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User: Grishnakh

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  1. Re:The results are deliberately skewed on Racial Discrimination Affects Virtual Reality Characters Too · · Score: 1

    Oh bullshit. *Most* cops are evil. Any time a cop does something evil, and his fellow cops defend him, don't testify against him, lie in testifying against him, or refuse to take a stand against him in any way, that makes *all* off them (in that department) evil.

    This "small percentage" bullshit is just that, and I'm sick and tired of morons like you spouting that crap. A few bad apples spoils the entire bunch, and that's what's happened with cops. Departments which don't make sure to keep their ranks clean of the bad ones become departments full of bad cops, and that's how most police departments are in the US. There might be a few good one out there (which you never hear about because they don't have any problems), but they're a minority of the population of cops, since all the worst police departments are the ones in big cities, especially the LAPD and NYPD (which is trying to claim that murders in NYC are up because of marijuana legalization in Colorado).

    This has nothing to do with races. Races of people are not governmental, hierarchal organizations. There is no "chief" in charge of all black people, but there is a police chief in charge of every police department.

  2. Re:Bad idea on Snowden Reportedly In Talks To Return To US To Face Trial · · Score: 1

    There's nothing ironic about your comment. Yes, everyone knows that Russia isn't exactly a nation that values free speech. It's also one of the few places where Snowden could go because the US has so much power over other nations (look at all the supposedly-human-rights-respecting European nations like Sweden which happily allowed the US to illegally abduct people and take them to black sites for torture, called "extraordinary rendition"), since Russia does not do extradition and likes to thumb their nose at the US, and is also a place where the CIA is not about to go abducting people since the repercussions if it was discovered and publicized would be utterly catastrophic.

    The fact that Russia would not treat a whistleblower of its own secrets kindly is completely irrelevant, because Snowden is not a Russian and would never be employed in such a capacity in Russia.

  3. Re:The results are deliberately skewed on Racial Discrimination Affects Virtual Reality Characters Too · · Score: 1

    Non-brown-skinned cops *are* evil. However, cops are not normal people, and the rest of us, regardless of our ethnicity, are not responsible for their behavior (beyond the collective responsibility we bear towards controlling our governments).

  4. Re:you care more for your own kind, its science! on Racial Discrimination Affects Virtual Reality Characters Too · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Resolving conflict through violence, males procreating with as many females as possible and preventing others from doing likewise, extreme tribalism etc.

    The pre-European-contact Hawaiians and many other indigenous cultures (pre-European-contact usually) completely disagree with you. In Hawaiian culture, they didn't even have marriage; people just had sex with whoever, whenever, no one knew who kids' fathers were, and the kids were raised collectively by their villages. In some South American tribe, people think kids can have multiple fathers, so women wanting a kid have sex with a bunch of different men they like, hoping to endow the child with traits from each of them.

    It's only various expansionist cultures which pushed the idea that women are owned by men and their sexuality is to be controlled by them.

  5. Re:Bad idea on Snowden Reportedly In Talks To Return To US To Face Trial · · Score: 1

    Snowden does not work for the Russian government, nor is he ever likely to. What he's been doing for a job over there, I'm not sure, but I'm quite sure they're not going to employ him in a job doing the same thing he was doing in the USA. At best, he can just work in private-sector jobs there which have nothing to do with the government.

    Yes, if he exposed government corruption in Russia, he wouldn't be treated well. But why would he ever be in a position to see such corruption and expose it?

  6. Re:Scandinavians on Doomsday Vault: First Tree Samples Arrive At Underground Seed Store · · Score: 1

    The US has a nasty history with regard to slavery and the treatment of indigenous peoples, but that doesn't have much bearing on its current culture.

    I'm not talking about Scandinavian culture 100 years ago, only right now.

  7. Re:serious question on Marissa Mayer On Turning Around Yahoo · · Score: 1

    thanks for that information. but other than the mail, none of that is anything they did. they bought out other companies. I mean thats great for them, flickr is a good platform, im sure tumblr as well. but buying a company and innovating are 2 different things.

    Most big companies are like this.

    Look at Microsoft, their history is full of purchases: Powerpoint, Hotmail, Visio, Dynamics, Skype, Nokia, Bungie,

  8. Re:Scandinavians on Doomsday Vault: First Tree Samples Arrive At Underground Seed Store · · Score: 1

    I never said they were poor. However, they have a really small population compared to the US, Russia, and China, and a much smaller GNP as a result. So why aren't those countries doing useful things like this?

  9. Re: Live on Spock and the Legacy of Star Trek · · Score: 2

    The 1st season of TNG was a mess; it got better afterwards when Gene became less involved and Rick Berman took over. He's really the guy we can thank for TNG being the classic it was. He took Gene's great vision, and made a great show out of it. It also helped when Gene's drinking buddy Maurice Hurley left the show, as he was a writer and had a lot of sway over the scripts. He's the reason Gates McFadden left during the 2nd season.

