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User: Gizzmonic

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Comments · 1,694

  1. Re:Context around the law (from a Texan) on Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google Lobby Against Texas 'Bathroom' Bill (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    "We have whole boatloads of activists, who think it's cool and progressive to plaster people's private sexual problems all over...that's the reason for laws like the one in TFA

    Oh, but the creator and sponsors of the bill will tell you that this has nothing at all to do with transgender people. This is really about protecting women in bathrooms, don't you see?

    Transgender people, who would be LED OUT IN CUFFS if they followed your advice to "use the other restroom," are merely collateral damage in the battle against men sexually assaulting women in women's bathrooms (in a subset of government buildings).

    So tell us, do you approve of this bill, and why?

  2. Re:Who cares about bathrooms? on Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google Lobby Against Texas 'Bathroom' Bill (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    Sorry for re-replying, cleaning up my formatting and adding more about why this Child Molesters will love this bill:
    --
    Before the "Bathroom Bill" Molester: I love Texas! I can grope whoever I want and not go to jail!

    --
      After the "Bathroom Bill" Molester: Extremely feminine transgender women and 7-year-old boys are forced to use the men's room by themselves in a subset of government buildings!

    No one has a job because every tech company pulled out of Texas, but...I'm applying for every government job I can! I'm still not on the sex offenders list!

    Molester (kneels reverantly): Thanks to Jesus Christ and Dan Patrick!

  3. Re: Public controls public bathrooms on Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google Lobby Against Texas 'Bathroom' Bill (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 2

    This is not a rights issue or a bathroom issue.

    A bill that dictates who can use the bathroom is not a rights issue or a bathroom issue?

    What color is the sky in your world?

  4. Context around the law (from a Texan) on Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google Lobby Against Texas 'Bathroom' Bill (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 4, Informative

    As a Texan, I've been reading about this bill for almost a year now. Here's some context around it:

    1) Texas still has some of the most molester-friendly groping laws in the nation (anything short of penetration is a class C misdemeanor, you won't even go to jail for it). This bill does nothing to address it.

    2)The driving force behind the bill is revenge on the federal government for dictating that transgender students can use the restroom of their identified gender (a policy that is strongly supported by local school districts). That's why the bill only applies to government buildings (and a subset of those, at that!).

    3)The bill's author, Lt. Governor Dan Patrick (not the sportscaster) got his start as a bargain-bin Rush Limbaugh. He realizes that the "social conservatives" lost the fight against gays, and he's using this to target a smaller, even more vulnerable minority.

  5. Re:Who cares about bathrooms? on Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google Lobby Against Texas 'Bathroom' Bill (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 1

    Before the "Bathroom Bill" Molester: I love Texas! I can grope whoever I want and not go to jail! --- After the "Bathroom Bill" Molester: Oh noes! Extremely feminine transgender women are forced to use the men's room in a subset of government buildings! No one has a job because every tech company pulled out of Texas, but...I can still grope whoever I want, short of penetration, and not go to jail! Molester (kneels reverantly): Thanks to Jesus Christ and Dan Patrick!

  6. Re:Public controls public bathrooms on Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google Lobby Against Texas 'Bathroom' Bill (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can you point us to some statistics that show

    a)there's an epidemic of men in women's bathrooms committing assaults?

    b)making extremely feminine transgender women go into men's bathrooms will somehow reduce assaults?

    c)a law that only applies to SOME GOVERNMENT BUILDINGS will have any effect on this "epidemic"?

    To put it bluntly, you've been duped by Dan Patrick and his hate squad. Don't kid yourself-this law does nothing to protect women or any victims of sexual assault. Do you think that bush-league Rush Limbaugh gives a shit about whether or not women get sexually assaulted?

    It's mainly an impotent revenge play on the federal government for dictating that transgender students can use the restroom of their identified gender (a policy that is strongly supported by local school districts). If it passes, it will do untold economic damage to Texas, and INCREASE sexual assaults.

    If you are a Texan, make sure you know how your state lawmakers voted, and make sure you tell them they're getting VOTED OUT if they supported this petty, oppressive law that has no place in the freedom-loving state of Texas.

  7. Re:Public controls public bathrooms on Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google Lobby Against Texas 'Bathroom' Bill (arstechnica.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Straight men dressed as women commit rapes in women's bathrooms.

    Not only do you need to prove that this is true (spoiler alert: it's not), you also need to prove that the law would do anything to change this.

