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  1. Conflict of Interest on Energy Star Program For Homes And Appliances Is On Trump's Chopping Block (npr.org) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is of course a mere coincidence that this highly successful and entirely voluntary program, which has saved US consumers billions of dollars over its existence, far more than the actual program cost or cost to manufacturers, was also responsible for rating several of Don The Con's properties as being in the bottom 10% of all rated structures from an energy efficiency standpoint, just because those structures happened to be highly inefficient with their energy usage. That got the program on his Enemies List. http://www.cnn.com/2017/04/25/...

  2. Re:Gerrymandering on The Demographic Future of America's Political Parties · · Score: 1

    'Compactness' is not a remotely optimal means of determining whether a district is gerrymandered or not. Republicans want 'compactness' to be the standard because Democrats are more likely to be clustered in dense cities, where 'compact' lines will cause 'packing' automatically. Maintaining communities of interest has an actual benefit, allowing people with a shared community to select their representation. They're not mutually exclusive; states with a non-partisan redistricting process usually do better at finding a happy medium, with relatively geometric-shaped districts that preserve communities.

  3. Re:Gerrymandering on The Demographic Future of America's Political Parties · · Score: 1

    It's not solely due to gerrymandering; Democrats also have a less efficient distribution naturally, with many densely-populated heavily-Democratic areas that can't be 'unpacked.' There's not really any way to draw the lines in the state of New York, for example, to take advantage of the massive Democratic population in the city of New York; a district in Brooklyn or something might vote 90% for a Democratic candidate, but that means there's about 40% of a district's worth of Democrats whose votes are just surplus there for the local race, even as it makes statewide races lopsided affairs.

  4. Re:Only Two Futures? on The Demographic Future of America's Political Parties · · Score: 1

    Actually, most states just go with the plurality winner on a fixed date. I know Louisiana and Georgia do require an outright majority and do hold a runoff, but Montana and Alaska (just to name a couple) have recently had winners with under 50%, for example. Lisa Murkowski in Alaska won with under 40% as a write-in in 2010, even.

  5. Re:Only Two Futures? on The Demographic Future of America's Political Parties · · Score: 1

    Because it relies on the definition of when the result of a sperm and an ovum combining changes from 'potential human being' to ' actual human being.' If you believe that it's a human being the instant the sperm meets the ovum, then you consider any abortion to be murder. If you prefer to use viability as your standard, then anything up to the point where the fetus could reasonably survive on its own is still 'potential' and therefore medical treatment is the woman's choice. At that point it's a philosophical and practical dispute, because the definition of a fundamental term is not agreed upon.

  6. Re:Until you can prove them wrong on In America, 46% of People Hold a Creationist View of Human Origins · · Score: 1

    If those volumes weren't themselves pieces of pseudoscientific junk, then that might have helped.

  7. Re:"Divinely guided"? on In America, 46% of People Hold a Creationist View of Human Origins · · Score: 1

    Bear in mind that you can get a PhD in theology, and that a Juris Doctor is considered post-graduate, and so on, and yes, that's entirely believable. Also, that group is the most likely to believe in pure evolution; another way to phrase that point would be "the group with the lowest likelihood of believing in pure creationism are the people with post-graduate studies."

  8. Re:in other words, 46% of americans are dumb on In America, 46% of People Hold a Creationist View of Human Origins · · Score: 1

    That minister declared that gays should be imprisoned in concentration camps. The poster said that adults who continue to believe in a shared invisible friend should be tolerated and pitied. It is in fact the exact opposite. Also, self-perpetuating mass memes are a terrible source for morality; you are admitting that if you were not constantly afraid that God is watching everything you do and threatening you with punishment for it, you would have no qualms about going out and shooting up a bus stop? Not relying on millennia-old goatherders for morality leaves quite a lot of philosophy open for alternatives. "Do your best to not be a dick to other people" is a very simple basis for morality, but it works a lot better than any system that produces, say, the Westboro Baptists.