    As for the Federation not being superior, how do you figure? They weren't militaristic, so of course they weren't easily able to easily overcome the Romulans and Klingons who devoted all their resources to empire-building and the military. It's just like Russia today. Their economy sucks but they're still holding onto lots of territory and have lots of power because that territory holds valuable natural resources, and they have a huge and powerful military to guard it and push their agenda, including seizing land from neighboring nations.

  10. Re: Live on Spock and the Legacy of Star Trek · · Score: 1

    BS, TNG was a great series. However, it was really rough and kinda bad during the first season, and into the 2nd.

    What worked was when Gene was the figurehead and kinda oversaw things, so that people were working according to his vision, but Gene was not involved in any nitty-gritty details. He was a lot like George Lucas: he came up with some cool ideas and visions for things, but when they were executed by other people is when the final product was really fantastic.

    Gene became much less involved in the show after the 2nd season, and that's when it really shined, at least until it just got too old and stale. The 3rd-5th seasons were amazing, and some of the best TV ever made.

    The same thing happened in TOS too. All the best episodes were when Gene wasn't so hands-on.

    Now with Gene gone, it's gone to crap because they aren't using his vision at all, they're just recycling and trying to make money off of things from the prior series, but without the vision that really made it ST.

  11. Re:Live on Spock and the Legacy of Star Trek · · Score: 1

    I actually like the guy they have playing Bones on the competing fan-made Star Trek Phase II series. The other actors, not so much, but the McCoy guy is great. They should swap him with the Bones guy from ST: Continues, because all their actors are great except for the McCoy guy. My office desk is less wooden.

  12. Re:Live on Spock and the Legacy of Star Trek · · Score: 1

    Great post. I feel mostly the same way, except I never bothered with JJ's 2nd movie because I was too disappointed by the 1st one.

    The real problem with Star Trek, however, was that it was unrealistic in its optimism and with everyone having such excellent values. They said many times in the series that genetic engineering was bad, was banned, etc. (except for that 2nd-series Pulaski episode in TNG, for some odd reason), but the only way humanity is going to be that moral is if it's engineered into them, or we do something to engineer sociopathy out of our species. Right now, sociopaths are in charge, and are exceedingly common, and their values permeate our society. Just look at the replies to your post: these days, the only thing that matters is money and profit, that's what makes a person "good". Even the Christians will tell you this these days: God favors people who make more money, and loves rich people more, and poor people are poor because God has abandoned them. Popular TV preachers like Joel Osteen will happily tell you this, and countless Christian churches preach this theology.

    Of course, even Star Trek had its dark side, but it was in the past: we were supposed to have the Eugenics Wars back in the 1990s, and we're supposed to have WWIII sometime soon. Only after all that calamity is Zephram Cochrane supposed to invent the warp engine, meet the Vulcans, and quickly propel us into the galactic neighborhood as seen in STE, with humanity going from a war-torn society to eradicating poverty inside a century. So according to ST, we're supposed to be living in a pretty shitty time right now. That seems ridiculously optimistic however (that going through WWIII and meeting the Vulcans will suddenly turn us into a wonderful race of moralistic do-gooders without a bunch of sociopaths running our society like we have now).

    What I like to tell people in discussions like this is that Star Trek does show our society, but not in the normal episodes; they're in the "mirror" episodes! That's us: the evil humans who run around murdering and conquering anyone and anything we can. If we ever invent warp drive and phasers, the galaxy is going to wish they only had the Klingons to deal with.

  13. Re: Live on Spock and the Legacy of Star Trek · · Score: 2

    Exactly. Also, the Kardashians are superior people because they have lots of money, and that's why the rest of us need to spend our time watching their family drama on their TV show, because with all that money, their lives are obviously much more interesting and important than ours.

  14. Scandinavians on Doomsday Vault: First Tree Samples Arrive At Underground Seed Store · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Here again, the Scandinavians prove they are the most superior culture on the planet. While much larger nations with far more resources are spending on their resources on military adventurism and weapons systems (including nations who also have possessions far north of the Arctic Circle, namely Russia), the Scandinavians have the highest quality of life in the world and are looking out for the future with this seed vault.

  15. Re:Acorns on Doomsday Vault: First Tree Samples Arrive At Underground Seed Store · · Score: 1

    They're frozen, silly. That's why it's in Svalbard (go look it up on Google Maps). It's pretty close to cryogenic storage up there.

  16. Re:Thieves looking to steal metal? lolwut? on Vandalism In Arizona Shuts Down Internet and Phone Service · · Score: 1

    Yep, tweekers are pretty much a lost cause.

    It's not just copper piping they can steal; they'll also steal electrical wiring. Nothing's too small or low-value for them.

