The problem is, the congressmen do these things without thinking of where the money will come from, so taxes will need to be raised in some form or another in the future.
Remove government regulation public schools, make them have to compete, and we'd see the end of teachers unions that force high pay and automatic raises, tenure, etc.
May as well say that as a college freshman, RIT is pretty sweet, and can help you get a job wherever you want considering how many companies kiss up for interns and such.
Votes being bought is a problem with our voting system and with government - any concentration of power like that is liable to be bribed or bought like that.
As for everything being able to be bought and sold, why is that a problem? If I need food and could sell my vote to keep my children fed for another month, isn't that worth it?
And I challenge you to name one monopoly that came into being without government interference - maintaining a monopoly is damn hard when you're not being legislated for.
There is nothing wrong with capitalism, the problem is that government exists and is easy to corrupt. If people kept a closer eye on the fed and made sure they were doing a very few specific things, everyone would be much better off. Do you really think 400 families could have accumulated that wealth without bribing some officials in D.C. at some point or another?
"I'm fine with keeping the federal government within the bounds of the Constitution, but only if we change the Constitution to cover almost all of what the federal government does."
Reread what you wrote and think about it for a while.
Note that I don't feel strongly one way or another on the protests - from what I've heard the people are justly angry but are focusing it on the wrong people and are asking for the wrong change. It's likely that if they get legislation passed then they will be making the government clamp down on the businesses - which is just as bad, but in the other direction.
The problem isn't wealth distribution, it's the fact that the government can regulate the industry and just print money and give it to the corporations. With a central point of failure (the federal government) it's easy for business to become corrupt.
Treat the source, not the symptom. Get the federal government back to doing the (very) few things that it is mandated to by the constitution.
As for Obama, he didn't really remember much of his campaign platform after he was elected last time, I don't see why it'd be different this time.
As long as the government has a monopoly, legally nobody else can compete. Under a private system, at least the airlines can go wtf r u doin. Then they start their own security process, or hire some other company.
Not going to address the free market bashing because that would end unproductively, but you should be aware that, at least in the USA, due to Lysander Spooner kicking the USPS' ass, they technically have a monopoly on delivering mail, and UPS, fedex etc only get by by paying USPS a rather large fee, and classify their services are specialty delivery services.
Dwarfs?! was different, It sounds similar, but if Dwarf fortress is a huge ocean of content with sunken treasure to discover, then Dwarfs?! is a crystal clear swimming pool. Both can be fun, but one is for exploration and creation and experimentation, while the other is fun for a half an hour at a time and you know exactly what you're getting in to.
The GUI is great. It's not accessible and not easy to read. It's perfect for what it represents, and I wouldn't play if it had a different interface. Just because it's hard to learn for new players doesn't mean it should be dumbed down.
You have no idea what you're talking about.
Proof Of Stake is garbage and bitcoin will not be moving to it
You mean studios will finally be able to pan at a reasonable speed without it looking jittery and fucking terrible?
24 fps is terrible and you should feel bad for propping up a dying standard.
Pretty sure he'd just remove the federal level CERS, though as a more low priority objective. And even then, states would do a better job.
You hit the nail on the head.
The problem is, the congressmen do these things without thinking of where the money will come from, so taxes will need to be raised in some form or another in the future.
Basically, politicians aren't accountable because they're spending other people's money. So they can afford to be wasteful.
I've been using one with ddwrt for a while, it was pretty simple to get setup and AFAIK it is fully supported.
Wish I had mod points.
Remove government regulation public schools, make them have to compete, and we'd see the end of teachers unions that force high pay and automatic raises, tenure, etc.
May as well say that as a college freshman, RIT is pretty sweet, and can help you get a job wherever you want considering how many companies kiss up for interns and such.
Sounds like government is at fault here for guaranteeing the loans.
Not sure about the randian part, but as a regular old libertarian (or anarcho capitalist, anyway) IP is stupid.
Votes being bought is a problem with our voting system and with government - any concentration of power like that is liable to be bribed or bought like that.
As for everything being able to be bought and sold, why is that a problem? If I need food and could sell my vote to keep my children fed for another month, isn't that worth it?
And I challenge you to name one monopoly that came into being without government interference - maintaining a monopoly is damn hard when you're not being legislated for.
There is nothing wrong with capitalism, the problem is that government exists and is easy to corrupt. If people kept a closer eye on the fed and made sure they were doing a very few specific things, everyone would be much better off. Do you really think 400 families could have accumulated that wealth without bribing some officials in D.C. at some point or another?
"I'm fine with keeping the federal government within the bounds of the Constitution, but only if we change the Constitution to cover almost all of what the federal government does."
Reread what you wrote and think about it for a while.
Note that I don't feel strongly one way or another on the protests - from what I've heard the people are justly angry but are focusing it on the wrong people and are asking for the wrong change. It's likely that if they get legislation passed then they will be making the government clamp down on the businesses - which is just as bad, but in the other direction.
The problem isn't wealth distribution, it's the fact that the government can regulate the industry and just print money and give it to the corporations. With a central point of failure (the federal government) it's easy for business to become corrupt.
Treat the source, not the symptom. Get the federal government back to doing the (very) few things that it is mandated to by the constitution.
As for Obama, he didn't really remember much of his campaign platform after he was elected last time, I don't see why it'd be different this time.
Not when voting favors big winners over third parties.
Once we get range voting (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Range_voting) then I'd agree with you.
Taxes are theft as well, doesn't mean that's okay.
As long as the government has a monopoly, legally nobody else can compete. Under a private system, at least the airlines can go wtf r u doin. Then they start their own security process, or hire some other company.
Dark matter always seemed like a convenient hand wave, but I'm thrilled if there's some concrete evidence of it. I do love being wrong!
Not going to address the free market bashing because that would end unproductively, but you should be aware that, at least in the USA, due to Lysander Spooner kicking the USPS' ass, they technically have a monopoly on delivering mail, and UPS, fedex etc only get by by paying USPS a rather large fee, and classify their services are specialty delivery services.
Supposedly it's too hard to program for multiple threads for AI, as it already supports offloading some features to alternate cores.
Dwarfs?! was different, It sounds similar, but if Dwarf fortress is a huge ocean of content with sunken treasure to discover, then Dwarfs?! is a crystal clear swimming pool. Both can be fun, but one is for exploration and creation and experimentation, while the other is fun for a half an hour at a time and you know exactly what you're getting in to.
They're all standardized in my opinion, and once you figure out how you use any one menu, they all work about the same.
The GUI is great. It's not accessible and not easy to read. It's perfect for what it represents, and I wouldn't play if it had a different interface. Just because it's hard to learn for new players doesn't mean it should be dumbed down.
The fact that it is a commodity specifically made to be a highly convenient, flexible, sound currency.
Or, if it makes more sense, the economy behind it. Which is growing rather rapidly, for the record.