What was the sum of money across all malpractice judgments last year? I couldn't find it via Google. I'd like to see how big of a percentage it is compared to the total money spent on healthcare.
The fact that there have been few murders lately means that the prohibition on murder isn't needed. People who don't want to be killed are doing just fine without laws against murder, as evidenced by the fact that they so rarely have to be enforced; we should get rid of them for good.
Whoa, scary distopian world these cameras will cause! Let's outlaw laws too, since presumably someone could make a law that said you had to hire plumbers from the plumbers union! We should outlaw cops as well, since they might enforce a pro-plumber union stance even if it isn't encoded into law.
>two spaces after the end of a sentence seems to be too much to ask for
Kids don't use typewriters. That rule only applies to typewriters because they are monospaced. Modern typography using proportional fonts is designed for one space after a period. Are you an old grandma?
>The other way to put this is that the war lowered components of GDP aside from military purchases.
Why count the military purchases as worth 0? I see why *now*, when our military purchases primarily go towards blowing up brown people, but I don't see why at that point in time.
Uhh how would the donors die? Their aids virus molecules don't suddenly evolve when the patients' do. Life is prototype based, like javascript, not class based, like java.
>You WANT something like that? Remember what happened whenever the government started giving grants to modernize America with phone lines? The AT&T monopoly was formed.
Yes, I think we need another monopoly like that. Because basic research is a huge tragedy of the commons problem, you need a big monopoly that *is* the commons. When AT&T was, they were able to create one of the best research labs ever and invented the transistor which has accelerated human development at exponential speeds.
>Just look at the patriot act (mind you, passed by BOTH republicans and democrats) and you can see why the government shouldn't run any ISPs.
Just look at the FISA domestic spying indemnity for telecoms who broke the law bill, and it is clear your argument applies to both government and telecoms. I really doubt cable companies would have been any different.
Moot point unless the only way you do anything as root is through a shell in one of the virtual terminalsor xdm. If you ever give your root password in a logged in X session, or as your user (su or sudo) your machine can be compromised. su, bash, etc. can all be replaced with sinister versions, and the next time you su to root, your password is captured.
Since there are no Federal Universities, only partially federally funded universities, the point is moot--faculty, etc. fall under the work for hire exemption, just like Harris does when it writes software for a radar under contract.
If you read your contract with ATT, you will realize that any such lawsuit will have to go to arbitration, with a phone-industry appointed panel of phone industry lobbyists.
But there is no correlation between families with filthy carpets, and families that watch TV.
The java examples you showed had quake running at 1/8th the number of pixels as the C example from google.
What was the sum of money across all malpractice judgments last year? I couldn't find it via Google. I'd like to see how big of a percentage it is compared to the total money spent on healthcare.
>Printing ink is a carcinogen.
No it isn't.
Bringing the century into it is pure straw-man; how old is hydro?
this: http://creativecommons.org/projects/founderscopyright
The fact that there have been few murders lately means that the prohibition on murder isn't needed. People who don't want to be killed are doing just fine without laws against murder, as evidenced by the fact that they so rarely have to be enforced; we should get rid of them for good.
I don't like your two choices. Why not give everyone in America X dollars to appropriate as they see fit to their favorite fact observer(s).
Whoa, scary distopian world these cameras will cause! Let's outlaw laws too, since presumably someone could make a law that said you had to hire plumbers from the plumbers union! We should outlaw cops as well, since they might enforce a pro-plumber union stance even if it isn't encoded into law.
>two spaces after the end of a sentence seems to be too much to ask for
Kids don't use typewriters. That rule only applies to typewriters because they are monospaced. Modern typography using proportional fonts is designed for one space after a period. Are you an old grandma?
>The other way to put this is that the war lowered components of GDP aside from military purchases.
Why count the military purchases as worth 0? I see why *now*, when our military purchases primarily go towards blowing up brown people, but I don't see why at that point in time.
But it *did* work for us in the 40's.
Uhh how would the donors die? Their aids virus molecules don't suddenly evolve when the patients' do. Life is prototype based, like javascript, not class based, like java.
On the order of a couple of pennies per display.
Future is bright: http://multiplayerblog.mtv.com/2008/09/29/harmonix-confirms-rb2-wii-dlc/
Doesn't sound so different from the US: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Lippmann
>You WANT something like that? Remember what happened whenever the government started giving grants to modernize America with phone lines? The AT&T monopoly was formed.
Yes, I think we need another monopoly like that. Because basic research is a huge tragedy of the commons problem, you need a big monopoly that *is* the commons. When AT&T was, they were able to create one of the best research labs ever and invented the transistor which has accelerated human development at exponential speeds.
>Just look at the patriot act (mind you, passed by BOTH republicans and democrats) and you can see why the government shouldn't run any ISPs.
Just look at the FISA domestic spying indemnity for telecoms who broke the law bill, and it is clear your argument applies to both government and telecoms. I really doubt cable companies would have been any different.
Moot point unless the only way you do anything as root is through a shell in one of the virtual terminalsor xdm. If you ever give your root password in a logged in X session, or as your user (su or sudo) your machine can be compromised. su, bash, etc. can all be replaced with sinister versions, and the next time you su to root, your password is captured.
Since there are no Federal Universities, only partially federally funded universities, the point is moot--faculty, etc. fall under the work for hire exemption, just like Harris does when it writes software for a radar under contract.
>I wish people would educate themselves on the notion of what it means to be a federation of states.
What it means is that Big Companies can play one state against another and score massive subsidies while small businesses can't.
Surely you mean 128Kb.
If you read your contract with ATT, you will realize that any such lawsuit will have to go to arbitration, with a phone-industry appointed panel of phone industry lobbyists.
Firefox has about 50 different extensions implementing grab-and-scroll in various ways.
Isn't Catalan the main language in Barcelona?