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User: d0n0vAn

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Comments · 38

  1. The government does fund research. on Why Isn't the US Government Funding Research? · · Score: 1
    You make the statement that the government should have invested x dollars in research instead of giving x dollars to a corporation, GM, in your query, to squander.

    Two responses come to mind:

    1) The government does fund research. Most of the dollars spent in the form of grants and such go to science. I know because my fiance teaches at a research university and her area of expertise, non-science, receives virtually nothing compared to the sciences. The budget for the entire department is less than $40,000 for the acquisition of books vs. millions for science.

    2) The government gave billions of dollars to Chysler and GM as an investment in political capital rather than technological capital. Feel free to disagree with me, but I would ask you explain why the Chrysler deal gives billions of assets to the UAW while completely fucking over the smaller retirement funds such as the Indiana fund which just lost 61% of the value of those investments.

  2. health care reform on Hospital Turns Away Ambulances When Computers Go Down · · Score: 1

    the health care system today has price floors (union contracted wages), price ceilings (usual and customary rate), the removal of the individual being able to negotiate a better price (hmo legislation from 1970s), and mandated electronic locks on everything (hippa). all i hear is it's broken and when are we gonna fix it? jesus h christ, congress has been 'fixing' it longer than i have been alive! when are you going to wake up?

  3. Re:Sounds good... on Download Taxes As a Weapon Against File-Sharing · · Score: 1

    Yeah, except the RIAA will just bill you for the 1,000 songs @ $750 a song * 8.25% resulting in a bill of $750,000 for the songs plus $61,875 in taxes.

  4. I did not have sexual relations... on Last.fm Strongly Denies Sharing Data With RIAA · · Score: 1

    'I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinski.' You can say you didn't until you're blue in the face but if we believe you did it.... Look at it this way, remember when you said we were guilty of illegal file sharing and we said we didn't do it? Maybe you see my point, now?

  5. Re:Idiocy on Homeland Security To Scan Citizens Exiting US · · Score: 1

    Terrorism is the vehicle that the United States government is utilizing to expand its totalitarian powers. This is just another example of a central government knowing where its citizens are each and every minute of every day. Are you behind on your Visa bill? Did you miss a car payment? Do you owe back child support or taxes? Do you write anti-government comments on websites? If so then this program is designed to catch you and put you where you belong. Catch illegal aliens my fucking ass.

  6. No. on Dot-Communism Is Already Here · · Score: 1
    The nineteenth century in Europe was dominated by three -isms: Liberalism, Nationalism, and Communism. The nineteenth century was also the least violent century in the history of Europe. This is not communism as defined by Marx, and the author of the article appears to identify communal behavior with Lenin and Stalin which also cannot be considered pure Marx.

    When a centralized world body controls the internet with an iron fist - its content, its distribution and you are forced to contribute without payment then you might be able to call it communal, but until then it is the furthest thing from communal. Ideas have consequences. Don't think that your government doesn't see what happens on the net and eyes shutting it down. The most dangerous idea man has ever had is that he is free and beholden to none.

  7. True. on Survey Finds Airport Wi-Fi More Important Than Food · · Score: 1

    Yes, a working connection is more important than food, and on par with beer.

  8. Re:More Mac Commercials on Microsoft Patents the Crippling of Operating Systems · · Score: 1
    PC: Hi, I'm a PC.

    ---

    MAC: And I'm a MAC. PC, what are you doing with that hammer?!

    ---

    WHACK! WHACK! WHACK!

    ---

    PC: MAC, MAC, MAC. you obviously don't understand how a business works. Let me e-mail you a spreadsheet -

    ---

    MAC: But you just broke.... Um, PC, what are going to do with that hacksaw?

    ---

    PC: MAC, didn't you see the movie saw? Well, that's how I'm to improve the Windows experience.

  9. Re:Corporations on Battle Lines Being Drawn As Obama Plans To Curb Tax Avoidance · · Score: 1

    Corporations do not pay taxes, but their customers do. Exxon Mobile doesn't pay gasoline taxes, you do. Sales taxes, payroll taxes, again that's you. Corporate taxes, yep, those costs are passed to you, the customer. When Obama says he is taxing those evil corporations that don't pay their fair share what he is really saying is you're not paying enough for the food you eat, the gas you put in your car, etc because ultimately those costs will be bore by you or the corporation will cease to exist or no longer do business where you live. Think I'm wrong? Check any balance sheet of any publicly traded company.

