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User: seebs

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  1. Re:How is this different than christianity? on Google Aids Scientology-Linked Group CCHR With Pay-Per-Click Ads · · Score: 2

    There's a lot of very good material already written on the topic. Quick summary:

    1. The people who founded Scientology explicitly stated that was not a religion, but a scientific practice. They changed to calling it a "religion" solely for tax/legal purposes. That's an official statement from Hubbard himself, not speculation.
    2. Fairly dangerous and abusive. Look up Lisa McPherson, or Paulette Cooper.
    3. Lots of very shady practices, like pressuring members to have abortions so they won't be wasting money on kids that they could be donating to the organization. Yes, really.

    Plenty of stuff here you could look up. It's not so much about the specific beliefs as about the organizational structure and practice.

  2. Re:But is their criticism of Psychiatry wrong? on Google Aids Scientology-Linked Group CCHR With Pay-Per-Click Ads · · Score: 1

    I think there may have been a true statement somewhere in there, but it was too subtle for me to find. The anti-ADHD stuff is pure Scientology spin, promoted aggressively precisely because the benefit of ADHD medication for most people is so very, very, obvious. Similarly, the "not much better than placebo" claim is a massive overclaim. There's some specific drugs that are pretty unreliable, but the key is that that's averaging over a general population; if you look only at the people who react well to them, and you move other people to something else, it actually works pretty well.

    The claim that "no real disorders have been detected yet" is just plain stupid. Talk to people who are doing neuropsych, there is a ton of very nice, concrete, research being done on various cognitive abnormalities.

  3. Re:The answer to bad speech on Google Aids Scientology-Linked Group CCHR With Pay-Per-Click Ads · · Score: 2

    That doesn't mean they need to be actively funded by others.

  4. Re:Why do people listen to her? on Jenny McCarthy: "I Am Not Anti-Vaccine'" · · Score: 1

    Not really related, there were lots of people using other preservatives already, and long before it was established that Wakefield was commiting deliberate fraud, it was well-established that if something in vaccines was causing autism, it wasn't thimerosal.

  5. Re:Why do people listen to her? on Jenny McCarthy: "I Am Not Anti-Vaccine'" · · Score: 1

    I think that's because you're fucking with a well-researched medical procedure based on absolutely no information whatsoever that would show that you have a reason to do so.

  6. Re:Rift on Do Free-To-Play Games Get a Fair Shake? · · Score: 1

    Yeah. Rift does a very good job. I know at least one person who was raiding without ever having spent any money on the game, and also without having bought credits (the store currency) with in-game money. The game is built around the same tuning that was generally regarded as acceptable when it was subscription-based, and the majority of the purchases go towards convenience things, cosmetics, and gambling. If you really want to be powerful, the best stuff still requires you to actually play the game.

  7. Re:free to play isn't worth defending on Do Free-To-Play Games Get a Fair Shake? · · Score: 0

    Except... It's not actually true that these are all "games that are designed to exploit people for money on a continuous basis". At least some of the games that have adopted F2P models have worked very, very, hard to avoid exploiting players.

  8. Re:I think this is bullshit on Brendan Eich Steps Down As Mozilla CEO · · Score: 1

    That's a nice attempt at a dodge, but unrelated to the actual point, which is that you can find clear evidence of previously-existing hostility. It's not that people act to hurt whatever group of people they're bigoted against, and get backlash, and then start being hostile. They're hostile first.

  9. Re:TLDR? Exactly. on Judge (Tech) Advice By Results · · Score: 1

    I've never actually seen him say something worthwhile, and often what he says is painfully stupid. I don't know what the gimmick is, but it's been sort of a long-running sore point for ages. He's the one thing Slashdot has that's more annoying than the obvious insertions from the DICE people.

  10. Re:There's only one thing; on Start-Up Founders On Dealing With Depression · · Score: 2

    Pretty much this, yeah.

