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User: independent123

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  1. You can prove anything on The Man Who Convinced Us We Needed Vitamin Supplements · · Score: 1

    Some proponents of vitamins predicted the outcome of this study. For en explanation of this flawed study see: http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2012/mar2012_Synthetic-Alpha-Tocopherol-Shown-Increase_01.htm

  2. Why the big corps use Oracle on Ask Slashdot: Is Postgres On Par With Oracle? · · Score: 1

    Oracle will handle highly concurrent transactions with minimal locking, and provide consistent reads at the same time. This is the most difficult thing transactional databases do. You can also throw horrendous queries and really bad applications at it and Oracle will handle it. Like the other major companies Oracle gives fairly good support for their product and the product documentation is superb. The big corps have the money to pay for it and like to play it safe.

  3. Re:Dammit, Texas! on Texas Bills Would Bar Warrantless Snooping On Phone Location · · Score: 1

    The coastal area from just below DC up to Boston has run the country from the beginning. That area holds the country hostage, not Texas. Do you really think you will have Intelligent Design in the NYC school books because Texas ordered it? The people in more rural areas constantly have their culture mocked and attacked. When they push back even a little, alarm bells go off. They don't quite understand yet that abortion is good and god is dead. It's not my culture or belief system, but they have a right to their own. The blood thirsty, war mongering Northeast has no moral bearing to lecture anyone.

  4. Re:A Modest Proposal on Hidden Viral Gene Discovered In GMO Crops · · Score: 1

    We all know why the labels aren't there. It's because no one would buy the food. There's no trust left in this society and for damn good reason. If a large part of the public wants something on the label, it should be there in some way or another. "Rights" are vapor though. Only power gives rights and the public is easy to roll over on almost any issue.

  5. Re:The "anti-science" crowd? Seriously?? on Researchers Investigating Self-Boosting Vaccines · · Score: 1

    Simple way to resolve the problem, you do what you want and I'll do what I want. Private schools so your kids don't get contaminated. Oh, I forgot this is a fascist country, "science" is the new religion, and "science" serves money not humanity. All this trumps freedom, easily and completely. Forced vaccinations justified by herd immunity, normal court access replaced by a special "vaccine court", a revolving door at the FDA, and Pharma money being spread everywhere to fund research and influence opinion. Nothing to see here. BTW, no vaccine will EVER eliminate the need for herd immunity, because your argument for forcing vaccinations on people would largely disappear. If people weren't forced to take them, they would actually have to work and be safe, or disappear.

  6. Re:"Hunted like a terrorist"? on Assange Makes Statement Calling For an End To the "Witch Hunt" · · Score: 1

    When you compare this to the case Roman Polanski who drugged and raped a minor and is still free, it looks over the top. The US, the Brits of course, and others are going to cause as much trouble for Assange as they can. Sex charges, how original. These people run the world and no little shit like that is going to get away with what he did.

  7. Europe has banned them on Maine Senator Wants Independent Study of TSA's Body Scanners · · Score: 1

    Since Europe has banned them, it's definitely worthy of study, at least. Whether that can ever be done honestly in the US is another question. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=europe-bans-x-ray-body-scanners

  8. Re:Corruption on FCC Commissioner Leaves To Become Lobbyist · · Score: 1

    This revolving door is a far bigger problem than campaign contributions, yet it gets little attention.

  9. Re:Money buys power -- regulatees capture regulato on FCC Commissioner Leaves To Become Lobbyist · · Score: 1

    Dated, but a good article. I smell a libertarian here, so I guess you'll agree that this was always about power rather than the public. Certainly at this point in time there are few resources that are as abundant as bandwidth. Not much reason there for heavy regulation or a natural monopoly.

  10. Re:Pffft on Chinese iPad Factory Staff Forced To Sign 'No Suicide' Pledge · · Score: 1

    We've been told that we must "compete" with that system in order to keep our jobs. Is competing a necessity like a law of physics or is it a choice that someone makes? If our workers only work 40 hours a week for decent wages, does that threaten our survival?

  11. Re:Think before making your career choice on Why Science Is a Lousy Career Choice · · Score: 1

    You're absolutely right to emphasize tariffs and other pressures. Trade is more win-lose than win-win. Our elite have taken the profits and sold out the country. Reagan pressured the Japanese, but all the presidents since have done nothing. Can you imagine JFK or Reagan allowing large parts of the middle class to be reduced to poverty and the power of the country to wither? For what?

