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User: CrimsonAvenger

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  1. Re:the solution: on The $1,200 DIY Gunsmithing Machine · · Score: 5, Informative

    laws intended to keep weapons designed to kill a large number of people out of the hands of criminals and the mentally unstable.

    If the laws you speak of were meant to do what you claim, then the AR-15 would be joined by the Mini-14 on the list of "evil assault weapons".

    Alas, the Mini-14 is on the Exempt List of each of the Assault Weapon Bans.

    Of course, the Mini-14 is exempt because it is a self-loading rifle firing 5.56mm (.223 for you non-metric types) rounds using magazines ranging from 5 to 35 rounds capacity, as opposed to the AR-15, which is a self-loading rifle firing 5.56mm (.223 for you non-metric types) rounds using magazines ranging from 5 to 35 rounds capacity....

    If it isn't obvious from the above descriptions, there are two essentially identical rifles - one an evil assault weapon, the other a perfectly fine sporting rifle out there in the wild. If the various bans on things like the AR-15 lower receiver (or the AR-15 itself) were actually about keeping guns out of the hands of criminals, there would be no distinction made between the Mini-14 and AR-15.

    What the Bans actually are is a ban on Scary Looking Rifles. And that's all they've ever been - a feel-good measure that accomplishes nothing....

  2. Re:They need to lock this down now! on Ebola Has Made It To the United States · · Score: 1

    Ebola is not contagious until you're symptomatic.

    Which means this guy started being contagious within the last day or two at most.

    So the people that were on the plane with him are no more at risk then I am.

  3. Re:Not sure about this. on CEO of Spyware Maker Arrested For Enabling Stalkers · · Score: 2

    I find myself wondering what laws they actually broke...

    It's not like they did any actual wiretapping themselves, so it wasn't the wiretapping laws.

    Is there an actual law on the books that allows the Feds to arrest you for making software that ALLOWS wiretapping? If so, I suspect that the Feds should be chasing down a lot more people than just this lot...

  4. Re:How about protecting the public on Piracy Police Chief Calls For State Interference To Stop Internet "Anarchy" · · Score: 1

    Drone strikes alone would probably eliminate most of the resistance very quickly, no matter how many small handguns they have,

    One should note that if every handgun owner were to target member of the military, as long as the failure rate is not more then 98% or so, the US Military would run out of soldiers before the civilians ran out of handguns.

    And this ignores that not every soldier would go along with fighting against American civilians....

  5. Re:Should we? on Could We Abort a Manned Mission To Mars? · · Score: 2

    It's a lot harder to do that with a spacecraft if you know you need the Oberth effect of your destination to make it home.

    It's called an "Earth Return Trajectory".

    Basically, it's a two-year long transition orbit to Mars. More deltaV to enter the orbit, quite a bit more to enter Mars orbit at the other end, but if you have a problem along the way, you'll be back to Earth eventually (or your bodies will be, in any case) assuming no action on your part.

  6. Re:This is how government "solves problems" on State of Iowa Tells Tesla To Cancel Its Scheduled Test Drives · · Score: 1

    What? Aren't the dealers consumers? They buy cars from manufacturers, after all....

  7. Re:cut utility profits from 8% to 41% on Utilities Should Worry; Rooftop Solar Could Soon Cut Their Profit · · Score: 2

    I have read TFA.

    The assumption for reduced profit due to increased PV usage was 8% for a specific northeastern utility company, 15% for a specific southwestern one.

    That "up to 41%" number came from "using certain other assumptions" for the southwestern utility.

    In other words, TFS is, at best, misleading as hell.

  8. Re:I dunno about LEDs, but CFLs don't last on The Great Lightbulb Conspiracy · · Score: 1

    I think I had to replace a CFL once. It's been a few years, so maybe I'm misremembering, though.

  9. Re:Think of the children on FBI Chief: Apple, Google Phone Encryption Perilous · · Score: 1

    It IS true, law enforcement agencies will REJECT you for having a high I.Q. They , of course, have in mind, that smart people think for themselves

    No, they have in mind that they'll spend a metric buttload of money and time training you, and then you'll get bored and go looking for a more challenging job.

    Personally, I think even that rationale is suspect. But what do I know, I'm just a guy who was too bright to ever consider law enforcement as a career....

  10. Re:Why not google on Drones Reveal Widespread Tax Evasion In Argentina · · Score: 1

    Yes. Assuming you count spelling errors as a subset of grammar errors.

  11. Re:Someone explain please on Australian Senate Introduces Laws To Allow Total Internet Surveillance · · Score: 1

    In fact, this concept of "elite" is changing more and more into what we currently call "politicians".

    Once upon a time, we had governments that consisted of the "elite" - nobility, usually, but once we figured out this whole "election" thing, the elite became the guys we elected.

    What these various "elites" have had in common throughout history is that they feel themselves to be entitled to tell the rest of us what to do.

    And since, in general, they controlled law enforcement and the military (not always distinct entities), if only by the power of the pursestrings and the ability to define law (by, well, passing laws), they were pretty much right.

    In the USA, at least, the Constitution was meant to be a limiter on government, so as to fend off the "elite" who wanted to tell us what to do. Alas, we've long since managed to convince ourselves that anything we want has to be Constitutional somehow (which leads us inevitably to "shall not be infringed" being translated as "shall be infringed", and "Congress shall make no laws abridging..." being translated as "Of course Congress can make laws abridging...").

