With the change to a Chromium base, it no longer has any relevance.
I'm a long-time Opera user, and this change saddens me a great deal. There will now no longer be a browser that integrates so many things without relying on plugins. All the standard usability plugins for Chrome and Firefox are native features of Opera pre-Next. Their relevance used to be the enhancements that everyone else copied. Now they'll just be playing catch-up.
Unless they re-add features such as per-website preferences and the ability to customize the UI in as many ways as Opera pre-Next, I won't be switching until the old Opera no longer works with new web tech.
Next is completely crippled compared to the previous version.
If a universal ban worked I would be for it. It won't though.
Also, the majority of firearm owners aren't trying to solve societal problems with them, and most firearm uses don't include a trigger pull.
Your continued use of the word insane to cover a vast number of people with widely disparate views says more bout you than those at whom you aim your words. They are as bad as right-wing extremists. Those who are not willing to listen and engage civilly are all part of the problem.
I actually just watched a video of the test-firing of various 3D-printed shotgun slug designs. Of course they weren't using rifled barrels nor did they add spin control to the design so the slugs tumbled in flight rather than spinning, but they were still quite effective at short range.
It's actually a great idea for being able to produce your own less-than-lethal rounds, which are otherwise difficult to procure.
That's the opposite of my take. The comment hinges on morality, and few believe it is moral to randomly kill people.
I am a-religious. I sympathize with the quoted statement, and yet would not ever initiate violence against another unless it were justifiable defense. The two have nothing to do with each other except what a given person deems as moral.
In libertarianism, the government exists to protect the rights of the people. No such structure exists in Somalia, making it the antithesis of libertarianism.
Taxing gross profits over $1M would bankrupt an enormous number of small businesses who do not have the resources to hire cutthroat accountants.
Other than that, sounds pretty good. Corporations exist at the pleasure of the jurisdiction in which they are incorporated, and as such should have no rights whatsoever. There are no provisions for collective rights in the Constitution. All rights are personal, even the right to assembly. Stripping corporations of rights do nothing to infringe the personal rights in the Constitution, as people can still exercise them. There is no right to avoid personal accountability just because you run a business.
While many claiming to be libertarian would howl at the above, I believe it is perfectly consistent with a primarily libertarian outlook.
Politicians make it hard to distinguish left wing from right wing in all but the most trivial of ways. They each mimic the other's methods depending upon whom is in power.
There's even disagreement on the 2.4GHz band. The US and certain other countries limit it more than others do. There are a number of additional channels available outside the US.
A rent-controlled apartment is not the property of the renter.
And calling someone a moron tends to make people immediately write off your argument. Try being civil and you might be more successful in dialogues.
Indeed, which means a appeal to "fairness" must be defined before it is necessarily relevant.
Most people for this technology are for it being mandatory, so the point is completely salient to the discussion here.
Starting off by implying all gun fans are paranoid is not a good way to be listened to.
There's a means to change the Constitution, and when you ignore it when it's convenient it'll be ignored for other, far more nefarious reasons too.
I'll accept every firearm death per year if it means people abide by the system required to change the Constitution.
Nope. We must wrap them in bubble wrap until they're 18, and then throw them out with absolutely no idea how to fend for themselves.
With the change to a Chromium base, it no longer has any relevance.
I'm a long-time Opera user, and this change saddens me a great deal. There will now no longer be a browser that integrates so many things without relying on plugins. All the standard usability plugins for Chrome and Firefox are native features of Opera pre-Next. Their relevance used to be the enhancements that everyone else copied. Now they'll just be playing catch-up.
Unless they re-add features such as per-website preferences and the ability to customize the UI in as many ways as Opera pre-Next, I won't be switching until the old Opera no longer works with new web tech.
Next is completely crippled compared to the previous version.
Hollywood icons
I don't know anyone, liberal or conservative, who supports PETA.
I think I've seen this episode of 24. Don't worry, the Australian Jack Bauer will keep everyone safe.
That's not the NY way.
If a universal ban worked I would be for it. It won't though.
Also, the majority of firearm owners aren't trying to solve societal problems with them, and most firearm uses don't include a trigger pull.
Your continued use of the word insane to cover a vast number of people with widely disparate views says more bout you than those at whom you aim your words. They are as bad as right-wing extremists. Those who are not willing to listen and engage civilly are all part of the problem.
That's not a third option; it perfectly describes rent control as it exists in NYC.
You failed to grasp the word "balance" in the above equation. Nothing was said about stripping all profit.
I definitely agree that we'd be better off with a number of smaller countries. I'd love to see the US split into 5 or more independent republics.
At least then the national government of each would be much more representative of the population.
I actually just watched a video of the test-firing of various 3D-printed shotgun slug designs. Of course they weren't using rifled barrels nor did they add spin control to the design so the slugs tumbled in flight rather than spinning, but they were still quite effective at short range.
It's actually a great idea for being able to produce your own less-than-lethal rounds, which are otherwise difficult to procure.
That's the opposite of my take. The comment hinges on morality, and few believe it is moral to randomly kill people.
I am a-religious. I sympathize with the quoted statement, and yet would not ever initiate violence against another unless it were justifiable defense. The two have nothing to do with each other except what a given person deems as moral.
In libertarianism, the government exists to protect the rights of the people. No such structure exists in Somalia, making it the antithesis of libertarianism.
Taxing gross profits over $1M would bankrupt an enormous number of small businesses who do not have the resources to hire cutthroat accountants.
Other than that, sounds pretty good. Corporations exist at the pleasure of the jurisdiction in which they are incorporated, and as such should have no rights whatsoever. There are no provisions for collective rights in the Constitution. All rights are personal, even the right to assembly. Stripping corporations of rights do nothing to infringe the personal rights in the Constitution, as people can still exercise them. There is no right to avoid personal accountability just because you run a business.
While many claiming to be libertarian would howl at the above, I believe it is perfectly consistent with a primarily libertarian outlook.
Politicians make it hard to distinguish left wing from right wing in all but the most trivial of ways. They each mimic the other's methods depending upon whom is in power.
The law doesn't determine anything but the law. Fairness is subjective, otherwise slavery was fair when it was legal.
Then work toward repealing it with another amendment.
Mockett is just awesome. They have some of the greatest furniture-tech integration products on the market.
Mockett has been producing products like that for years. Not identical, but designed to be built into furniture.
It's a net gain for those collecting the money, in that the affected class is only a tiny percentage of the entire pool of taxpayers.
There's even disagreement on the 2.4GHz band. The US and certain other countries limit it more than others do. There are a number of additional channels available outside the US.