This thing is, they might not have a warrant but they can come into your house if they want. They can toss the place, etc. Your rights don't come into play until you go to court, where it will cost you a lot of money to excercise your rights. Disobeying a police order to disperse is the same way, you don't get to decide if the order is lawful, the police can arrest you at any time and haul you off to jail, you don't get a say until you are in front of a judge. Arguably, police need to have that power, otherwise it would quickly become impossible to do the job.
Aside from an arrest being quite punative in of itself, the biggest flaw I see is that there are really no consequences for law enforcement who heap bogus charges on people. Hence some places (florida?) where the police are increasingly arresting people for resisting arrest just for asking why they have been arrested etc.
I look at it in terms of actual money versus potential money. There is an enormous amount of actual money at risk and this money is organized and concentrated. This actual money can be used today to promulgate and protect deeply entrenched interests. There is an unknown amount of potential money to be made, and it is a lot harder to spend and organize potential money than it is to spend and organize actual money.
My limited fact checking bears this theory up. Very often the skeptical pieces I find about AGW in the media are sourced from non-scientists affliated with monied interests.
It isn't so far fetched. I just recently completed some refinancing paperwork for my mortgage, and they want some pretty excruciating detail. I was surprised to see they wanted bank/investment account numbers and asset details. I care way more about that stuff then any facebook data.
In this age of soundbites your hypothetical candidate would get exactly that far and then be roundly denounced by the Tea Party, not to mention Grover Norquist. There is no room in the hysteria of modern politics for nuance or complexity.
I wish they would just abandon these stupid schemes and implement a simple e-book lending model. I don't see why they can't make it so I can lend a book to a friend and have it 'locked' until the friend returns it. This wouldn't really impact publisher sales and it would give e-books the same sort of social interactive power that traditional books have.
It seems from reading on some of the skeptic's websites, they always knew that the temperature was rising, and this study confirms nothing, has not been peer reviewed and is flawed is several ways. The kettle defense!
I have often wondered if this same phenomenon is why houses cost so much more to buy than say 30 years ago. Has the rise in credit dramatically outpaced wages? Does it lead to a self perpetuating cycle which pushes up costs, and requires bigger loans?
The biggest negative about federal student loans is how easily exploitable they are for the 'for profit' institutions. The drop out rate is very high, and the default rate is too, but the for profit colleges make their money regardless.
I have spent some time working on government contracts where I was one of many contractors sitting at the client location full time. Part of the reason that particular agency used contractors was because their HR process was very difficult to deal with. It was very hard to hire new full time employees and it was almost impossible to fire anyone. The director knew he was paying more for the contractors, but he also knew he could quickly alter his workforce if his budget changed.
As far as costs go, the full time employees were probably paid 10-15% or so less than the contractors (in terms of what the contractors took home), but they had much better benefits (not to mention job security). Most of the contractors worked for consulting companies, and they were the ones raking in the cash, not the actual contractors. In fact the agency I worked for forced everyone to go through a middle-man company if you wanted to do any work for them. The middle-man took from 10 to 20% off the top just for time entry and billing.
Don't forget that many government agencies have no real incentive to save money. If an agency improves their efficiency and slashes the budget by 10 million dollars, it just means they get less money the next year. It is why you sometimes hear about agencies going crazy at the end of the fiscal year and using up their remaining budget to buy whatever they can, regardless of need, so they can show they spent their allocated monies.
This reminds me of a client I had where the in-house developer was unhappy with my choice to remove his homegrown database abstraction middle-ware from a simple internal application I was tasked with enhancing. I added a ton of new features and cut down the code base by about 80%, but all I ever heard from him is "but what if we decide to switch to ORACLE?!?"
After all, when we're playing a game of baseball (right, right, I know, this is slashdot), and a ball is coming towards us, we aren't calculating in our heads the velocity, air resistance and other variables involved in catching the ball. We just reach out our arms and our brain makes its best guess based on some sort of heuristic or something to make the catch.
Norway has a much more homogeneous population than the US (I assume). I wonder if that has certain advantages in terms of governance? Also, the per cap number is nice, but how does that translate to quality of life?
There is a discovery channel documentary about beauty which talks about how they think symmetry is partly determined by the fetal environment. Each half of the body grows at the same time--mirror-like, so changes in nutrition or stress can impact the one side or the other.
The theory they developed based on this information is that selection for symmetry is really just expressing a preference for a mate who is more likely to be in better environmental circumstances than a less symmetrical mate.
If this is true, it would make sense that woman (and men) in general are more symmetrical today than they have been in history. Nutrition, disease and stress (from violence especially) are much better for larger numbers of people.
My old high school had a company put in 'free' televisions in every classroom, in return for forcing the students to watch several minutes worth of commercials every day.
I think the outfit was called 'Channel One'.
