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User: Vaphell

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  1. Re:Potayto/potatoh on Supreme Court Overturns Defense of Marriage Act · · Score: 1

    i don't give a shit what 'marriage' is because it's only a word and the perks are important. It's the conservative christians, who cling to their holy book and appeal to tradition, you have to convince in order to get shit done, not me. Drop the label and see your chances of change shoot through the roof or get bogged down in a fucking stupid ideological war, the choice is yours.

  2. Re:Potayto/potatoh on Supreme Court Overturns Defense of Marriage Act · · Score: 1

    the concept in general yes, but that's ignoring how the thing evolved
    marriage -> religious version becomes the only existing form when christianity becomes the state religion in the west -> the state recognizes the christian version granting non-religious perks by default

  3. Re:Good ... on Supreme Court Overturns Defense of Marriage Act · · Score: 2

    true that. Half of the problem with 'progressive' forms of marriage is that they go against the strict definition found in the bible and religious conservative people simply won't swallow it, EVER. Who would have thought that seemingly openminded progressives are so boneheaded that they prefer to wage ideological wars instead of getting shit done.
    Drop the fucking label and the resistance drops because 'bbbut God said something else' won't have a leg to stand on, but saying 'these people are taxpayers too so fuck off' will still work.

  4. Re:Potayto/potatoh on Supreme Court Overturns Defense of Marriage Act · · Score: 3

    because in the west marriage is of christian origins and that makes religious nuts nervous. Whenever you try to call relationship of gays, lesbians or polyamoric peeps a marriage, the bible alert goes off: "bible says marriage is 1man+1woman! error! error!" and that gets you nowhere in a country split roughly in half.
    Why would you care about label when it's the perks you are after (inheritance, visitations in hospitals, etc)?

  5. Re:thats what you get for being stupid on Bitcoin Exchange Mt. Gox Halts USD Withdrawals · · Score: 1

    the whole thing wouldn't fly in the first place if the government mandated rating agencies didn't give AAA status to that junk (mandated because the law requires to use *their* ratings to evaluate portfolio risk). You could argue that these agencies are private, but time and time again it was shown that once you get that special privilege granted by the govt, you may stop trying and still do just fine.
    While GS are scum, they did a perfectly rational thing and exploited the shit out of a severely mispriced asset.

  6. Re:Not too shocking. on Research Reveals Low Exposure of Excellent Work By Female Scientists · · Score: 1

    i've heard the interpretation that from the survival of the species perspective females are precious. Evolution 'wants' them to have rock solid gene base, society wants them to be safe not to jeopardize their role, which means teaching them risk aversion. Men are the main source of genetic variance so it's a full blown RNG in their case. One or two badly constructed individuals is no tragedy, they won't pass their genes, no big deal. Genetic diseases mostly in males? No big deal, they are seen as disposable either way. And they have to compete for access to female parts and they are raised that way.

    Is it bad? Maybe, but i think not. It's an evolutionary example of the economic concept of comparative advantage. 'Fixing' it in the name of political correctness might come with severe unintended consequences.

  7. Re:Seriously? on The Free State Project, One Decade Later · · Score: 1

    can you compare with alternative timeline without student loans that you are so sure they in fact help people in aggregate?
    Without the student loans people wouldn't be studying BS to get a piece of paper setting them back $50k in the first place. Higher education rate would be lower but so fucking what, as it stands soon you will need PhD to make burgers at $8/hr. Fix goddamn high schools first, it will be cheaper than throwing money at every every retard so he can get a worthless degree.

  8. Re:Liberty loving? on The Free State Project, One Decade Later · · Score: 1

    war on drugs? i think you mean Rand Paul, who is further from libertarian principles than his father.

  9. Re:"Liberty-Minded"? on The Free State Project, One Decade Later · · Score: 2, Interesting

    strong protection of pregnant women makes the women of ages 20-30 unemployable in the first place. That shit is abused in my country like there is no tomorrow and no small business owner can afford to wait for his employee 2 years (whole duration of pregnancy+maternal leave, some even get pregnant again, wash rinse repeat) with a reserved spot and pay for the first month getting nothing in return. The result is that young women are mostly employed in certain, mostly temporary forms that don't offer the protection (just like in the US employers select a form of employment that allows them to skip health insurance) .... and the fertility rate currently hovers around 1.3 (way below 1.4 of old shrinking Japan!), because most women avoid pregnancy like a plague

    Another classic example of the road to hell is paved with good intentions.