    The real context around this law is

    1)"Social conservatives" lost the battle against the gays, so they are starting a new battle against a smaller, even more vulnerable minority.

    2)"Small-government conservatives" resent the federal governments above, and local school districts below, having sane policies about transgender student bathroom use. Notice that the law ONLY APPLIES TO GOVERNMENT BUILDINGS (and even that has some expections). If there was an epidemic of cross-dressing rapists, wouldn't it make more sense to have this law apply to private businesses as well?

    3)The author of the bill, Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, is a minor-league Rush Limbaugh that somehow got elected to high office. He's a grandstanding idiot that doesn't care how many transgender teens commit suicide, so long as he can rile up his base with this fake crisis.

  8. Re:Security? on OpenStack Mitaka Aimed at Simplifying Cloud Operations (eweek.com) · · Score: 2

    Of course, OpenStack can't implement things which are needed by real people. Wake me up when they are able to get comparable functionality to vMotion, HA, fault tolerance, or just adding disks/RAM to an image without having to kill the VM and spin up a new one from an image.

    FUD. OpenStack is not a hypervisor, it's an omnibus cloud application suite. There are at least 2 nova-compute compatible hypervisors that can "vmotion" (which is snapshotting RAM and storage to a network block device). If you can't figure out how to do "HA" and "fault tolerance" with MySQL then by all means, keep transferring your entire bank account to VMWare.

    All in all, your rant makes about as much sense as someone complaining that Microsoft Office can't do spreadsheets.

  9. Re:1) This is because IBM owns them now 2) on IT Leaders Now Expected To Be Open To Open Source (enterprisersproject.com) · · Score: 1

    OpenStack? Run Windows VMs?

    Doesn't look like a problem for the world's largest OpenStack installation.

    As for free ACID-compliant DBs, that's what Postgres is for...CAP theorem and all that.

  10. Re:It may be the idea.... on Mozilla CEO: Windows 10 Strips User Choice For Browsers and Other Software · · Score: 1

    Well shit, did you even need to mention your internally-developed CAD system? I mean, that's such a vital part of everyone's software needs, I thought it went without saying.

  11. Re: How timely... on Oracle To Debut Low-Cost SPARC Chip Next Month · · Score: 1

    "Performance per watt" is a bullshit metric...until you have to pay the electric bill.

  12. Re:Doomed from the start on Privacy Advocates Leave In Protest Over U.S. Facial Recognition Code of Conduct · · Score: 1

    Cynicism is easy-both for you and the people that want to take your freedom away. What's difficult is getting off your ass and doing something about it.

  13. Re:American Civil War on Court Releases DOJ Memo Justifying Drone Strike On US Citizen · · Score: 1

    What are the significant differences, if any?

    What a stupid question! Obviously, there aren't any differences at all!

  14. Re:Level playing field on Hundreds of Cities Wired With Fiber, But Telecom Lobbying Keeps It Unusable · · Score: 1

    they will act like any other local utility and tell you to wait 5 years until they gather enough data that there is a demand for it, then take another few years to study the problem, then spend another 5 years begging for money in the budget and finally upgrading the network

    Actually, go check out Wilson, North Carolina. They embarrassed Time Warner so badly, Time Warner strongarmed the state into making municipal broadband illegal. It creates a lot of cognitive dissonance with the "government can't do anything right" crowd.

    Which is hilarious considering the current system is just government-granted monopoly anyway, yet they defend it voraciously because, uh...privatization!

  15. Re:Contracting? on Sony Warns Demand For Blu-Ray Diminishing Faster Than Expected · · Score: 1

    Netflix is better because they'll stream you 4K video if your TV (and connection) will support it. That's roughly 4x the resolution of 1080p, which I think is as high as standard Blu-Ray will go.

    OK, so Netflix has "4k" streams just like VHS-sourced garbage on Youtube is "720p". The source of the video, and the encoding itself, is much more important than the final resolution.

    That 12 megapixel smartphone with the tiny lens isn't going to be taking front-page photos for the Boston Globe for the same reason.

    Blu-ray is still the best quality consumer format out there, period. Netflix is focused on the smallest files, and the "HD" streams turn into a chunky mess during high-motion scenes.

    I hate defending Blu-ray for numerous reasons (DRM, 'standard' that actually wasn't for the first few years, slow menus, etc) but the video and audio quality really is the best we have.