    Also, I don't think you can replace copper with PVC; you can use some other stuff, like PEX, but PVC isn't used for high-pressure supply piping as far as I know, at least not inside walls. I have seen it used for irrigation systems though. I think the problem is that you can't use PVC for hot water supply lines.

  17. Re:Thieves looking to steal metal? lolwut? on Vandalism In Arizona Shuts Down Internet and Phone Service · · Score: 4, Informative

    No, it was most likely metal thieves. There's tons and tons of them in Phoenix, since that city is chock full of meth-heads and illegal aliens, both of whom steal any metal they can get their hands on so they can take them to the metal recyclers in South Phoenix and get a few bucks. They've had all kinds of problems with metal theft there for a long time; not only are new-home construction sites frequently burgled of their wire and copper pipe, they've even resorted to stealing catalytic converters from vehicles in parking lots (using a portable reciprocating saw).

    There's been lots of cases of metal thieves trying to steal electric wire from high-voltage installations and being killed in the process.

  18. Re:Boring on An Evidence-Based Approach To Online Dating · · Score: 1

    Catholic priests and ISIS fighters are good examples of why male celibacy is a very bad thing.

    Of course, being in a sexless marriage isn't much good either...

    My solution to this: we need to genetically engineer people somehow so people don't have to be single.

  19. Re:To answer your question on Intel Moving Forward With 10nm, Will Switch Away From Silicon For 7nm · · Score: 1

    Beta was not superior to VHS. No one liked having to change tapes in the middle of the movie. Your analogy is like saying the P4 was a better chip than AMD's offering at that time, if your criteria for "good" is "performance per watt". Beta was better in some ways, but not ways that consumers cared about.

  20. Re:Attitude on An Evidence-Based Approach To Online Dating · · Score: 1

    I'm not that young any more (which doesn't help); I'm about 40. I'm separated, not single, but that means I'm back in the dating game and looking to meet new women obviously. But I'm finding that, for me, nothing's changed much since my late 20s when I was last in the dating game. The biggest difference, I guess, is that my dating pool does seem to be a bit wider, in that there are a lot of late-20s women interested in dating men up to my age (but that's about the cut-off), so my range is from about 27 up to 47, whereas in my late 20s it was narrower, probably only about 23 to 31. And of course, I've now been through one marriage so I'm a bit paranoid about making sure I don't hook up with someone that I don't think is really right for me, as I feel I rushed into it before, so now if I see a woman's profile online and it has too much commonality with my current wife, I pass.

    Your novel sounds really interesting, and does sound a lot like me (now, not when younger; I didn't consider the location factor much back then, which in retrospect I think was a big mistake; I was in a (different) big metro area then and thought that was good enough). I would be interested in reading it and providing feedback if you like. Thanks!

  21. Re: Attitude on An Evidence-Based Approach To Online Dating · · Score: 1

    Um, I don't think that's going to help matters unless most of us decide to try being gay.

    Slashdot dating tips, sure; surely I'm not the only one here who needs advice. But a dating service? Unless it's homosexual, you need to actually have a good mix of both sexes for that to work. There is not a significant number of women here who are looking for a relationship. (I imagine what very, very few women we do have here, are all attached and not looking.)

  22. Re:Boring on An Evidence-Based Approach To Online Dating · · Score: 1

    True, but we still hold monogamy as the ideal, and then when someone doesn't live up to it, then the relationship is ended, frequently involving the court system and some expensive lawyers.

    If you're openly non-monogamous, you can avoid all that.

  23. Re:Boring on An Evidence-Based Approach To Online Dating · · Score: 1

    Well, we also delegate our politics because we have societies with more than a few hundred or thousand people now. These days, a group of 1000 people is a small town, and a small city has 50k. In the ancient world, that was a very large city. I imagine the Romans probably did a lot of innovation as far as cities, by bringing us aqueducts to improve sanitation, easily the bane of human civilization.

  24. Re:Attitude on An Evidence-Based Approach To Online Dating · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the advice! I've never really had much success in even seeing any women I have much interest in IRL, which is part of my problem (and was back in my 20s too; it hasn't really changed much). I just don't see a lot of available, attractive women in the grocery store. But much of this isn't too different from the approach I take with online dating.

    Maybe I should try staying at a Holiday Inn Express though....

  25. Re:Boring on An Evidence-Based Approach To Online Dating · · Score: 1

    I don't know about this. With the upper classes back then, marriages were usually arranged and had nothing to do with love, only property rights and strategic alliances and such. So of course they didn't want to sleep together, they really didn't even like each other much.

    The lower classes weren't so much like this; they were just peasants, so they married people they liked.

    However, I do think you're right about relationships not lasting a lifetime any more. There's also good evidence that monogamy really isn't natural for us either, and many people in non-monogamous relationships are happier and have stronger relationships than typical married monogamous people. Many older cultures were completely non-monogamous, such as the Hawaiians before European contact.