While I am not privy to the specifics, the summary does say the women were forced into it to pay off debts to crime bosses. So, if the information is correct.. the women were victims. If they were prostitutes by choice, that is a different story.
Religious fervor? I don't see how religion, not that I have one, plays into what I said. And for clarification, I had meant that it doesn't eat the fat first. It'll consume both during starvation.
Actually, burning muscle before fat in that case is exactly what would happen. If you starve your body of too many calories, it turns to burning muscle as it costs more energy to maintain.
Their point was the difference between the two definitions of diet (noun) one being the long term, what one normally consumes. The other being the generally short term change to ones dietary habits to induce weight loss.
You're an AC, so I don't expect too much here. But, you're apparently the kind of idiot that cannot grasp that humans are a complex biological organism. To say people have a choice in their diet is all well and good. To ignore the fact that physiological processes in the body will affect the choices made is just willful idiocy. The point of these studies isn't to remove blame from fat people that just like to eat. It's to help understand the why and how of the way the body does its thing. With that information, people can take steps to improve their gains when trying to lose weight.
Windows 10 is a paid for product. Yes, most people got free upgrades to it. However, it's disingenuous to act like it's a free product. Anyone building/buying a new computer with Windows 10 is likely paying for Windows 10.
When talking about a completely arbitrary set of rules, designed to facilitate communication between people, common usage should be the ultimate deciding factor for what is correct.
All language is just a collection of common usage. It follows its own evolutionary process. What was correct in the past or present will not, and should not, necessarily be correct in the future. The point of language is to attempt clear communication between people. Correct/incorrect usage should be derived from how it's used by the populace, not forced upon the populace.
Right now? Cost. You're going to pay at least twice as much for the laptop as for the console. However, it's at least close enough that it can be considered an option given the extra functionality.
I mentioned it in another reply, but I don't agree with our current system of registry. I do think sex offenders need a different system of parole, chiefly closer watch on whereabouts and place of residence, but I'm mostly of the same mind. If they can control themselves and show reasonable proof of such, they deserve to be treated like any other person.
While other crimes still have very real victims, sex crimes tend to be perceived as more egregious by society. I imagine most people wouldn't appreciate the idea of "gambling" on the chances.of someone else being assaulted by a sex offender. Monetary restitution for victims isn't likely to provide much comfort to the victims. Further, false claims by "victims" would be a real concern.
Now, I'm assuming you weren't literally providing that as a valid replacement. I'll also say I'm not a proponent of the current registry system. However, I do recognize how we got here and the difficulty in trying to find a fairer balance that society will accept. It's often hard to fight against overzealous well-meaning.
Let's be honest here. Jail time is designed to be a deterrent/punishment to unwanted behavior. There may be programs to rehabilitate, but that's only secondary at best. Further, there is no real way to accurately judge whether an individual will commit again after release. As a society, we have decided that people deserve the right to be released after serving their time. We've also determined that recidivism is a real concern. Registries are an attempt at trying to let them out of prison, knowing people can better themselves, while still acknowledging a certain risk.The penal system is fundamentally broken in many ways. This is not the biggest affront.
Regardless of personal opinion, your assertion is flawed. From the article you linked:
"In 1988, the Sixth Circuit upheld a jury instruction: "There is no such thing as valid jury nullification." In 'United States v. Thomas (1997), the Second Circuit ruled that jurors can be removed if there is evidence that they intend to nullify the law."
Again, I'm not saying it can't happen and I'm not arguing whether it should or shouldn't. I'm just pointing out that it isn't legally recognized.
It all depends on the traffic. I often used to get stuck in stop and go that was a few car lengths at a time. I would be coasting at abysmally slow speeds, unless I step up to 2nd or really push the RPM.
I would imagine a little bit of poetic licence behind their "few feet" remark. Personally, unless traffic is already stopping before I start accelerating it's time to upshift.
The information I've seen online is around 6GB per hour for HD. Assuming two tuners, would be 12GB per hour or 288GB per day. If you were to use the same 500TB that puts it up closer to 4-5 years.
In this case, one minute you're there and a while later you're pronounced dead. It wasn't exactly quick. He suffered serious injuries that resulted in death.
There very much is an added cost to process online payments. That cost differs on whether it's ACH or credit card based. There very much is a higher processing(whether higher than paying labor is hard to say) cost of credit/debit. Most businesses I deal with these days only charge extra if you're using a credit/debit card. They don't often charge for using ACH.
There are a plenty of non-turbo 1.5-2l engines out there. Chevy Aveo being the example I'm personally familiar with. The oil change requirements are, when the engine says to or once a year. I am getting around 12,000mi between changes. I get ~35mpg on the highway and 25 in the city. About the only downside you provided that fits is the towing and the engine life, and even that if you double the life expectancy you stated. Most info I can find shows it shouldn't be too difficult for me to get 200+k on my engine, with proper care.
I'm not going to argue whats better, because they have different use cases. I'm just making a point that it's not as bad as you're trying to claim.
While I am not privy to the specifics, the summary does say the women were forced into it to pay off debts to crime bosses. So, if the information is correct.. the women were victims. If they were prostitutes by choice, that is a different story.
