Slashdot Mirror


User: CrimsonAvenger

CrimsonAvenger's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
9,858
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 9,858

  1. Re:501(c)(3) Classes on The New 501(c)(3) and the Future of Open Source In the US · · Score: 1

    Not-For-Profits are when people come together to pull their resources.

    POOL their resources. Try not to use expressions you've never seen in print.

    Or try not to post when you're too drunk/sleep-deprived to remember how to spell expressions you HAVE seen in print.

  2. Re:Good idea on Lawrence Lessig Answers Your Questions About His Mayday PAC, Part 2 (Video) · · Score: 1

    It's not about a return to constitutional values, it has nothing to do with the constitution, and it's not right or left wing.

    It has nothing to do with the Constitution? They want a Constitutional Amendment, for Christ's sake!

  3. Re:perhaps a slice of crow for the US? on Western Energy Companies Under Sabotage Threat · · Score: 1

    but not to attack civilian infrastructure such as electricity, water supply, trains, banks, the stock market, etc. etc.

    Dresden. Hamburg. Hiroshima. Nagasaki.

    Numerous other cities in both Germany and Japan.

    Step back to the 1800s, and we have Sherman's Neckties between Atlanta and Savannah (civilian railroads torn up by Union troops in Sherman's Army).

    And that's just the USA.

    Coventry.

    Nanking.

    Too many others to count....

  4. Re:Uh... Yeah? on Court Allowed NSA To Spy On All But 4 Countries · · Score: 1

    1. It shouldn't be. That's why we're having this debate. It would be one thing if our government found evidence of something shifty going on... spied to confirm or refute that, and then took action.

    I'm curious. How, exactly, are we supposed to "find evidence of something shifty going on" without, well, SPYING on people??

  5. Re:The entire Republican party predicted it, and w on How Often Do Economists Commit Misconduct? · · Score: 1

    Sure, slavery produced more cotton than the post-Civil-War south did, but only by using force and ignoring unalienable rights.

    Actually, that common misconception is...a misconception.

    Cotton production in the South almost doubled between 1850 and 1870, and more than doubled again by 1900.

    And that in spite of the more obvious economic damage (railroads destroyed, workers killed, that sort of thing).

  6. Re:Gee Catholic judges on U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Religious Objections To Contraception · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The real issue stems from the retarded decision back in the high income tax bracket era of the early 20th century that led to the IRS allowing health insurance premiums to be tax-deductible from payroll. That fucking brain damaged decision led to our current clusterfuck of employer-provided health care.

    Note that this was a side-effect of WW2.

    During WW2, Wage and Price controls were put into effect for many industries.

    Which left companies unable to attract talent by paying them more. So, some bright boy figured that he could offer free health insurance as a perk of the job (instead of higher pay).

    By the time the dust of WW2 had settled, the current system of employer-provided health insurance was firmly established. Leading us inevitably to today....

  7. Re:Fundamental reform? on Lawrence Lessig Answers Your Questions About His Mayday PAC (Video) · · Score: 1

    While I believe the first two sentences of this argument are be true, I see no logical reason to infer the final sentence, which I think is false. This being the case, I find entire line of reasoning invalid.

    So, you believe that the First Amendment is limited to speech with no artificial aids, eh?

    Note that that would allow newspapers and news broadcasts to control information flow during a political campaign. Unless you intend to restrict Freedom of the Press as well.

    Note that neither newscasters nor newspapermen are unbiased, and allowing them to decide what you are allowed to know about a particular candidate is at least as bad as the current situation.

    Note also that the incumbent has an enormous advantage even if the news people are paragons of virtue to the last man - all an incumbent has to do to get press attention is propose a law. His challenger(s) get no such instant attention.

    So, your ideal solution guts the Freedom of Speech, the Freedom of the Press, OR it gives incumbents an enormously LARGER advantage....

  8. Re:The only way to end "big money" politics on Lawrence Lessig Answers Your Questions About His Mayday PAC (Video) · · Score: 1

    Interesting that you don't mention Bloomberg or any other of the left-leaning billionaires who are throwing money at politics....

  9. Re:wealthy funders can't be eliminated that way on Lawrence Lessig Answers Your Questions About His Mayday PAC (Video) · · Score: 1

    contrary to that tenement.

    Not sure where slums fit into your argument, so I'm assuming you meant "tenet"....

  10. Re:wealthy funders can't be eliminated that way on Lawrence Lessig Answers Your Questions About His Mayday PAC (Video) · · Score: 1

    Yes, they could.

    And the owners could still spend their money on politics.

    Note that stripping corporation status from a business does NOT remove its money. It just changes (possibly) who is in control of the money. And the (hypothetical) new owners of the money can still spend it on politics....

  11. Re:Bribery represents the will of the people? on Lawrence Lessig Answers Your Questions About His Mayday PAC (Video) · · Score: 1

    Actually 3/4 of the states can call for a Convention.

    2/3 of the States can call a Constitutional Convention.

    Which bypasses the need for Congress to act, but leaves in place the need for 3/4 of the States to ratify any proposed Amendments.

  12. Re:WUWT on Researchers Claim Wind Turbine Energy Payback In Less Than a Year · · Score: 1

    What sort of humidity conditions do you have though?

    I'm in New Orleans. 80% humidity is considered a dry day. Usually it's more like 90+F/90+% humidity.