  10. Parents? on Why Is It So Difficult To Fire Bad Teachers? · · Score: 1

    What about the parents? Don't they have the final responsibility to educate their children? Sure, they send them to school, but do they make sure that they are learning? Do they read the material presented and talk about it with their children and ask questions so that they know what they have learned? Of course not, they send them off each morning and the kids come home to an empty house, maybe a blowjob, or a PS3. Mod me down, but it's the damned truth. Children are failed to be educated because of their parents. Professional educators have their faults, sure, but put blame on where it belongs, on parents that don't give a shit about their kids.

  11. duh on Al-Qaeda Used Basic Codes, Calling Cards, Hotmail · · Score: 1
    'throw away your cell phone and email accounts, toss your uniforms and flags in the fire and behave as if it were the past. pass all your communications in person, and pretty soon the guys from the future won't be able to see you and ask "who the hell are we fighting!?"'

    face it, you are not going to ever stop a determined enemy, you just aren't. consider that a truly free society does not need a government to monitor it's enemies and citizen's telephone calls or emails, because a truly free society cannot be monitored, killed or destroyed.

  12. I like it on AMD Overclocks New Phenom II X4 To 7 GHz · · Score: 1

    I love my X4 920/Biostar 790GX. It's cool and quiet, and encodes music and video at 1/4 price of i7.

  13. I read the movie sucked... on Columnist Fired For Reviewing Pirated Movie · · Score: 1
    I did not read his review. I did read the movie sucked. No, I have not watched it, and I probably will not. If he wrote that the movie, as unfinished, sucked, then I believe you have the reason he was fired - not because he reviewed an unreleased movie. Hell, unreleased movies are review all the time. It's called hype.

    Show business, like politics, is a dirty game. It is not a coincidence that the local radio stations just happen to play NIN/JA combos two months before they come to town to play a show. These people have a failed business model and damn any one telling them that they make shit that no one wants to buy.

    Fair and balanced my ass.

    /d0n0vAn

  14. Love it! on Star Trek Fragrances · · Score: 1

    What's that smell? What the hell is THAT smell? We'll, I'll tell you, it's Uhura.

  15. Re:Absurd! on UK Gov. Wants IWF List To Cover 100% of UK Broadband · · Score: 1
    I am sure I will be modded down for this reply, but here we go....

    Your third sentence makes the statement that pretending [child abuse] does not exist is sad and ineffective, therefore unreasonable enforcment laws and a nanny is acceptable as long as it helps the children.

    The BBC article did not link to the 'Children's Charities Coalition on Internet Safety' [sic], but I looked it up and read through the letters posted. From the 'Letter to Lord Carter':

    'There is one issue which we see as being something of a hybrid, but among other things it certainly touches on the safety agenda. I refer to the misuse of file-sharing software.'

    'Of course we have no interest in promoting or allowing copyright theft but we are just as concerned about the potential for a family to be plunged into a financial crisis when a rights-holder tries to collect their dues, the bill for which having arisen from the unknown/undiscovered activity of a child in the household. Some children will doubtless have fully understood the unlawful nature of their activity from the outset, and will simply have been skilful [sic] at disguising what they are doing from their parents.'

    'Then there is the role of this type of software in providing access, as it frequently does, not only to copyright protected material, but also to a spread of other items found on participants' storage devices and hard drives. These other items may range from the plainly illegal e.g. child pornography, through to extreme violence or hard core pornography which falls short of being illegal but which is nonetheless highly age inappropriate, and much else between and besides.'

    'In every other context, when we speak about online safety, it is commonly accepted that all participants and players in the digital space have a responsibility to do what they can to make the internet a safer place for everyone, but perhaps particularly for some of the most vulnerable elements in society such as children.'

    SOURCE: http://chisuk.blogspot.com/

    Reasonable enforcement laws is an oxymoron if I read one.

    In the nineteenth century there was a battle to control political opinion through pamphlets. In the twentieth century, it was newspapers, television and radio. And in the the beginning of the twenty-first century there is a battle to control the internet and therefore your mind.