Yes, because white people don't work fast food.......
Religious fervor? I don't see how religion, not that I have one, plays into what I said. And for clarification, I had meant that it doesn't eat the fat first. It'll consume both during starvation.
Actually, burning muscle before fat in that case is exactly what would happen. If you starve your body of too many calories, it turns to burning muscle as it costs more energy to maintain.
Their point was the difference between the two definitions of diet (noun) one being the long term, what one normally consumes. The other being the generally short term change to ones dietary habits to induce weight loss.
You're an AC, so I don't expect too much here. But, you're apparently the kind of idiot that cannot grasp that humans are a complex biological organism. To say people have a choice in their diet is all well and good. To ignore the fact that physiological processes in the body will affect the choices made is just willful idiocy. The point of these studies isn't to remove blame from fat people that just like to eat. It's to help understand the why and how of the way the body does its thing. With that information, people can take steps to improve their gains when trying to lose weight.
Windows 10 is a paid for product. Yes, most people got free upgrades to it. However, it's disingenuous to act like it's a free product. Anyone building/buying a new computer with Windows 10 is likely paying for Windows 10.
But, are the robots capable of the levels of hatred necessary to be good Dalek?
As this is Slashdot, I imagine your hand has been monogamous. Risk of STDs should be low.
When talking about a completely arbitrary set of rules, designed to facilitate communication between people, common usage should be the ultimate deciding factor for what is correct.
All language is just a collection of common usage. It follows its own evolutionary process. What was correct in the past or present will not, and should not, necessarily be correct in the future. The point of language is to attempt clear communication between people. Correct/incorrect usage should be derived from how it's used by the populace, not forced upon the populace.
Right now? Cost. You're going to pay at least twice as much for the laptop as for the console. However, it's at least close enough that it can be considered an option given the extra functionality.
I can't confirm it would work or not on the Zero, but you would have to at least purchase an adapter as the Zero only has microUSB.
I think I'd still take the empty hand over the full one.
I mentioned it in another reply, but I don't agree with our current system of registry. I do think sex offenders need a different system of parole, chiefly closer watch on whereabouts and place of residence, but I'm mostly of the same mind. If they can control themselves and show reasonable proof of such, they deserve to be treated like any other person.
While other crimes still have very real victims, sex crimes tend to be perceived as more egregious by society. I imagine most people wouldn't appreciate the idea of "gambling" on the chances.of someone else being assaulted by a sex offender. Monetary restitution for victims isn't likely to provide much comfort to the victims. Further, false claims by "victims" would be a real concern.
Now, I'm assuming you weren't literally providing that as a valid replacement. I'll also say I'm not a proponent of the current registry system. However, I do recognize how we got here and the difficulty in trying to find a fairer balance that society will accept. It's often hard to fight against overzealous well-meaning.
Let's be honest here. Jail time is designed to be a deterrent/punishment to unwanted behavior. There may be programs to rehabilitate, but that's only secondary at best. Further, there is no real way to accurately judge whether an individual will commit again after release. As a society, we have decided that people deserve the right to be released after serving their time. We've also determined that recidivism is a real concern. Registries are an attempt at trying to let them out of prison, knowing people can better themselves, while still acknowledging a certain risk.The penal system is fundamentally broken in many ways. This is not the biggest affront.
Regardless of personal opinion, your assertion is flawed. From the article you linked:
"In 1988, the Sixth Circuit upheld a jury instruction: "There is no such thing as valid jury nullification." In 'United States v. Thomas (1997), the Second Circuit ruled that jurors can be removed if there is evidence that they intend to nullify the law."
Again, I'm not saying it can't happen and I'm not arguing whether it should or shouldn't. I'm just pointing out that it isn't legally recognized.
It all depends on the traffic. I often used to get stuck in stop and go that was a few car lengths at a time. I would be coasting at abysmally slow speeds, unless I step up to 2nd or really push the RPM.
I would imagine a little bit of poetic licence behind their "few feet" remark. Personally, unless traffic is already stopping before I start accelerating it's time to upshift.
The information I've seen online is around 6GB per hour for HD. Assuming two tuners, would be 12GB per hour or 288GB per day. If you were to use the same 500TB that puts it up closer to 4-5 years.
In this case, one minute you're there and a while later you're pronounced dead. It wasn't exactly quick. He suffered serious injuries that resulted in death.
There very much is an added cost to process online payments. That cost differs on whether it's ACH or credit card based. There very much is a higher processing(whether higher than paying labor is hard to say) cost of credit/debit. Most businesses I deal with these days only charge extra if you're using a credit/debit card. They don't often charge for using ACH.
But.... ocelot.
There are a plenty of non-turbo 1.5-2l engines out there. Chevy Aveo being the example I'm personally familiar with. The oil change requirements are, when the engine says to or once a year. I am getting around 12,000mi between changes. I get ~35mpg on the highway and 25 in the city. About the only downside you provided that fits is the towing and the engine life, and even that if you double the life expectancy you stated. Most info I can find shows it shouldn't be too difficult for me to get 200+k on my engine, with proper care.
I'm not going to argue whats better, because they have different use cases. I'm just making a point that it's not as bad as you're trying to claim.