  12. Re:radical news! on The Simpsons Reviewed For Unsuitable Nuclear Jokes · · Score: 1

    It has more to do with the interests of the nuclear industry than Japanese sensibilities. Ever since the Japanese nuclear trouble there has been a barrage of pro-nuclear stories, all reassuring us that everything is ok with nuclear.

  13. What about the real economy? on National Security Jobs To Rival Silicon Valley Over the Next 10 Years? · · Score: 1

    Now all the bright young tech minds have to work for the national security state, rather than the real economy. It's losing game. The Soviets devolved to this just before they crumbled. When we crumble, I only hope we do it as peacefully as they did.

  14. Re:Wow on Bill Gates Says Anti-Vaccine Effort Kills Children · · Score: 1

    If you want vaccines for your children go right ahead. You can stuff your "herd immunity" and allow other parents to decide what's best for their kids. The corrupt corporate science you worship is a plague on humanity. I'm 60 now and I never heard of anyone with autism when I was growing up, except maybe in the newspapers. Now it's about 1 in 100. My oldest son was already weak because of some other problem, got the MMR vaccine and was limp and sick for days. He had multiple problems growing up which he has largely overcome, but not entirely. Keep your beliefs and act on them. Allow others the same privilege.

  15. Re:As a voter who normally leans Democrat... on Democrats Crowdsourcing To Vote Palin In Primaries · · Score: 1

    Given your mocking comments and your lack of knowledge about Huckabee, you're a pretty solid Democrat. Huckabee got the Christian vote, but was nixed in 2008 by the corporate money. Huckabee was one of the few big names that actually seemed to give a crap about the average person. Maybe he'll change his tune this time, but I don't think he'll convince the money boys. They would rather have a quite predictable Romney, rather than a Huckabee who has always been a bit suspect in the Republican party. Palin is even more suspect than Huckabee. Her first achievement in office was to work with Democrats to raise taxes on the oil companies. I don't think anyone controls Sarah. Good for her.

  16. Re:Great Job, Republican Judge on Judge Declares Federal Healthcare Plan (Partly) Unconstitutional · · Score: 1

    You are absolutely right and that is the only reasonable solution in this diverse society. Maybe when we are obviously and completely bankrupt, such solutions will be seriously considered.

  17. Re:Won't be as popular on Wikileaks Competitor In the Works · · Score: 1

    I think most people hate us and for good reason. We've been doing nasty things and killings lots and lots of people since we nuked Japan, twice. Google "Casualties of the Iraq War" and see the Wikipedia entry for our latest crime against humanity.

  18. The Real Reason on SCOTUS Rules Petiton Signatures Are Public Record · · Score: 1

    We all know the real reason someone is in favor of this decision. The vast majority of petitions are by conservatives. Now they and their family members will be subject to losing their jobs, verbal and physical harassment, and other forms of abuse. That is the ONLY thing that was at stake here. All else is rationalization. And of course, the high stakes are the real reason this went all the way to the Supreme Court. Would that it were otherwise, but openness is used selectively and only to weaken a targeted group.

  19. Re:Apple. on Ninth Suicide At iPhone Factory · · Score: 1

    "a political oligarchy that controls the people with an iron fist while allowing corporations to practice almost completely unrestricted capitalism". Sounds like the USA, but only if you add "and murdering people in the Middle East for oil".

  20. Mass Murder Has a Cost on Chicago Mayor Calls For "Brainiac High" · · Score: 1

    Expensive mass murder of innocent people abroad has repercussions at home. How terrible. We have to do something about this.

  21. Re:I'd do it the slow but secure way. on Need Help Salvaging Data From an Old Xenix System · · Score: 1

    Split, compress, and uuencode it before sending. Reverse process on other side.

  22. Re:Litigious society on Court Rules Against Vaccine-Autism Claims Again · · Score: 1

    You can always find, or imagine, a way that each of us influences others with nearly everything we do. We therefore have a ready reason to control other's behavior “for the good of society”. Experience, respect for human individuality, and prudence dictate that we err on the side of caution. This is especially true when there are commercial interests urging this control, as in the case of vaccines. Furthermore, like nearly everything in this once great country, “science” today is more about commerce than anything else. It simply serves money. Yesterday, I was talking to a mother with an young autistic boy. She's a Chinese immigrant, who is very upset that her children are effectively forced to take vaccines. It pains me to think that my country is possibly more fascist than her native country. It also pains me to think that she probably wishes she had remained in China, rather than emigrate to the “land of the free”. What a sad joke. It is also sad that political liberals today seem wedded to corporate interests above those of average people, who they seem to have great contempt for.