    You know, if any other part of your body hurt or stopped working as-expected, you'd probably go to a doctor pretty early on. But we have this cultural ideal that "willpower" is a virtue, so people want to "be strong". But you know, if stamina were a "virtue", would that mean that you should just laugh it off if you suddenly couldn't do normal things without being out of breath? No, it would not.

  11. Re:I think this is bullshit on Brendan Eich Steps Down As Mozilla CEO · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is wrong in so many ways. We have always recognized at least some marriages which we knew perfectly well would never produce children, because children are only part of the point of marriage. The purpose of marriage is to create family relationships. That's useful for kids, but it's also beneficial to lots of other people. Furthermore, there have been plenty of places recognizing marriages between same-sex couples for years, and even if there weren't, so what? We are allowed to do new things if we think they're useful.

    Mostly, it comes down to: No one is going to believe your feeble excuses, because we all know perfectly well that the people who don't think gays should be able to get married always just sort of happen to have a very noticeable personal hostility thing happening, even if they hide it somewhat, and that the arguments for that position are long-dead. The point at which several of the major former proponents of the position walked away because they realized that it was stupid and indefensible and motivated mostly by hatred was the point at which it stopped being a credible position to take.

    Mostly, though, I think your analysis sucks because you're not considering the many non-child-related functions of having an institution for the creation of family ties.

  12. Re:I think this is bullshit on Brendan Eich Steps Down As Mozilla CEO · · Score: 1

    We have pretty solid case law that marriage is indeed a civil right.

  13. Re:I think this is bullshit on Brendan Eich Steps Down As Mozilla CEO · · Score: 2

    You keep using words like "lynch" and "crucify", and those are really powerful emotional words... that are totally out of proportion to anything happening here.

    If you were to claim that James Byrd had been lynched, that would be credible and reasonably consistent with the facts. Claiming that someone powerful and wealthy was "lynched" because people said they disapproved strongly of him spending large amounts of money trying to harm other people is really pretty much not the same thing at all.

  14. Re:I think this is bullshit on Brendan Eich Steps Down As Mozilla CEO · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I don't see any persecution here. This is how free speech works; you get to say whatever you want, other people get to react to it.

  15. Re:We are the geeks, we are not tools for non-geek on Indie Game Jam Show Collapses Due To Interference From "Pepsi Consultant" · · Score: 1

    I think the key here is:

    The vast majority of people who have spent any time as an adult woman in our society would never dream of claiming it "doesn't matter". That you benefit from most of the ways it matters, and take them for granted, is the problem, not the solution.

    I think most people would agree that, if we could eliminate the disparities, there would be no real reason to pay attention to the issue any more, but that won't happen until we go through a period of being aware of them enough to do something about them.

  16. Re:We are the geeks, we are not tools for non-geek on Indie Game Jam Show Collapses Due To Interference From "Pepsi Consultant" · · Score: 1

    Sometimes, context is a thing. In terms of raw abilities, there is very little (apart from a few very specific biological functions) that cannot be done by both men and women. There might be some statistical variance, but in practice you are much better off evaluating individual competence only.

    However, there are specific experiences that only some people will have had, and those can lead to perspectives differing between people.

    Friend of mine once happened to go to lunch with some coworkers, and by coincidence ended up in a car in which she was the only white person. And so when the topic of conversation naturally turned to "places where the police pull you over and claim it was random", she was supriseed to find out that she had never experienced this, but that everyone else in the car had an actively-maintained mental map of the locations of "random" police stops. Because they had to assume that if they drove through a few of those, they would get pulled over at least once, and it would add a few minutes to how long it would take to get somewhere.

    This isn't a reflection of some kind of innate quality people get from their skin color that affects their ability to remember where the cops do or don't "randomly" pull people over, but it is a case where different people will have very different experiences.

    Men and women are both capable of being comparably-skilled programmers. But skill at programming is not the only useful thing in software development; awareness of the experiences users will be bringing to the table can be relevant.

  17. Re:Drama queens... on Indie Game Jam Show Collapses Due To Interference From "Pepsi Consultant" · · Score: 1

    All I'm getting is "blah blah blah I don't believe in science". When you can demonstrate the ability to completely and perfectly control your emotions in a controlled experiment, I will totally fake caring about what you say. Until then I'm not gonna even bother pretending.

