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User: harvey+the+nerd

harvey+the+nerd's activity in the archive.

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  1. our basic fascists on House Approves Extending the Warrantless Wiretapping Act · · Score: 1

    Only one correct answer. Seig Heil !

  2. change on 8th Circuit Upholds $220,000 Verdict In Jammie Thomas Case · · Score: 1

    Many had no pity for fascists hanged by their jackboots in a public place.

  3. Nifong on The Fight To Reform Forensic Science · · Score: 1

    The 2006 Duke LaCrosse case showed how badly the financial dependence of the lab on public officials compromised the defendants' rights.

  4. Putin, merely a Cal Worthington wannabe? on Nature Lover Vladimir Putin Flies With the Cranes · · Score: 1

    Apparently Putin thinks that he is Cal Worthington

  5. It helps to inject the correct form, the *sodium salt* of ascorbic acid, in a sufficient quantity. The life you save might be one of your own family. In some cases, like highly venomous creatures, time is important, without delays for argument or research. Already been there.

  6. I have real patents, corporate bioresearch, degrees better than Ivy, and NSF gold. Just trying to help the common folks out, but the truth here is, can't cure stupid.

  7. IV C on Yosemite Expands Scope of Hantavirus Warning: More than 20,000 At Risk · · Score: -1, Troll

    There is a cheap generalized virucide, intravenous sodium ascorbate, little known inside of corporate, fascist and socialist controlled medical circles. Really nasty viruses may take 200-300 grams C per day, or even more, along with supportive nutrients like oral B-50 complex (50 is a size/strength). Under 50 to 100 grams of IV C per (first) day is more typical of common, severe viral infections. See Thomas Levy, Curing the Incurable

  8. brave new world on Rick Falkvinge On Child Porn and Freedom Of the Press · · Score: 1

    Unlimited power like this is an important part of implementing a global police state controlled by criminal banks and other unaccountable megacorporations. That is all.

  9. mush on Scientists Say Organic Food May Not Be Healthier For You · · Score: 2

    "Scientists" may be using poor analysis methods; journal may suffer various biases including membership and advertising income sources. The paper sounds more like oranges, apples and orangutans were compared for a new agenda driven Rorschach test.

  10. even worse on When a Primary Source Isn't Good Enough: Wikipedia · · Score: 1

    If a biased party *lies* about what a book or group actually says but the biased party's statement is published in a "reliable source" like a journal heavily supported advertising, perhaps 98%, merely quoting what the book says is a primary source and not accepted since it is not a secondary source. Used to be "patently false" would get crap removed. Ran across this with advertising journals, the largest advertisers vs their competitors.

    Wikipedia's content has often been captured by various commercial interests, including the pharmaceuticals and their proxies, witting or not.

  11. LBJ raped... on With 'Access Codes,' Textbook Pricing More Complicated Than Ever · · Score: 0

    LBJ and most pols since then repeatedly raped the savings and economy until nothing but old socialist dictats remain as "laws".

  12. old FDR/LBJ Ponzi schemes on With 'Access Codes,' Textbook Pricing More Complicated Than Ever · · Score: 1

    Actually it's the boomers parents that got to blow all the pension and retirement funds. Already, nothing but debt was left for the boomers.

  13. education policy change on Iran Universities To Ban Women From 77 Fields of Study · · Score: 0

    Too much education means bad attitude for degrading sex and jobs, much less extra kids for clearing minefields.

  14. Re:Kevorkian Panels. on Near-universal Mexican Healthcare Coverage Results From Science-informed Changes · · Score: 1

    Means you're probably done for, Runner.

  15. atlas shrugged... on Jury In Apple v. Samsung Case May Have to Agree on 700 Points · · Score: 0

    The gubermint and "law" are out of control, trying to be in total control.

  16. As a matter of financial history on Knight Trading Losses Attributed To Old, Dormant Software · · Score: 1

    The majority of stock market types have been dependent on government/Federal Reserve sponsored inflation for the bulk of the 20th century. One could hear the hard money advocates of the 70s discuss and mock the 20s-30s cries from Wall Street for more liquidity, even in the good times. Ditto the 70s inflation. Wall Street has been a scan site in dozens of ways, protected and pumped by the Federal Reserve/government.

  17. international terrs on 'Pirate' Website Owner Sentenced To 4 Years In Prison · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The US Gov has mutated and is deep into international extortion and terrorism, even on a retail basis. Basically, governments all over the world need to tell them and their weaslely spying and extortion to get stuffed ans stay home. We taxpayers would appreciate it, too.

  18. blame where it belongs: TEPCo management on US Freezes Nuclear Power Plant Permits Because of Waste Issues · · Score: 2

    The engineers knew the site was faulty in many ways, the IAEA knew the Japanese reactors had lots of serious subcode issues, relative to US/European standards. No body could motivate or hold willful TEPCo management responsible. Still can't.

  19. The Bq dude on US Freezes Nuclear Power Plant Permits Because of Waste Issues · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The difference is that much of the Fukashima and Chenobyl radioactivity will be gone in a century, from short lived fission products. The radioactivity from coal (Th232, U235, U238, K40) will mostly still be here in hundreds of millions, and billions of years. Albeit, mostly buried in "our" geological layer.

  20. Bloomburger on Data-Fed Monitoring System Will Put New Yorkers Under Police Surveillance · · Score: 1

    "...private companies already do it"
    The difference Mr Bloomberg is that the private company doesn't claim the right to fine, tax and impound your whole existence for little more than breathing.

  21. expendable on War By Remote Control, With Military Robots Set To Self Destruct · · Score: 1

    Such expendable weapons suggests expendable people, far worse than the landmine problem.

  22. who will the USGov be compared with... on War By Remote Control, With Military Robots Set To Self Destruct · · Score: 1

    for aggression and state terrorism, the Nazis or the WWII Japanese ? This business has a very bad feeling to it ... like when Nixon was offering military weapons for domestic police. No knock raids could take on a whole new dimension for wrong addresses. Fooom.

  23. 50 year periods in US on NASA's Own Video of Curiosity Landing Crashes Into a DMCA Takedown · · Score: 1

    I don't agree with "inevitability" but the historical record is this:
    1968 Vietnam war, related problems
    1918 WWI for US participation, patriotic fervor and race riots
    1868 Reconstruction with racial problems, eventual rise of the KKK. Of course 1861-65 was peak violence.
    1818 correlation seems to me to slip, Panic of 1819
    1768 hmmm, but French and Indian War 1756-1783 is bloody
    1718 huh? zzzz

  24. backdoors on The Chinese Telecom That Spooks the World · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When we buy stuff from China without a corresponding increase in our own exports, they've already backdoored our economy.

  25. Re:Government needs to be slapped down again? on Mathematician Predicts Wave of Violence In 2020 · · Score: 0

    "unbelievably wonderful compared to damn near everywhere else in the world." Yes, the US was once a terrific place. The various levels of socialist governments and Federal Reserve in the US have been working overtime since LBJ to destroy that.