    Do not be fooled into thinking that this is for the children.

  16. Not out of the woods.... on Pirate Bay Day 5 — Prosecution Tries To Sneak In Evidence · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I am inclined to believe that if TPB wins this round we are all still in jeopardy. Legislative bodies seem inclined to write and pass laws in favor of preserving their status quo through legal monopolies, and prosecutors willing to sacrifice the permanent at the altar of the immediate put us all in jeopardy. This is not about downloading music or videos - it never has been. The only reason governments of the world are interested in these corporation's complaints is they hear them scream about all the revenue they have lost and then they start running the tax implications in their head. Not out of the woods yet, indeed.

  17. One pump is a warning... on How To Keep Rats From Eating My Cables? · · Score: 1

    ...two pumps lets 'em know you mean business. (http://www.airgunsbbguns.com/Crosman_760_Air_Rifle_p/cro760b.htm).

  18. Move Along.... on Senator Diane Feinstein Trying to Kill Net Neutrality · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is Time Warner really one of her largest donors? Nothing to see here.... FTFA: US Senator Dianne Feinstein hopes to update President Barack Obama's $838bn economic stimulus package so that American ISPs can deter child pornography, copyright infringement, and other unlawful activity by way of "reasonable network management." SOURCE: http://www.opensecrets.org/politicians/contrib.php?CID=N00007364

  19. failed to show growth... on CCP To Discontinue EVE Online Support For Linux · · Score: 2, Informative

    Failed to show growth my ass. Ubuntu was by far the easiest distribution to get Eve up and running. Hell, I even got Eve to run on my netbook. It wasn't lack of interest. Tell the fucking truth: CCP couldn't get it right and they never released a native linux client. Their support was terrible. That's why they failed.

  20. I'm sure it's just me, but... on MS Confirms Six Different Versions of Windows 7 · · Score: 1

    For my PC, I like operating systems with 'X' in them...XP...Xubuntu...OSX.... Don't ask me which version I want. Don't ask me if I want 32- or 64-bit.... Just install the fucking operating system! If I need a feature then I will look for it. If not, then I won't and if, by chance, I don't need a particular feature you did not short your stockholders by installing it on my PC.

  21. 30 Seconds from Tucson on Comcast Apologizes For Super Bowl Porn Glitch · · Score: 5, Funny

    As an accounting major, I am just doing the math: 30 seconds of pr0n equals $10 dollars...so, that's $20 a minute and $1200 dollars an hour. By my calculations, I can watch two hours of pr0n each month and be able to pay my tuition instead of taking student loans. What a country!!!

  22. Ahhh, HP LaserJet Printers on HP Accused of Illegal Exportation To Iran · · Score: 3, Funny

    PC LOAD LETTER? What the fuck does that mean?

  23. Smoke and Mirrors on Computer Models and the Global Economic Crash · · Score: 1

    In January 1970 the DOW average was about 770 points. Trend that to late 1999, 2000 and it is about 11,000 points with a high point at almost 14,000 points. Consider that trend with the consumer debt in this country. American Express was started in 1958. Visa and MasterCard changed their names and gained prominence in the late 1970s. Non-mortgage debt at the end of 2007 was about 2.5 trillion dollars. In October 2008, we had almost 1 billion in revolving debt. This is only possible with our current fractional-reserve lending practices. Would we have the big-box stores or mega malls without consumers spending money they don't have to buy shit they don't need? Our entire financial system is a house of cards and it isn't 'if' but rather 'when' it is going to fall.

  24. Depends on you on IT Job Without a Degree? · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I really hope this helps you: If you can build a box with parts you bought and install a linux or bsd with some useful server applications along with properly configured security then you probably can find a decent IT job. If not then I'd say no. I am employed as a data modeler. I do not have a degree, but if you need a box running a database to house 78 million rows of protected health information then I am your guy. In all honesty though, if you can do the above and you have a degree you'll make more money in the long run and be more valuable. I think that says a lot. Don't be like me. I am almost 40 years old and I returning to university next semester to complete my non-IT degree.

  25. Lost it! on Dropped Shuttle Toolbag Filmed From Earth · · Score: 0

    That is awesome!