    We tend to run AC nine months of the year here. It's not all that common to run your AC in December here, but it's not unusual enough to comment on....

  13. Re:WUWT on Researchers Claim Wind Turbine Energy Payback In Less Than a Year · · Score: 0

    Air conditioners use a lot of power in the summer, when its 82F and 100% humidity

    82F????

    I wish it were that cool here. And we're not even to the hot part of the year yet.

  14. Re:Weather is NOT climate on Swedish Farmers Have Doubts About Climatologists and Climate Change · · Score: 1

    Your reference goes back 1.35 MY.

    OP was going back 60 MY.

    Note that your period is 2.25% of the OP's period....

  15. Re: The site does not commit piracy ... on Want To Resell Your Ebooks? You'd Better Act Fast · · Score: 1

    Who reads a book twice?

    Actually, everyone I know who actually reads for pleasure does it from time to time. Including me.

    Which reminds me, we're coming up on the sesquicentennial of Gettysburg. Time to pull out one of my histories of that battle and reread it before the Fourth.

  16. Re:The REAL value of the transit system on Cracking Atlanta Subway's Poorly-Encrypted RFID Smart Cards Is a Breeze, Part II · · Score: 1

    In my county, for every dollar spent by a rider, the taxpayer pays two dollars.

    Just read an article about a new bus route being added near where my parents live.

    It is intended, of course, to allow for commutes into metropolitan area nearby...

    So, the article broke down the costs of the system into Federal, State, Local, individual costs. The individual riders of the system were expected to pay ~17% of the cost of the system. The remaining ~83% was covered by taxpayers at various levels.

    Even with that level of subsidization, they were expecting an average of only 30 people per day to be using the system....

  17. Re: They're infringing my Second-Amendment drone r on That Toy Is Now a Drone · · Score: 3, Interesting

    the second amendment is only tangentially related to a militia

    That would only be true if one had never read the Militia Act.

    Hint: it's not even in the fine print that pretty much every American citizen is a member of the Militia.

  18. Re:Gilbert U238 atomic energy lab was a "kids toy" on That Toy Is Now a Drone · · Score: 1

    That IS a kid's toy. A geiger counter, a cloud chamber, a couple of low-level emitters (alpha, beta, gamma), and some ore samples? Sounds like it would have been a helluva cool addition to your home chemistry set.

  19. Re:This just illustrates on Germany's Glut of Electricity Causing Prices To Plummet · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Here in america my power bill consists of only one part, and I have the choice of whether to go fuck myself or allow the regional monopoly to price gouge me for electricity.

    Interestingly enough, German residential electric rates are up to four times as high as US rates (Hawaii pays about as much as Germany, New England and Alaska half as much, everywhere else considerably cheaper)

    Finnish rates, on the other hand, are comparable to New England's rates. In other words, more expensive than anywhere but Alaska and Hawaii.

    So, if you're being "gouged", I take it you live in Hawaii? Because otherwise, your "gouged" is probably lower than anyone in Europe is paying....

  20. Re:Another misconception bites the dust on Germany's Glut of Electricity Causing Prices To Plummet · · Score: 2

    Also, there is now a strategic security/economical/political dimension to the energy transition for Germany much like there is for the USA concerning Oil independence that has only been reinforced by the Ukraine crisis.

    Two things:

    1) The USA is a net exporter of petroleum products (we import some oil, but export more refined petroleum products than the oil we import makes) these days.

    2) Increasing dependence on natural gas rather than coal by Germany makes them more vulnerable to things like the Ukraine situation.

  21. Re:No, they're replacing. on If Immigration Reform Is Dead, So Is Raising the H-1B Cap · · Score: 1

    The Center For Immigration Studies just released a report showing that all employment growth since 2000 has gone to immigrants, legal and illegal.

    It should be noted that population growth is pretty much identical to immigration these days. Absent immigration, population growth in the USA (as in Western Europe) is negative.

    Which means that, at best, the overwhelming majority of job growth should be taken by immigrants since they're the overwhelming majority of population growth.

  22. Re:What logic! on Norway Scraps Online Voting · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, more a matter of "we found no evidence that this new idea actually improved things, so we decided it wasn't worth spending more money experimenting with it".

  23. Re:He has no clue. on Larry Page: Healthcare Data Mining Could Save 100,000 Lives a Year · · Score: 1

    Before the whole ACA thing, it wouldn't be a big deal

    And post ACA, it's still not a big deal, since they can no longer charge you extra for pre-existing conditions and suchlike.

  24. Re:so basically, its a sham. on Larry Page: Healthcare Data Mining Could Save 100,000 Lives a Year · · Score: 1

    outlaw cigarette smoking: make a big dent in the 480,000 deaths per year it causes.

    Because outlawing alcohol and marijiuana worked so well for us.

    It should be noted that cigarettes are already smuggled in the US (there are States with really high tobacco taxes, enough so that it's worth smuggling even though cigarettes are legal). So what makes you think that that'll stop just because you make smuggling MORE lucrative?

  25. Re:Repeat after me... on Massachusetts SWAT Teams Claim They're Private Corporations, Immune To Oversight · · Score: 1

    State Militia (National Guard).

    Read the Militia Act sometime. No, the National Guard is NOT the State militia.