  16. Re:It was not misspelled on TSA Missed Boston Bomber Because His Name Was Misspelled In a Database · · Score: 1

    ...and now video stores are all out of business! I hope you're proud of yourself, Mopps!

  17. Re:Kill capitol punishment! Kill it dead! on Controversial Execution In Ohio Uses New Lethal Drug Combination · · Score: 1

    But... Our system right now is so paranoid against executing the falsely convicted, that stays of execution are granted when there is the faintest whiff of innocence. Prisoners are kept for decades, just to avoid wrongful execution.

    Hahaha. In the United States? No. Ever heard of the Innocence Project?

    In Texas? Hell no! We still have a guy on death row even though the judge who sentenced him was sleeping with the prosecutor (Charles Hood).

    Until there are consequences/punishments for prosecutorial overreach, we can't even think about executing convicts.

  18. Re:Equality on The Brains of Men and Women Are 'Wired Differently' · · Score: 2

    Only strip mining and Microsoft Office creates wealth. Down with these debauched entertainers! Throw them into Re-Education Camp and let them learn how to graph their salt mine output in Excel!

    Ironically enough, your post is the most entertaining thing I've read all day, you worthless leech! Share some more economic theories with us, and you may get your Microsoft Salt Mine hours cut back from 16 to 14, plebe!

  19. Who cares? on Security Company Says NASDAQ Waited Two Weeks To Fix XSS Flaw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, it's the NASDAQ website. Who goes the NASDAQ website? You can't trade stocks there. Financial information was not leaked, so BFD. This is fairly common on any website. Sounds to me like a single security research got butthurt because they didn't acknowledge his finding quickly enough.

  20. Re:In b4 deluge of thorium posts. on Pandora's Promise and the Problem of "Solutionism" · · Score: 2

    As far as I can tell, what's coming out the wrong end of a thorium reactor will be a molten salt soup of toxic, possibly very corrosive, and VERY radioactive materials

    As opposed to what comes out of the "wrong end" of any coal-fired plant?

    In any case, the above does not sound very pleasant. It sounds expensive and dangerous and potentially hazardous, a lot like how we store spent fuel rods now.

    Dangerous *and* potentially hazardous? Well, let's give up and start living in caves then.

    There's plenty of info on thorium reactors. Google can help you there. But you're not really interested in anything but spreading FUD. Carry on, then.

  21. Big yawn for the 720... on Paul Thurrot Predicts November Debut, $500 Tag For Xbox 720 · · Score: 1

    Why would I want to buy a 720? I don't like the idea of always-on DRM, because it adds an unnecessary point of failure to the gaming experience. Microsoft's dashboard is designed to serve ads, not to navigate around games. And I imagine it will only get worse.

    At least Sony is spending a ton of money on indie game developers...MS doesn't seem to have a plan except "the same stuff, only even more customer-hostile!" I've never been so unimpressed by nextgen offerings.

  22. Re: corporate bubble on Rep. Mike Rogers Dismisses CISPA Opponents "14 Year Old Tweeter On the Internet" · · Score: 1

    You realize we're talking about the Mike Rogers representing Alabama, right? Also, why would I let my patents vote? They have enough rights as it is!

  23. Re:He's right on How Google Fiber Could Do Some National Good, Or At Least Scare the Carriers · · Score: 2

    They used to solve problems. How do you think we got our country-wide telephone network? Our highway system?

    Back then, government wasn't reviled as evil, and we didn't elect people who depowered government to further enrich their rich buddies. Now the expectations are set: government can do no right, so let's deregulate and let the private sector solve the problem (aka enrich themselves at our expense).

    I guarantee you that if the Internet had been around in the 50's, we'd have a nationwide fiber network better than any other in the first world. But that kind of coordinated national movement is passe now. The best we can hope for is a little Google Fiber here and there.

  24. Re:Cell phones haven't gotten any better 30 years? on How Google Fiber Could Do Some National Good, Or At Least Scare the Carriers · · Score: 2

    Check out the cell phone prices and broadband infrastructure in those Eurosocialist countries compared to the US. You may teach YOURSELF something.

  25. Re:Nothing but a whorefest on Small Company Wants to Make Encryption Key Management Into a Commodity (Video) · · Score: 1

    Your life is a whorefest? All I can say is, make sure you get tested regularly!