Right, you might not die, but you will probably end up ruined financially. It would be nice to find a nice middle ground between death and losing everything.
Why would politicians care about money? They are only allowed to use campaign contributions for their campaigns
Actually the rules have changed and you can have your relatives (even your wife and children) being paid by your campaign. There are Congressmen who have their wives being paid 120,000+ as 'political consultants' from the campaign fund. This is a fairly wide-spread practice.
Check out Dick Morris's book 'Outrage', you may not like Dick Morris, but the book has some disturbing information in it.
In Virginia at least, gas tax money is separate from the General Fund and cannot be used for anything other than transportation related initiatives.
In fact, we recently had a pretty big budget shortfall, and even though I am sure the politicians wanted to pillage the transportation fund, they couldn't. I think only in emergency cases where one of the state entitlement programs (like pensions or medicare) is about to fail can the money be tapped.
I had read in Dick Morris' book "Outrage" that many of the hijackers had expired visas. If the government had just spent more time enforcing existing laws, 9/11 might have been prevented by routine deportation.
You need to ignore the parties and look at the individual candidates. Ron Paul, although Republican, is very much in alignment with the 3 things you listed.
It is your right to sit back on your ass and complain that "nobody" represents your views. But it will never get you any closer to having your views represented. If you really care about certain issues, you can't afford to wait and hope some shining knight will come along, you have to get personally involved.
In my government class at college (long ago) the professor suggested that one of the key ingredients to a successful democratic government was strong 'non-governmental organizations' (NGOs).
One of the reasons why so many democracies had failed (we were studying Africa specifically) was due to a lack of such NGOs.
Fuck this stay-the-course nonsense. Just think of it as a strategic retreat.
I am always amused by how people seem to accept sound-bites like 'stay-the-course' and 'you don't change horses mid race' like they were some kind of universal wisdom.
You don't 'stay-the-course' if you are headed towards a cliff. And you certainly do 'change your horse mid race' if it is running the wrong way.
I think this is what pushes humanity forward. If we spent all of our time being impressed with our last invention, we would never move on to the next invention. By quickly getting bored with our accomplishments we look for something else to invent and briefly impress ourselves with!
I use direct2drive, which has a pretty good selection of major titles you can download. They have some activation process you have to go through once you download, but after that you can play the game and don't need to be connected to anything.
This thing is, they might not have a warrant but they can come into your house if they want. They can toss the place, etc. Your rights don't come into play until you go to court, where it will cost you a lot of money to excercise your rights. Disobeying a police order to disperse is the same way, you don't get to decide if the order is lawful, the police can arrest you at any time and haul you off to jail, you don't get a say until you are in front of a judge. Arguably, police need to have that power, otherwise it would quickly become impossible to do the job.
Aside from an arrest being quite punative in of itself, the biggest flaw I see is that there are really no consequences for law enforcement who heap bogus charges on people. Hence some places (florida?) where the police are increasingly arresting people for resisting arrest just for asking why they have been arrested etc.
I look at it in terms of actual money versus potential money. There is an enormous amount of actual money at risk and this money is organized and concentrated. This actual money can be used today to promulgate and protect deeply entrenched interests. There is an unknown amount of potential money to be made, and it is a lot harder to spend and organize potential money than it is to spend and organize actual money.
My limited fact checking bears this theory up. Very often the skeptical pieces I find about AGW in the media are sourced from non-scientists affliated with monied interests.
It isn't so far fetched. I just recently completed some refinancing paperwork for my mortgage, and they want some pretty excruciating detail. I was surprised to see they wanted bank/investment account numbers and asset details. I care way more about that stuff then any facebook data.
I am raising taxes by 20%
In this age of soundbites your hypothetical candidate would get exactly that far and then be roundly denounced by the Tea Party, not to mention Grover Norquist. There is no room in the hysteria of modern politics for nuance or complexity.
I wish they would just abandon these stupid schemes and implement a simple e-book lending model. I don't see why they can't make it so I can lend a book to a friend and have it 'locked' until the friend returns it. This wouldn't really impact publisher sales and it would give e-books the same sort of social interactive power that traditional books have.
It seems from reading on some of the skeptic's websites, they always knew that the temperature was rising, and this study confirms nothing, has not been peer reviewed and is flawed is several ways. The kettle defense!
I have often wondered if this same phenomenon is why houses cost so much more to buy than say 30 years ago. Has the rise in credit dramatically outpaced wages? Does it lead to a self perpetuating cycle which pushes up costs, and requires bigger loans? The biggest negative about federal student loans is how easily exploitable they are for the 'for profit' institutions. The drop out rate is very high, and the default rate is too, but the for profit colleges make their money regardless.
