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User: Intrepid+imaginaut

Intrepid+imaginaut's activity in the archive.

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  1. Re:Are you saying that criminals don't exist? on 'Prisonized' Neighborhoods Make Recidivism More Likely · · Score: 2

    From the Swedish police it would seem:

    http://swedenreport.org/2014/1...

    I'm the first to take exceptional-sounding news with a large pinch of salt but he appears to have supported it up adequately.

  2. Re:Are you saying that criminals don't exist? on 'Prisonized' Neighborhoods Make Recidivism More Likely · · Score: 1

    I assume those bottom two levels you're referring to don't apply to the 50+ no-go areas in Sweden where the police aren't able to operate effectively?

  3. Re:So.. Sales are up then? on Canadian Piracy Rates Plummet As Industry Points To New Copyright Notice System · · Score: 1

    I find it hard to imagine music is even a major target for downloading these days - it's way too easy to simply go to youtube, find the song you want, download and convert it to an MP3.

  4. Fruit flies on Studying the Roots of Individuality · · Score: 1

    Please don't attempt to extrapolate human behaviour from the actions of tiny, tiny insects. That is all.

  5. Re:Ownership and Appreciation on From Commune To Sharing Economy Startup · · Score: 1

    Denmark has one of the highest rates of mental illness and suicide anywhere. It's very far from being "the happiest place on earth".

    https://www.lonelyplanet.com/t...

  6. Re:Anecdote on FAA: Big Tech Challenges For Massive Washington, DC Warbirds Flyover · · Score: 2

    I just randomly googled that and you ain't kidding: http://albumwar2.com/wp-conten...

  7. Re:Dosbox in a browser? on Twitter Stops Users From Playing DOS Games Inside Tweets · · Score: 1

    Whatever that was meant to do, it isn't doing it.

  8. If I owned this place and hell on Extreme Exoplanet Volcanism Possibly Detected On 55 Cancri E · · Score: 1

    I'd rent this place out and live in hell.

  9. Re:Capitalism does not create freedom on China Takes Its Already Strict Internet Regulations One Step Further · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure you fully understand the scope of the social welfare programme in question - for much of its existence, it supplied around a third of the citizens of Rome with what they needed to exist. It didn't do so for the fun of it, costing Rome an absolute fortune as it did, but rather because said citizens would otherwise revolt.

    While Nazi rhetoric consistently attacked the rich, the well born, the war profiteers, and the industrialists and while Nazi rhetoric consistently championed the working poor, the old, and the unemployed, how did the Nazis act once they had acquired actual power?

    If anything, Nazis in power were more hostile to business and to the "rich" when they ran Germany then when they were seeking power through democratic means. In 1937, four years after the Nazis gained power, Freund wrote of Hitler in Zero Hour that "Only in domestic affairs did Hitler follow his original plan to the letter."

    Graf von der Golz, the Deputy Commissar in the Ministry of Economics in a speech to businessmen reported in the Nazi periodical Völkischer Beobachter on July 15, 1934: "Any organization that represents the interests of the employer will be regarded as illegal and disbanded and the guilty parties will be prosecuted."

    Fritz Thyssen, one of the industrialists who did help bring the Nazis to power, said in 1940: "Soon Germany will not be any different from Bolshevik Russia; the heads of enterprises who do not fulfill the conditions which the ‘Plan' prescribes will be accused of treason against the German people, and shot."

    The Nazis on October 16, 1934 raised the highest income tax rate from 40% to 50%, and on February 17, 1939 raised that highest rate again to 55%. A decree of September 9, 1939 again increased income taxes, but exempted incomes of 2,400 Reichmarks a year or less.

    Comparative Major European Governments, a 1937 book, notes that through several new laws on December 4, 1934 banking, credits, and stock exchanges passed under complete government control and that the Loan-Stock Law limited stock company dividends to six percent in some cases and to eight percent in others, with profits over that required to be transferred to the Gold Discount Bank, which was in turn required to invest them in government loans or municipal debt service bonds.

    Nazi hostility to individual wealth was matched by its hostility to big business. The same act of October 16, 1934 removed the exemption on business taxes for many types of businesses and it increased the progressivity of the business taxes; an act of August 27, 1936 raised the general business tax rate from 20% to 25% and to 30% for each year thereafter; then on July 25, 1938 corporate profits of more than 100,000 Reichmarks per year were subjected to an additional tax of 35% with that rising to 40% for each year thereafter; and on March 20, 1939, the Nazis imposed an excess profits tax. In four years, Nazis had raised taxes to approximately one fourth of the national income.

    Stephen Roberts, in his 1937 book, The House That Hitler Built, noted that compulsory loans had been extracted from banks and insurance companies, and that these grew to such an extent that armament firms complained that they no longer could bear this in addition to all the other assessments like the eight percent Labor Front charges assessed.

    The Nazis passed legislation to make it difficult to form or maintain corporations and to limit the authority of directors of corporations or of stockholders in corporations. Directors of corporations, for example, were allowed to grant bonuses only upon condition that they were directly tied to profit and upon condition that the board of directors authorize "voluntary social contributions" to employees, granting employees effectively an automatic share in corporate profits.

    Later, the tax on directors' fees was increased from 10% in March 1933 to 20% in February 1939. The capital market in Germany was almost completely closed to private issues and banks were subject to a succ

  10. Re:Capitalism does not create freedom on China Takes Its Already Strict Internet Regulations One Step Further · · Score: 1

    Benito Mussolini was a socialist and earned the title “Il Duce” as the leader of the socialists in Italy. When he founded the fascist party, its program called for implementing a minimum wage, expropriating property from landowners, repealing titles of nobility, creating state-run secular schools and imposing a progressive tax rate. Mussolini took socialism and turned it in a more populist and militaristic direction, but remained a modernizing, secular man of the left.