  10. Re:Eh, what? on Europe Needs Genetically Engineered Crops, Scientists Say · · Score: 1

    keeping farmers in business and improving local economy is more important in the long run. Without robust economy these will be a bunch of dependent beggars forever. Feel free to donate/invest in their infrastructure, know-how, tech level and what not but never give them finished products for free - it fortifies the position of already established players from developed countries and prevents the birth of successful local competition.

    Let's say there are 1000 starving people. you give them free food from foreign aid. They now multiply like rabbits (that is their current strategy of survival, the difference is they don't die now) and soon go back to starving. Foreign aid has to be bigger to compensate. You raise the ceiling to 10k, 100k, 1M - the bar goes every time the population reaches the capacity of its environment.
    You had 1000 starving people, now you have million and you might think the world can support this situation indefinitely. That's a very risky assumption. Let's say huge huge economic downturn happens and people in the West don't feel rich enough to blow money and food on Africa, because they have their own poor and unemployed to take care of. Suddenly all that artificial support for millions of people vanishes and you have mass starvation so harsh the initial state seems like a child play in comparison.

    People need to face the basic fact that starvation is a nature's way to signal overpopulation relative to what the ecological niche can bear. Granted, you can cheat it with external support but only so long (most organisms follow exponential growth until they hit the hard wall of environmental limitations and africans are no different here). You need to ask yourself, how long you want to subsidize people so they can have their unrestricted e^x growth. You *will* run out of resources and even the idea of not increasing aid at some point will be disastrous, not to mention withdrawing it completely.

    This is a perfect example why bleeding heart do-gooders need to be smacked upside the head every time they want to fix the world - the road to hell is indeed paved with good intentions. They should first prove they have a grasp of possible consequences before being allowed to act. Policy based on feelings invoked by sad pictures of little black people with flies all over them does no favors to anybody, well maybe except local elites who sell the aid food on the black market and UN bureaucrats who can justify their existence.

  11. Re:Eh, what? on Europe Needs Genetically Engineered Crops, Scientists Say · · Score: 3, Insightful

    if they are starving they have a very strong incentive to BUY food from local farmers. That gives farmers the incentive and means to improve their tech level and yield. If people are fed the farmers are shit-outta-luck because nobody needs them, everybody gets food for free. That's a problem in the making, because by making sure people survive and multiply, mismatch between the needs and what the environment and local economy can provide is even bigger, which means even greater dependence on external help. It does nothing to solve the problems, everything to perpetuate them.

    Tell me how is it possible that population Ethiopia, country in a pretty much perpetual state of famine, *doubled* in last 30 years.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_Ethiopia

    I've read article than in Senegal and neighboring countries there are dirt cheap snacks made from chicken legs on every street and everybody buys them. Problem? These chicken legs are dumped on these markets by european companies who get rid of stuff nobody in Europe wants for pennies. Unfortunately local farmers can't compete with dirt cheap throwaway parts of animals that were raised on subsidized grain in rich Europe, so they go out of business.

  12. Re:Anti sexist policies are almost always sexist on Changing the Ratio of Women In Tech: How Etsy Did It · · Score: 4, Interesting

    no, not really.
    You can't blame nordic countries for sexism or discrimination, yet in Norway they still have only 10% female engineers. Paradoxically, the more people are free, the more likely they are to pursue stereotypical gender roles.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQ2xrnyH2wQ @5:30, 29:30

  13. Re:Anti sexist policies are almost always sexist on Changing the Ratio of Women In Tech: How Etsy Did It · · Score: 1

    nobody bats an eye when it's the men who who experience 90% of deaths at work or when homelessness is a predominantly male problem. The shittiest/the most dangerous jobs? All male dominated. Is this kind of discrimination ok? Because i have never seen anybody mention it as something very bad that needs to be fixed asap.

    Draw 2 bell curves, one tall and narrow (women) and one low and wide (men) - that's how most traits are generally distributed, with greater deviation for men. Now tell me why it's always the difference on the right that is talked about, and nobody ever mentions the one on the left.

  14. Re:Can it do... on Enlightenment Terminal Allows Video Playback, PDF Viewing · · Score: 2

    gnome-open or xdg-open ftw

  15. Re:How did this moronic submission make it here? on Why Earth Hour Is a Waste of Time and Energy · · Score: 1

    Earth Hour is nothing more than a crap invented solely for simpletons so they can click Like on their facebook profile and feel like they accomplished something.
    Ask them if they *really* want to really sacrifice their oversized houses, 3 cars, airconditioning 24/7 and boatloads of gizmos they don't really need in order to significantly reduce their footprint - now that would be interesting.

