Requesting Independence · · Score: 1

    Or ask an Israeli.

  20. Obligatory... on Tiny, Morphing, Electricity-Stealing Spy Planes Developed · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I, for one, welcome our new tiny, morphing, power-stealing, flying overlords.

  21. Re:A interesting thought on Toshiba Builds Ultra-Small Nuclear Reactor · · Score: 1

    Link here

  22. Re:A interesting thought on Toshiba Builds Ultra-Small Nuclear Reactor · · Score: 1

    Add in the fact that batteries generally can't produce as much current when colder: see here.

  23. Re:A slogan on Toshiba Builds Ultra-Small Nuclear Reactor · · Score: 1

    And with regards to wind, not only are there the problems of itermittancy (including shutting down turbines to prevent them from being damaged when the winds are too strong), there is the land use, the noise, the harm to wildlife, and the economic impacts to the area (boosting the NIMBY effect): see here.

  24. Re:Are you kidding? on Toshiba Builds Ultra-Small Nuclear Reactor · · Score: 1

    And if you think it's bad for solar in New Hampshire, try here in Alaska.

  25. Re:No, no on Mobile Linux Group Releases First Specification · · Score: 4, Funny

    Linux on the Toaster Oven? Is that anything like Linux on a dead badger?