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User: EuclideanSilence

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Comments · 438

  1. Re:What's wrong with hierarchy? on Meet the 36 People Who Run Wikipedia · · Score: 2

    Wikipedia has positioned itself as a reliable source of information.

    It was my understanding that wikipedia was attempting to position itself as a reliable source of references.

  2. Re:Silly on Tim Cook: "I'm Proud To Be Gay" · · Score: 1

    Did you get beat up in high school for being 5'10"?

    I guarantee you that height is more correlated to fights than gayness. No one can look at you and see that you are gay, but any drunk meat-head in a bar looking to impress some airhead girl can look at someone and see that they are short.

    Height is, in my opinion, the greatest discriminatory stereotype of all of them. There is a reason presidents are usually the taller candidate, and that midgets are used as comic relief. Humanity will probably never overcome height discrimination, gayness doesn't even come close.

  3. Re:Silly on Tim Cook: "I'm Proud To Be Gay" · · Score: 1

    If you were exactly 5'10'' that would be pretty cool. You could become the new SI unit for length. An international standard. All that careful dieting and your dreams are realized. Pride, women, fame...

  4. Re:Yawn on Tim Cook: "I'm Proud To Be Gay" · · Score: 1

    Stop asking for "acceptance" from the public and just live YOUR life.

    Ah, I see GP's subtlety was lost on someone. I'll give you a hint. By "discrimination", he meant the kind of problem that occurs when meat-heads with something to prove need an easy target. See if you can guess the rest.

  5. Re:Gay? on Tim Cook: "I'm Proud To Be Gay" · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why would you say:

    1) He shouldn't be proud because being gay is not a choice

    but

    2) He should be unproud if he was a paedophile?

    Do you consider paedophilia to not be a choice? How do you get +4 insightful for saying something so blatantly illogical?

  6. Re:The ACLU is busy with real rights violations on CHP Officers Steal, Forward Nude Pictures From Arrestee Smartphones · · Score: 1

    Privacy is not defined as a right. "No true Scotsman" arguments are arguments which arbitrarily redefine terms. Thus you have also need to work on your understanding of logic.

    "this isn't a rights violation because privacy isn't a right"

    Assuming you mean "should be a right" rather than "is a right" as is the common misusage, it is still not a "No true Scotsman" fallacy. It's not even a wrong style of argument. For example, change the "privacy" to "running around naked" to make an isomorphic argument. "This isn't a rights violation because running around naked isn't a right". See how that isn't problematic?

    The issue you seem to be having with logic is "confirmation bias". Since you are upset by what occurred, you are agreeing with every argument which argues your feelings and disagreeing with every argument which disagrees. It's a common mistake as well. I call it "you aren't right because you don't care to be right".

  7. Re:The ACLU is busy with real rights violations on CHP Officers Steal, Forward Nude Pictures From Arrestee Smartphones · · Score: 1, Informative

    A "no true Scotsman" argument is when one redefines terms in a contrived way. When you specifically choose your definitions to support your argument, rather than choosing generally agreed upon definitions, you are making a "no true Scotsman" argument.

    This, and the other post you responded to, are not "no true Scotsman" sophistries. They are not redefining privacy, they are saying that it is a trivial invasion of privacy. An example of a "no true Scotsman" sophistry here would be: "this isn't an invasion of privacy, because it was police officers who obtained the photographs." Notice how it arbitrarily chooses to make an exception to the common definition solely for the sake of defending the argument.

    If you are having trouble understanding logic and argument, the I suggest imagining yourself as an uninterested observer. It may take practice, but you'll eventually get the hang of it.

  8. Re:$3500 fine? on Tech Firm Fined For Paying Imported Workers $1.21 Per Hour · · Score: 1

    if you have to pay people more, they have more to spend.

    That's idiotic. It's like trying to fly by lifting up on your own boots.

    You can't improve the spending power of a population by taxing them, whether by direct or inflationary tax. People have more to spend when you put less restrictions on what they can do with their labor.

  9. Re: New York on NY Doctor Recently Back From West Africa Tests Positive For Ebola · · Score: 5, Funny

    However, this virus has a 50-70% mortality rate and there is no vaccine.

    Does that mean it has a 30% - 50% immortality rate? Hmm....

  10. Re:German illegal? on How English Beat German As the Language of Science · · Score: 1

    It was made illegal in 23 states. And this was during a time when the 14th amendment wasn't being taken literally by the supreme court. So except for the 14th amendment, it wasn't a violation of the US Constitution.

    The Sedition Act of 1918 is a better example, where Freedom of Speech was infringed: "any disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language about the form of government of the United States...or the flag of the United States, or the uniform of the Army or Navy".

  11. Re:Incredible on BitHammer, the BitTorrent Banhammer · · Score: 1

    No one would do at a buffet what the bit-torrent users are doing on the network because of the beating the bit-torrenters would take. Vigilante justice is what prevents this thing from happening person-to-person. People may condemn "vigilante justice" with righteous indignation, but the fact that it exists as an option is what keeps many people from doing what they could if they were anonymous. Or have you not noticed the misery that the anonymity of the internet has created?

  12. Re:Incredible on BitHammer, the BitTorrent Banhammer · · Score: 1

    He's just poisoning his own share of the food. The fact that the other took it and ate it, they got what they deserve.