  16. Re:Red herring on Shuttleworth On Ubuntu Community Drama · · Score: 1

    existing inertia, design by commitee meaning decisions take too long? I am not saying their decision is right, but i can somewhat understand it.
    If Canonical are in a hurry to gain any foothold in an exploding mobile/tablet market they can't wait X years because the players already present in the market will use that time to fortify and distribute the spoils among them, not leaving anything for newcomers. If you are going to be way too late, you can as well not try at all.

  17. Re:Confusing on With 'Obamacare' Kicking In, Microsoft Sees a Health-Data Windfall · · Score: 2

    The problem with the US system is that you don't have laws stating that that insurance companies cannot deny pre-existing conditions, must provide treatment for basically everything, and cannot charge differently due to you being a high-demanding customer, only being allowed to increase prices due to age and even so within pre-defined limits.

    what you describe here is not insurance but a payment scheme managed by 3rd party. Insurance is about the management of highly unlikely events. Covering someone who is 100% certain to generate costs has nothing to do with risk management, it's a money losing position. Risk management would be: 5% chance of costing X => premium is roughly 5% of X. The price discrimination against cost centers is what makes insurance work. With coverage of 100% certain cases you have only offloading cost on someone else, who would see his premium greatly reduced if that was not the case. Also maintenance stuff like regular checkups have no place in a true insurance model (it's a 100% certain cost that will inflate your premium).

    With rising unemployment and detoriating perspectives among the young i don't really think that making them subsidize older generations who are more likely to be wealthy than they are is such a brilliant idea.

  18. Re:"Big Data" on With 'Obamacare' Kicking In, Microsoft Sees a Health-Data Windfall · · Score: 1

    too vs to i can forgive (though it should not survive proofreading), but misusing there/they're/their or you're/your is outright inexcusable.

  19. Re:Anonymous currency on Bitcoin Hits New All-time High of $32 · · Score: 1

    afaik bitcoin is divisible up to 8 decimal places, so you don't really overpay for anything.

  20. Re:Clealry on Blizzard Set To Debut 'Something New' At PAX East · · Score: 1

    too bad sc2 pissed all over the motivations/reasons from sc1.

  21. Re:WoW for PS4 and Xbox Durango?!?!? on Blizzard Set To Debut 'Something New' At PAX East · · Score: 1

    Although each did include a campaign for each race, SC2 Wings of Liberty did have a lot more Terran content than either SC1x campaign had.

    yes, they sold it as some kind of groundbreaking storytelling and whatnot, in reality it was 1/3 meat tops, the rest was filler where you do completely unrelated things only to jump into the main storyline 3 missions before ending. And the story sucked ass too.
    Sc1 offered you a complete balanced package with equal attention to all races, in case of sc2 zerg was clearly undercooked, heart of the swarm is still not out, and when will legacy of the void be released, in 2015? I admit that stretching the game to five years is an epic achievement.

  22. Re:Never waste an opportunity on Gubernatorial Candidate Speaks Out Against CAS · · Score: 2

    American history would seem to demonstrate that it is possible to have a government that keeps corporations in check without becoming some sort of nightmare police-state.

    are you serious? Govt that keeps corporations in check? So why everybody and their dog whine about the citizens united and the money as speech thing? Ever heard of regulatory capture (plain as day in case of FDA, EPA, SEC)?

  23. Re:Never waste an opportunity on Gubernatorial Candidate Speaks Out Against CAS · · Score: 2

    while i agree the op went too far in his rant, the wording does imply govt regulations. Show me any public utility that doesn't have a long list of govt strings attached. Roads and airports are public utility and you begin to have TSA and other 3letter wonders everywhere. In the age of terrorist and pedophile bogeymen the fate of the internet is sealed.

  24. Re:I dont know on US CEO Says French Workers Have Three-Hour Work Day · · Score: 1

    i assume you don't buy anything from india or china? Do you get excited like that all the time or only when the CEO explicitly spells the mainstream doctrine out?
    That's how the huge majority of stuff is made, deal with it.

  25. Re:Prices will come down? Hah! on The End Is Near for GameStop · · Score: 5, Insightful

    true that, anyone believing the price would fall when the competition gets weaker (2nd hand stuff competes with brand new) is a fucking moron.