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User: hamilton76

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Comments · 30

  1. Re:yay free market on Study Warns of Internet Brownouts By 2010 · · Score: 1

    And improving the standard of living of the average citizen!
    Um, it has.
  2. Re:Doesn't seem to benefit the enduser... on Vista Licenses Limit OS Transfers, Ban VM Use · · Score: 1

    Yes, Linux. Especially Ubuntu.

  3. Re:Capt. Kirk on Researchers Teach Computers To Perceive 3D from 2D · · Score: 1

    Nitpick alert: it was "I, Mudd," not "Mudd's Women."

  4. Re:that's what i was thinking on Using Gravity To Tow Asteroids · · Score: 1

    Touché....

  5. Re:Science and religion on Vatican Rejects Intelligent Design? · · Score: 1

    You dare to mention Orwell and make accusations of doublethink and then deny freedom of conscience?

    Do not perhaps your beliefs affect other people?

    And who are you to decide that condoning certain beliefs is "harmful to society at large" and that condoning yours isn't? Who, also, are you to hold yourself up as the arbiter of thought? Suppose "society" doesn't want your protection?

    And how would you go about compelling people to believe the "right" things anyway?

    And lest you wonder, no, I am not a Biblical literalist: I do not believe in the fundamental inerrancy of the Bible or that it must be taken absolutely literally. So you needn't go there.

  6. Re:what drives this controversy? on Lawmakers Support U.S. Control Of The Internet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Funny how you conveniently forget that we're talking about the Internet, not the Web.

  7. Re:what drives this controversy? on Lawmakers Support U.S. Control Of The Internet · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Correct. The Internet is, fundamentally, an invention of the United States. Now, that doesn't mean that we should be arrogant about it, but what have, say, Cuba or Iran done to create or maintain it? Then why should they have any part in its control? Never mind the fact that they're repressive, closed, anti-deomcratic states....

  8. First on Lawmakers Support U.S. Control Of The Internet · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    First!

  9. Re:No Invite on Flock, the New Browser on the Block · · Score: 1

    Um, offtopic, I know, but I couldn't resist: your sig was written by Immanuel Kant, not Albert Einstein.

  10. Re:Intelligent Design? on From Carnivore to Herbivore · · Score: 1

    Or, perhaps a scientist engaging in experimentation. Or, someone who knows exactly what he's doing introducing a change in his creatures.

  11. Re:Oversaturated??? on Trek Producers Will Provide World A Break · · Score: 1

    "Hey! How about we let real fiction writers take a stab at writing some episodes? Maybe Stephen King, the Law & Order writers and Johanna Lindsey would'nt mind taking a stab at an episode each! Can't be any worse than what Rick & company has produced!"

    I think that's an excellent idea. Some of TOS' best episodes were written by real sf writers, like Richard Matheson, Theodore Sturgeon, Harlan Ellison, Jerry Sohl.... I would welcome something like that today.

  12. Re:First post? on The Empires Strike Back · · Score: 1

    In order to lie, someone must know that what they are saying isn't true.

    Are you saying, then, that President Bush somehow knew that there were no weapons in Iraq, despite the huge amount of intelligence, from domestic and foreign sources, believed by people from both parties and in many nations, to the contrary?

    Granted, it has turned out that that intelligence was faulty, and that's a serious problem that we have to correct, certainly. It may even go to the culture of expectations in the executive branch, and that will have to be examined and corrected if necessary---perhaps electorally. But did the President say something he knew was untrue? In other words, did he lie? No.

  13. Re:Bah on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    What, then, gives precedent for monitors today, AC?

  14. Re:Jst a asmall nitpick on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    Someone ought to tell the Australian republicans, then.

  15. Re:Jst a asmall nitpick on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    And neither is there any reason to believe it's any other nation.

  16. Re:Jst a asmall nitpick on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    An the UK isn't really a republic; it hasn't been since the brief Cromwell years.

  17. Re:uncontrollable laughter on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    Only if they were alive both in 1776 and 2004.

  18. Re:Yes my counstition mandates Equal Protection. on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    How enlightened! How tolerant! Please, please, enlightened ones, show us the way!

  19. Re:Lost faith? on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    At last, a rational statement. Amen.

  20. Re:Bah on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    It's true, nontheless. The Election of 1876 was contested and no one came to monitor the Election of 1880. End of story.

  21. Re:YANKEE IMPERIALIST BASTARDS on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    Wow, what peaceful, inclusive language!

  22. Re:I'm confused on this one. on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    Absolutely. Most of Europe, especially the West, is decidedly anti-Iraq-war and anti-Bush. Can we really expect them to be reliable monitors of this election?

  23. Re:Sadly, this is necessary on Europeans To Monitor American Voters · · Score: 1

    Riiiiiiiiiight.

  24. Re:What's the big deal with Google? on Ask Jeeves Looks to Outshine Google · · Score: 1

    Wiggidy-whack?

  25. Re:Question on Ask Libertarian Presidential Candidate Michael Badnarik · · Score: 1

    However, if it's stability you want, there's nothing more stable than a dictatorship. No, I don't think so. Most dictatorships in the world have been very short-lived: Robespierre's France (~1 y), Napoleonic France (~15 y), Nazi Germany (~15 y), Fascist Italy (~15 y), Imperial Japan (~25 y), the USSR (~75 y), etc. True, Cuba (~50 y), North Korea (~50 y) and China (~55 y) are still around, but I don't think they will be for much longer (especially the former two). By contrast, the United States and its presidential system (albeit with some modifications over the course of time) has continued through over 200 years of history, including a land invasion and destruction of the capital by the British in the War of 1812, the nullification crisis, the slave question and the civil war, the Great Depression, two world wars, civil unrest during the Vietnam War, the Watergate crisis, an energy crisis, and September 11. Add to that a number of assassinations along the way (Lincoln, by a Confederate sympathizer; McKinley, by an anarchist; Kennedy, by...somebody) and this makes for a pretty good track record of stability. The doctrine of separation of powers and checks and balances, combined with federalism, both make for this remarkable stability, without the need for the "collapse of the government" and the need for the executive to call for new elections.