    And so, the politicians have once again assumed their historical roles, and "civil servants" have once again become "civil masters".

    In other words, things are returning to their historical norms. And will continue to do so absent a revolution or two.

  12. Re:Exact Opposite of the Obama Campaign Message on Where Whistleblowers End Up Working · · Score: 2, Informative

    Obama vowed to improve government transparency and protecting whistle blowers.

    Obama has also prosecuted more whistleblowers than all other Administrations combined. Last count I saw was seven by Obama, three by all previous Presidents.

    Yes, I know that Obama isn't the one issuing the orders to prosecute. But he IS the one who can issue the order to stop prosecuting them....

  13. Re:12kW/day? on IBM Solar Concentrator Can Produce12kW/day, Clean Water, and AC · · Score: 2, Informative

    *sighs* yes, it produces 1600 CUBIC LITERS of it.

    To explain (for the slow), liters are cubic decimeters. A cubic liter would be decimeters raised to the 27th power.

    Note that we don't actually have twenty-seven spatial dimensions available to produce cubic liters in....

  14. Re:12kW/day? on IBM Solar Concentrator Can Produce12kW/day, Clean Water, and AC · · Score: 2

    Hmm, TFA also says the collector can produce "1600 cubic liters per day" of H2O.

    So I suspect very strongly that the author hasn't a clue what he's talking about as regards this device....

  15. Re:This has nothing to do with wasting food on Seattle Passes Laws To Keep Residents From Wasting Food · · Score: 2

    Actually, as soon as the garbage men show up, it's the governemnt's trash. I don't see why they shouldn't be free to do whatever they want with their property.

    If it's the government's trash, why are they threatening ME with a fine if THEIR trash has too much food waste in it?

    Seems to me that this new rule is heaven-sent for harassing the neighbor you don't like. Not like anyone can tell WHO put the food waste into a particular trash bin....

  16. Weight or volume? on Seattle Passes Laws To Keep Residents From Wasting Food · · Score: 2

    So, is the 10% limit by weight or volume?

    And how are the trash collectors supposed to determine whether it's 9% or 11%?

    Oh, and are they going to be opening plastic garbage bags to check the contents? Or are plastic garbage bags already illegal in Seattle?

  17. Re:So wait on Russia Pledges To Go To the Moon · · Score: 2

    Tell them that, and they'll point out that they only reason we went was because the Soviet Union was way ahead in the space race for several years and it took many years for us to catch up.

    Many years to catch up? Seems to me we managed to pass them in just eight years.

    As to "way ahead for several years", if you look at the details, they were about a year ahead for several years. They stopped being ahead considerably before the aforementioned eight years were up.

    And what's with the Russians taking 16+ years to do this? It's not like they're doing it from scratch, since they saw how we did it 45 years ago. And it's not like they don't already have large rockets operational....

  18. Re:Funny on Obama Presses China On Global Warming · · Score: 1

    I don't think those figures demonstrate what you think they demonstrate. They still show that the average American produces twice as much carbon as the average Chinese.

    Oddly, that's pretty much what I thought those figures shows.

    Alas, OP (who I was responding to) was trying to suggest that the average American produced FOUR times the carbon of the average Chinese....

  19. Radiation? on Fukushima Radiation Still Poisoning Insects · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every time I see the word "radiation" used interchangeably with "radioactivity", I cringe.

    And then I start wondering what else they got wrong....

  20. Re:Funny on Obama Presses China On Global Warming · · Score: 1

    And yet, China produces nearly twice as much carbon as the USA, even though it only has four times our population....

  21. Only tax based on use (i.e. Sales Tax)

    A national sales tax is arguably unconstitutional.

    Historically, that sort of thing has been found perfectly fine at times, and absolutely wrong at other times. Just depends on how the Supremes of the day read the law.

    Which means it would probably require another Amendment to make it legal.

  22. Re:Meanwhile on CDC: Ebola Cases Could Reach 1.4 Million In 4 Months · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your assumption that the unelected bureaucrats in an African kleptocracy are more responsive to the needs of millions of people (who aren't related to them) is...amusing.

    And I don't care how justified you think you are....

  23. Re: MAD on US Revamping Its Nuclear Arsenal · · Score: 1

    Dont know about the fallout though, that'd probably be pretty nasty.

    If you're wrecking cities, you go for airbursts, which result in (relatively) low fallout.

    If you're doing a counterforce strike (attacking their nuclear missiles), then you go for groundbursts, which result in quite a lot of fallout.

  24. Re:I Voted For Kodos. on US Revamping Its Nuclear Arsenal · · Score: 1

    Slashdot hasn't ever solved any problems in a real sense.

    I'm curious - whyever do you think slashdot is supposed to solve problems? In a real sense or otherwise.

    Personally, I come here to get a feel for how people think about various topics that may be of interest to me. I've never expected to solve anything by being here, anymore than I expect voting to solve anything...

    But if we're supposed to be here to "solve problems in a real sense", then I'm wasting my time. And so is everyone else....

  25. Re:The WHO on Bioethicist At National Institutes of Health: "Why I Hope To Die At 75" · · Score: 1

    Based on current trends and short of a major breakthru there is no way someone born today will live to be 120-130.

    Intriguing theory you have there. How does it account for Gertrude Weaver (born 1898, died - well, she'll die one of these years, but hasn't yet)?

    Note that she's not unique in living in the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. If someone can manage to reach 116+ when more than half her life went by with medical care no better than what was available when I was a kid....