  9. Re:Until you can prove them wrong on In America, 46% of People Hold a Creationist View of Human Origins · · Score: 1

    Except that it does in fact deal perfectly well with 'irreducible complexity' and entropy, and is a 'theory' in the same sense that gravity is a 'theory.' To point to the creationist's favorite misunderstanding, an eye is not 'irreducibly complex' because it is perfectly possible for structures necessary to reach the current state to evolve away after their function is superseded by later development. Try watching a little PBS.

  10. Re:Until you can prove them wrong on In America, 46% of People Hold a Creationist View of Human Origins · · Score: 1

    Like the poster above said, no evidence. Those links have about as much evidentiary value as the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

  11. Re:Until you can prove them wrong on In America, 46% of People Hold a Creationist View of Human Origins · · Score: 1

    I used to be a Prime mover. But I haven't taken Optimus off the shelf in a while.

  12. Re:Really? on In America, 46% of People Hold a Creationist View of Human Origins · · Score: 1

    By using European numerical conventions that use a period instead of a comma to separate out the thousands place.

  13. Re:Wait. on Nuclear Bunker Houses World's Toughest Server Farm · · Score: 1

    I always thought it was a better line just as "If I don't survive, tell my wife."

  14. Re:Headline Is So Very Wrong on How Google Avoided Paying $60 Billion In Taxes · · Score: 1

    "I like having a police and fire department." It was quite recently that one particular homeowner discovered the downside to not paying for a fire department. In a 100% Republican-controlled county, his town opted to not pay for fire coverage via taxes, instead allowing individual residents of the rural surrounding areas to voluntarily subscribe to the firefighting services of the nearby town. This guy didn't, and then was terribly upset that his offer to pay the fee while his house was burning was rejected. Sorry, buddy. You want fire coverage? That's what taxes are for. If your political philosophy objects, elect people who let things like this happen, and you can deal with the consequences. It's the on-your-ownership society.

  15. Re:Headline Is So Very Wrong on How Google Avoided Paying $60 Billion In Taxes · · Score: 1

    The share paid by the top 20% has gone up because the percentage of the national income accumulated by the top 20% has gone up by far more. If you have 100 people, 20 of whom make 100,000 each and 80 of whom make 10,000 each, and everyone pays a flat 10% tax, then the top 20% will pay 200,000 total while the bottom 80% pays 160,000 total. Then adjust it over time so the top 20 make 1,000,000 each while the bottom 80% make 20,000 each, but give the top 20 a 5% rate instead, and the top 20 pay 1,000,000 total while the bottom pay 320,000 - and so those top 20% who are making 50 times more than everyone else complain about how they're 'unfairly' paying too much, despite paying half the tax rate. It's a gross simplification, but the effect you're noting is not the wealthy paying an unfair amount; it's an effect of growing concentration of wealth into fewer and fewer hands, which is not a stable situation.

  16. Re:It's certainly easier... on The Push For Colbert's "Restoring Truthiness" Rally · · Score: 1

    The Bush deficits weren't wholly and utterly his fault, but you can rather easily place an enormous percentage of them on him spending a trillion dollars on a war he chose to start, and a trillion dollars on a tax cut that went disproportionately to the haves and the have-mores.

  17. Re:Most of the pople who Watch Colbert..... on The Push For Colbert's "Restoring Truthiness" Rally · · Score: 1

    Google 'Canadian National Anthem.'

  18. Re:What the hell? on The Push For Colbert's "Restoring Truthiness" Rally · · Score: 1

    Yeah! Those illegal immigrants who made Chinatowns and Jewish areas in American cities are just asking to be hunted down! Oh, and let's not forget Little Havana down in Florida, or all those darn Irish bars all over the place! For that matter, those traitorous Southerners are real ungrateful twerps, insisting on clinging to their outmoded racist culture when they were let back into the US, and their descendants STILL haven't adopted American cultural norms yet!