  11. Re:Capitalism does not create freedom on China Takes Its Already Strict Internet Regulations One Step Further · · Score: 3, Insightful

    China was a struggling third world country before they wisely began to adopt capitalism, It's far from a free market, operating more like a nation sized corporation, but to call it communist is off the rails. It still has a caste system for example. It's operating pretty much along the lines China has operated for quite a long time, except without an obvious emperor.

    Imperial Rome was sort of similar, but it's worth noting that the public had a strong voice in politics, as indicated by the bread and circuses they were provided to keep them happy, a fully operational social welfare system that existed thousands of years ago.

    Nazi Germany was never capitalist, for example Hitler in 1927: "We are socialists. We are enemies of today's capitalistic system for the exploitation of the economically weak, with its unfair salaries, with its unseemly evaluation of a human being according to wealth and property instead of responsibility and performance, and we are determined to destroy this system under all conditions." Goebbels: "The worker in a capitalist state - that is his greatest misfortune - no longer a human being, no longer a creator, no longer a shaper of things. He has become a machine."

      In 1941, former Nazi boss of Danzig, Hermann Rauschning, wrote that the last part of the German Revolution was Nazism, which was just as much a realization of Marxist as of nationalist ideas, and he notes that the only ones who refuse to admit this are supporters of Marxist theories and Nazis themselves. Rauschning also writes in his book that Marxism itself was part of a single great revolutionary movement which included Marxist Socialism, Nazism, Communist Bolshevism, Fascism and nihilism. Rauschning knew Hitler well and repudiated him and his movement at great risk before the rest of the world recognized the full danger of Nazism.

    Much the same could be said of fascist Italy.

    The only group in your list that could credibly be called capitalist were the British Empire, and during its height (mostly mid 19th century to the start of the 20th century) liberty and democracy did indeed bloom, culminating in universal suffrage and the outline of what we today call a modern democracy appearing. Not so much in the colonies of course but that was the Imperial part of the equation

  12. Re:Never learned jQuery on JavaScript Devs: Is It Still Worth Learning jQuery? · · Score: 1

    That's probably why you've never seen a reason to learn jQuery.

  13. Re: Pontifical Academy of Sciences on Pope Attacked By Climate Change Skeptics · · Score: 1

    He pretty much called the pope a moron: http://io9.com/5839933/did-gal...

  14. Re: Pontifical Academy of Sciences on Pope Attacked By Climate Change Skeptics · · Score: 1

    As far as I'm aware he brought many of his troubles more or less on himself due to his unfortunate habit of insulting a medieval absolute monarch.

  15. Re:I have a depressing feeling about this... on Wormholes Untangle a Black Hole Paradox · · Score: 1

    Yes some people like to exercise their imaginations outside of textbooks that will almost certainly be rewritten by this time next century, depressing stuff indeed. I've even heard that some of the cretins even enjoy such flights of fancy!

    The horror.

  16. Re:Capture some smoke, ash particles before they s on Yellowstone Supervolcano Even Bigger Than We Realized · · Score: 1

    If Yellowstone goes boom it will almost certainly wipe out most complex life on the planet, and we'll be very fortunate not to count ourselves among the casualties. I'm afraid some balloons just aren't going to cut it.

  17. Re:Interesting, but that is all on Yellowstone Supervolcano Even Bigger Than We Realized · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure underground is such a great idea - underwater now, that might be a different story.

  18. Re:Better cure has been known for quite some time on Ancient Hangover Cure Discovered In Greek Texts · · Score: 1

    Seems a bit like chopping off your foot to fix an ingrown toenail.

  19. Re:GCHQ on Twitter Moves Non-US Accounts To Ireland, and Away From the NSA · · Score: 2

    By that rationale the CIA has jurisdiction in Beijing.

    Jusrisdiction does not mean what you think it means.

  20. Re:GCHQ on Twitter Moves Non-US Accounts To Ireland, and Away From the NSA · · Score: 4, Informative

    GCHQ has no jurisdiction in Ireland. Different country, not part of the UK and all that.

  21. Re:I'll take it on Denver TSA Screeners Manipulated System In Order To Grope Men's Genitals · · Score: 1

    You maggots are like little fat marxist daleks waddling around the place shrieking "deconstruct! deconstruct! deconstruct!" even if you lack the self awareness to know this yourselves. The irony is that your entire assemblage is being deconstructed as we speak. The future does not look bright for you.

  22. Re:I'll take it on Denver TSA Screeners Manipulated System In Order To Grope Men's Genitals · · Score: 1

    Tell me, if a woman said "But if a man makes a pass at me or gropes me, I have no problem decking them," would you then respond with "Are you afraid you might like it?"

    Not edgy, not cool, and mostly just another gormless attack on male heterosxeuality. The vast majority of dudes aren't gay. Deal with it.

  23. Re:Like they'll really be fined enough to care. on EU To Hit Google With Antitrust Charges · · Score: 1

    Software patents aren't recognised by the EU as far as I'm aware.

  24. Re: Lifestyle on California Looks To the Sea For a Drink of Water · · Score: 2

    It was pretty clear what you meant and you weren't making a point about farming. This kind of econut proselytising is why people are not inclined to listen to environmentalist activist groups.

    Not just showing less (FYI we shower just as much in Europe)

    Not even showering less. Get the memo, the lifestyles of the citizenry aren't the problem.

  25. Re:this isn't going to make you safe. on DHS Wants Access To License-plate Tracking System, Again · · Score: 1

    One of the most interesting posts I've read here all year.