    People who live their life by "as much as possible for me, and I don't care who I hurt in the process" open themselves up to punishment by their own beliefs. Live by the sword, die by the sword.

  13. Re:DOJ Oaths on National Security Letter Issuance Likely Headed To Supreme Court · · Score: 1

    It is your first amendment right not to believe in the second amendment.

    It is your first amendment right not to be prosecuted for declaring your disagreement with the second amendment.

    It is NOT your first amendment right to request government employees to ignore your second amendment right. That is criminal. You can declare your belief that they should, but any intention to actually carry it out should land you in jail. And that goes for all constitutional rights.

  14. Re: Time To Occupy Comcast HQ? on Complain About Comcast, Get Fired From Your Job · · Score: 1

    ...[capitalism] breaks down, either due to unlimited demand as in a health care market, which is effectively buying life, on which there is no price too great to overcome the natural will to live...

    The exact same argument can be applied to buying food in a grocery store. So by isomorphic substitution it must be a wrong argument.

    The difference isn't demand, it's supply. Very few hospitals, lots of people wanting health care. Maybe we should be looking at how much training institutions charge for their government-granted privilege of choosing who gets to practice medicine. Put some price caps on health care licensing organizations, and watch the supply go up and the price go down.

  15. Re:And what's the problem ? on Complain About Comcast, Get Fired From Your Job · · Score: 1

    If he contacted Comcast from his company, there was a good chance that it was related to his job for the company.

  16. Re:What 1st Amendment Rights? on Complain About Comcast, Get Fired From Your Job · · Score: 1

    Yes, Comcast is the government. *Every* public utility is the government, whether it is sewage management or Comcast.

    Consider this: try to make a company to compete with Comcast. Assume all the powers that Comcast has. Just go around tearing down the copper that Comcast "owns", and lay down your own. Rip up people's front yards. You'll find out quickly that you are not allowed to compete because Comcast is the government.

    There is nothing unreasonable about organizations created by the legislature, startup funded by tax dollars, and existing by grant of government right such as eminent domain to be held to *every single standard* that the government itself is. That includes the first amendment. It includes public management of accounting.

    Comcast never had any claim to not being a government agency. Ever.

  17. Re:Why do people still care about C++ for kernel d on Object Oriented Linux Kernel With C++ Driver Support · · Score: 2

    Considering that most new phones are being released at 2 GB+ configurations, I care less and less about 'small embedded systems that are becoming more and more niche and obscure'.

    Being able to write an efficient program will never become an obsolete skill. If you are using excessive memory, that means your program is wasting CPU cycles. It means you are running my battery down and making me wait for your bloated program to load.

  18. Re: Fristy Pawst! on Ebola Has Made It To the United States · · Score: 1

    Only someone who wanted to believe you would believe you. Absolutely no objective individual would agree that "it's not theft because you see it coming beforehand". But then it doesn't matter what you think does it? Businesses will keep relocating (or not opening at all) while you keep rationalizing.

  19. Re:So-to-speak legal on Comcast Allegedly Asking Customers to Stop Using Tor · · Score: 1

    If my neighbor wishes to die but she cannot kill herself, I could kill her provided we both agreed to!! It's our LIBERTARIAN RIGHT! If the cops find her dead, I should NOT be investigated. All I need to do is explain that we both had a VERBAL CONTRACT and that should be enough!

    It's nice of you to joke about that. Lots of people have parents living in perpetual pain that are not allowed, by the government, to have a doctor or relative end their suffering. Keep trying to insult libertarians, and if you get what you deserve, you'll spend the last years of your life attached to a machine rolling in your own shit. The government will be on your side, making sure you have no choice in the matter.

  20. Re:Not about ease, about authority on School Installs Biometric Fingerprint System For Cafeteria · · Score: 1

    What's wrong with that?

  21. Re:Common Carrier on California Declares Carpooling Via Ride-Share Services Illegal · · Score: 1

    Value is more than just money. Everyone acts for profit, whether what you want is money or not.

  22. Re:real problem is patent and copyright length on Software Patents Are Crumbling, Thanks To the Supreme Court · · Score: 1

    I wish I had a gold dollar for every random length of time I've seen assigned to patents or copyrights. But this is amazing. THREE arbitrary lengths of time in yet ANOTHER patent/copyright reform post.

    Do yourself a favor and look up all the other posts that came before you. Everyone has some length of time that they think is best, but no one has any reason for it. Because there is no reason for it.

    While at the same time, the patent/copyright forever movement has 1 unified goal. Anything closer to forever. This is why there will be no reform, because you refuse to use reason.

  23. Re:yet if we did it on Deputy Who Fatally Struck Cyclist While Answering Email Will Face No Charges · · Score: 1

    ...law...it works.

    You so sure about that?

  24. Re:Stupid on Apple's Diversity Numbers: 70% Male, 55% White · · Score: 1

    Apple is competing on commercials and patent lawyers, the company sells its image more than it sells any engineering expertise. For a company like Apple, appearing politically correct may be in the shareholders best interest.

  25. Re:And this is the same for copyrights. on Patents That Kill · · Score: 1

    Could Pixar have been kickstarted for ToyStory 1?

    Perhaps if they had started out as a company that made stories with decent original plots instead of a expensive graphics company then yes. It wouldn't exactly hurt the industry if producers had to show actual story telling talent before getting fortunes for making shallow eye candy.