  19. Re:A more accurate count on The Push For Colbert's "Restoring Truthiness" Rally · · Score: 1

    Actually, the only group to have taken steps to create a believable estimate was CBS News, who hired a company to take aerial photography of the crowd from multiple angles. Their estimate was 85,000 plus or minus 9,000 - so the 'low end' was 76,000 and the high end 94,000.

  20. Re:Fully Automatic Weapon on Set Free Your Inner Jedi (Or Pyro) · · Score: 1

    Amusingly enough, Cracked had an article that included the unregulated state of flamethrowers not too long ago. I followed up, and as best I could find (and IANAL, etc) they were correct. I only checked a couple of states, but neither covered flamethrowers. Reading the definition of 'destructive device' (http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/26/usc_sec_26_00005845----000-.html), I think you might be able to make a decent case that a flamethrower does not in fact qualify as a 'similar device' on the grounds that, unlike everything else in the Act, a flamethrower does not have a projectile component.

  21. Re:!newsfornerds on Obama Will Nominate Elena Kagan To the Supreme Court · · Score: 1

    It could certainly have some impact if as a Supreme Court justice she has to make some ruling on a topic like, say, net neutrality. Or IP law. Or similar topics. It's not a direct technical advancement, but it's got a high potential to impact the technological world anyhow.

  22. Re:RUN AWAY! RUN AWAY! on Obama Will Nominate Elena Kagan To the Supreme Court · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Posting the names and addresses of those who oppose them is a common tactic of Democratic Party affiliated organizations.

    Citation needed. Preferably one that matches in offensiveness, say, Republican-affiliated sites that list the names and addresses of abortion doctors and make 'wanted' posters with targets superimposed on their features.

  23. Re:Pro / cons on House Passes Massive Medical Insurance Bill, 219-212 · · Score: 1

    Actually, nothing in the bill meets the legal definition of a 'mandate.' You cannot go to jail for not having insurance; you have a tax incentive to purchase it instead (in the form of a $695 tax that is waived if you do purchase it). There is no Constitutional question on this point. Similarly, the advisory board creates regulations, much like the EPA can create regulations. Congress has designated these groups as responsible for determining the implementation of policy within the guidelines that Congress has itself set, with discretion limited to what the law says has to be accomplished. Private insurance costs can only soar if medical costs themselves soar, because the bill specifically requires that insurers spend 85% of all premium dollars on actual medical care, with rebates for overages.

  24. Re:Pro / cons on House Passes Massive Medical Insurance Bill, 219-212 · · Score: 1

    Congratulations! You have either a cult or a conspiracy theory. In either case, "Everyone but my chosen leader is not trustworthy, but my chosen leader is without flaw."

  25. Re:Pro / cons on House Passes Massive Medical Insurance Bill, 219-212 · · Score: 1

    Allowing interstate insurance sales was intended to deliberately cripple the ability of states to regulate their own insurance markets - the amendments offered by Republicans very specifically exempted any interstate insurance from regulation by the state in which the policyholder lived. This was explicitly designed to create a race to the bottom, where the state with the least restriction on the insurance would become the home of all of the companies involved. So if, say, Delaware declared that insurance companies were immune from lawsuit regardless of their activities, every insurance company would cheerfully move there and the Republican amendment would have ensured that no other state could regular their activities. It was a deliberate poison pill that they knew would destroy the system. Barring consideration of pre-existing conditions was in the original bill; Republicans had nothing to do with it (other than voting against it). Even the most draconian tort reform would have a cost savings of less than 0.5%, and that's the optimistic estimate by pro-reform groups who took a serious look at the numbers. I have good insurance, and I do currently pay a reasonable rate. But guess who had to slog through paperwork and spend hours demanding they pay up when I had to use them recently? Both me and the hospital. And that was for a fairly simple bill. The insurance companies will slow-walk payments, refuse payments, and force litigation - if they pay up at all.