I have spent some time working on government contracts where I was one of many contractors sitting at the client location full time. Part of the reason that particular agency used contractors was because their HR process was very difficult to deal with. It was very hard to hire new full time employees and it was almost impossible to fire anyone. The director knew he was paying more for the contractors, but he also knew he could quickly alter his workforce if his budget changed.
As far as costs go, the full time employees were probably paid 10-15% or so less than the contractors (in terms of what the contractors took home), but they had much better benefits (not to mention job security). Most of the contractors worked for consulting companies, and they were the ones raking in the cash, not the actual contractors. In fact the agency I worked for forced everyone to go through a middle-man company if you wanted to do any work for them. The middle-man took from 10 to 20% off the top just for time entry and billing.
Don't forget that many government agencies have no real incentive to save money. If an agency improves their efficiency and slashes the budget by 10 million dollars, it just means they get less money the next year. It is why you sometimes hear about agencies going crazy at the end of the fiscal year and using up their remaining budget to buy whatever they can, regardless of need, so they can show they spent their allocated monies.
This reminds me of a client I had where the in-house developer was unhappy with my choice to remove his homegrown database abstraction middle-ware from a simple internal application I was tasked with enhancing. I added a ton of new features and cut down the code base by about 80%, but all I ever heard from him is "but what if we decide to switch to ORACLE?!?"
After all, when we're playing a game of baseball (right, right, I know, this is slashdot), and a ball is coming towards us, we aren't calculating in our heads the velocity, air resistance and other variables involved in catching the ball. We just reach out our arms and our brain makes its best guess based on some sort of heuristic or something to make the catch.
This is known as the gaze heuristic : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaze_heuristic
Norway has a much more homogeneous population than the US (I assume). I wonder if that has certain advantages in terms of governance? Also, the per cap number is nice, but how does that translate to quality of life?
There is a discovery channel documentary about beauty which talks about how they think symmetry is partly determined by the fetal environment. Each half of the body grows at the same time--mirror-like, so changes in nutrition or stress can impact the one side or the other. The theory they developed based on this information is that selection for symmetry is really just expressing a preference for a mate who is more likely to be in better environmental circumstances than a less symmetrical mate. If this is true, it would make sense that woman (and men) in general are more symmetrical today than they have been in history. Nutrition, disease and stress (from violence especially) are much better for larger numbers of people.
My old high school had a company put in 'free' televisions in every classroom, in return for forcing the students to watch several minutes worth of commercials every day. I think the outfit was called 'Channel One'.
Right, you might not die, but you will probably end up ruined financially. It would be nice to find a nice middle ground between death and losing everything.
Why would politicians care about money? They are only allowed to use campaign contributions for their campaigns
Actually the rules have changed and you can have your relatives (even your wife and children) being paid by your campaign. There are Congressmen who have their wives being paid 120,000+ as 'political consultants' from the campaign fund. This is a fairly wide-spread practice.
Check out Dick Morris's book 'Outrage', you may not like Dick Morris, but the book has some disturbing information in it.
It ended up in part, causing a war with India http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino_indian_war
A lot of China's posturing and paranoia seems to almost make sense if you look at the history of how they have been treated by other nations.
In Virginia at least, gas tax money is separate from the General Fund and cannot be used for anything other than transportation related initiatives.
In fact, we recently had a pretty big budget shortfall, and even though I am sure the politicians wanted to pillage the transportation fund, they couldn't. I think only in emergency cases where one of the state entitlement programs (like pensions or medicare) is about to fail can the money be tapped.
Come on, We all know you would just procrastinate for the first 139 years and 364 days!
I had read in Dick Morris' book "Outrage" that many of the hijackers had expired visas. If the government had just spent more time enforcing existing laws, 9/11 might have been prevented by routine deportation.
You need to ignore the parties and look at the individual candidates. Ron Paul, although Republican, is very much in alignment with the 3 things you listed.
It is your right to sit back on your ass and complain that "nobody" represents your views. But it will never get you any closer to having your views represented. If you really care about certain issues, you can't afford to wait and hope some shining knight will come along, you have to get personally involved.
In my government class at college (long ago) the professor suggested that one of the key ingredients to a successful democratic government was strong 'non-governmental organizations' (NGOs).
One of the reasons why so many democracies had failed (we were studying Africa specifically) was due to a lack of such NGOs.
You don't 'stay-the-course' if you are headed towards a cliff. And you certainly do 'change your horse mid race' if it is running the wrong way.
Yeah, don't trust Mr. Pibb, that jerk didn't even bother to get his degree!
I think this is what pushes humanity forward. If we spent all of our time being impressed with our last invention, we would never move on to the next invention. By quickly getting bored with our accomplishments we look for something else to invent and briefly impress ourselves with!
I use direct2drive, which has a pretty good selection of major titles you can download. They have some activation process you have to go through once you download, but after that you can play the game and don't need to be connected to anything.