  18. Re:Drama queens... on Indie Game Jam Show Collapses Due To Interference From "Pepsi Consultant" · · Score: 2

    That is really excellent advice for members of a species which isn't ours. Humans, however, really do have emotions, and they can't just shut them off. Furthermore, your proposed policy for what things should be like is basically the all-time champion of the Law of Unintended Consequences: If we adopt this policy, then the winning strategy is to constantly be an asshole to everyone, because if you can push them over the edge they lose.

  19. Re:We are the geeks, we are not tools for non-geek on Indie Game Jam Show Collapses Due To Interference From "Pepsi Consultant" · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There are pervasive differences in the experience of living in the US based entirely off gender (and others based on, say, race), so having someone female on a team will give you insights into things that an all-male team is extremely unlikely to be aware of. And vice versa, although that's much rarer.

    That people aren't aware of this is, to some extent, part of the problem.

  20. Re:Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra on Indie Game Jam Show Collapses Due To Interference From "Pepsi Consultant" · · Score: 1

    My first guess would have been "permanently decomission". Perhaps with a sledgehammer.

  21. Re:A features, an irksome burdden for most on Ask Slashdot: How To Handle Unfixed Linux Accessibility Bugs? · · Score: 1

    Except this is totally wrong, because the burden on other users consists of "turn it off if you don't want it", which you only have to do once ever, while the people who need the accommodation are gonna have serious problems without it.

    Disability accommodation is a good thing for society. Yes, it can have some costs for other people, but they are small costs and in general we can easily pay them.

  22. Re:So, we hate Peter now? on Peter Molyneux: Working For Microsoft Is Like Taking Antidepressants · · Score: 1

    I don't hate him, I just think he's being sort of a jerk. Well, that, and I continue to admire his absolutely unparalleled ability to create bugs in games that leave me wondering how anyone could have gotten those results on purpose, let alone by accident. (Favorite: In Amiga Powermonger, you could only save if every floppy drive the machine had contained a write-enabled disk. This is so much more work than simply using the existing writing facilities, and even then it's fairly impressively hard to get it wrong.)

  23. Re:Thanks for peptuating on Peter Molyneux: Working For Microsoft Is Like Taking Antidepressants · · Score: 1

    Then they weren't working very well, I'd say. "Depression" doesn't mean "extreme sadness", and if pills are flattening out your emotional state and removing the highs, either you're bipolar and that's a really good thing for everyone including you, or something's wrong with them.

  24. Re:There are many not worked up over it on Facebook Buying Oculus VR For $2 Billion · · Score: 1

    They're not, though. They're stating that they have compelling reason to believe that the "community-driven product" has already been destroyed. And really, I think their arguments are a lot better than yours, because they have arguments. Facebook's track record speaks for itself. The moment I heard this was real, I lost all interest in working on the Rift, buying one, or in any other way being involved with it.

    I have watched Facebook interact with various things, and if there is one thing that's been consistently true of them, it is that their entire view of the world is highly toxic to a lot of things I think are important, and I cannot coexist with their way of doing things. I don't trust the platform anymore. I cannot conceive of a level of claimed commitment that would cause me to believe that the device did not have tracking and reporting features built in intended to market me to advertisers, because that is all Facebook does, and it is all they will ever do, and if they tell you they aren't doing that, they are generally lying. So if they own this company, that is what it will do too. That's their only business model.

    I have seen so many companies turn seriously evil upon merely making a marketing deal with Facebook, and you want me to believe that a company bought outright by Facebook will stay legit? No.

  25. How many unhatched chickens? So many. on 3D Printing: Have You Taken the Plunge Yet? Planning To? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, you haven't actually tried to make any money, but you could see yourself doing it, and you are talking about how it would be nice if you choose to do it... Shouldn't you verify that you can actually successfully do such a thing before counting that as a selling point of the printers?