Uh, one of the tenets of the Libertarian platform is "No force or fraud." This is certainly fraud, and therefore a suitable target of government force.
It's completely illegitimate. Nowhere does the US Constitution grant the federal government the power to sell public resources to private interests. The closest is the "takings clause," which is exactly the opposite, taking private property for public use.
Furthermore, nowhere is spectrum mentioned (of course, it wasn't known about at the time), so it should be covered by the 10th Amendment, and left to the states. Before someone claims that the nature of spectrum demands federal oversight due to it's pervasive nature, I'll point to Europe and elsewhere with closely situated political divisions.
"at the time had 3 local ISPs to choose from, all offering the fastest modem connections at the time"
Sounds like in reality you had a single provider - the telco which would connect your modem to the modem of an ISP.
Faster than that, you would have used ISDN or DSL on those same wires, which required progressively shorter distances to the local telco facility, reducing their availability to rural customers. That continues on with cable modem and fiber networks - they aren't built out as far as the old copper telco circuits were.
Europe is much more population dense, so the build-out of higher speed links has a better ROI. There are lots of rural areas in the US where the ROI is too small to justify a build-out, so it doesn't happen. To compare, the US has a population density of about 83 per square mile, Germany is about 593. And although I couldn't find a metric, I suspect that the population in Europe is more evenly distributed, too.
"Thirty Minneapolis city buildings will get free basic cable for the next seven years"
Which is to say Comcast is helping Minneapolis increase taxes. We all know there's no such thing as "free," so this is simply a hidden tax on cable subscribers, who will now be subsidizing municipal cable.
Ummm... This sounds like Reading Comprehension 101... right there in the summary, you don't even have to RTFA:
this is very different to the slowing effect of passing light through a medium such as glass or water, where the light is only slowed during the time it is passing through the material--it returns to the speed of light after it comes out the other side. The effect of passing the light through the mask is to limit the top speed at which the photons can travel.
Name something which doesn't carry a legal risk in the US, where people will sue for anything. Disney's just as likely to get sued by employees who get infectious diseases because they didn't take well know, very safe, measures to help prevent their spread.
Requiring employees who have extensive contact with the public, especially the young and elderly, to have vaccinations for highly infectious diseases is also common sense.
No one would be forced to get a vaccination, and everyone has a choice. It would be a condition of employment, anyone would be free to quit if they chose not to get vaccinated.
Before I deleted my FB account, I don't remember having to agree to a TOS every time I signed on. AIR, it was only the first time. But, maybe I mis-remember.
OBD monitoring may not be require in OZ, but it is federally mandated in the US. It monitors things which would pass a simple tailpipe test. You're obviously unfamiliar with what it does, and unqualified to comment.
EDFA.
Uh, one of the tenets of the Libertarian platform is "No force or fraud." This is certainly fraud, and therefore a suitable target of government force.
It's completely illegitimate. Nowhere does the US Constitution grant the federal government the power to sell public resources to private interests. The closest is the "takings clause," which is exactly the opposite, taking private property for public use.
Furthermore, nowhere is spectrum mentioned (of course, it wasn't known about at the time), so it should be covered by the 10th Amendment, and left to the states. Before someone claims that the nature of spectrum demands federal oversight due to it's pervasive nature, I'll point to Europe and elsewhere with closely situated political divisions.
"at the time had 3 local ISPs to choose from, all offering the fastest modem connections at the time"
Sounds like in reality you had a single provider - the telco which would connect your modem to the modem of an ISP.
Faster than that, you would have used ISDN or DSL on those same wires, which required progressively shorter distances to the local telco facility, reducing their availability to rural customers. That continues on with cable modem and fiber networks - they aren't built out as far as the old copper telco circuits were.
Europe is much more population dense, so the build-out of higher speed links has a better ROI. There are lots of rural areas in the US where the ROI is too small to justify a build-out, so it doesn't happen. To compare, the US has a population density of about 83 per square mile, Germany is about 593. And although I couldn't find a metric, I suspect that the population in Europe is more evenly distributed, too.
"Thirty Minneapolis city buildings will get free basic cable for the next seven years"
Which is to say Comcast is helping Minneapolis increase taxes. We all know there's no such thing as "free," so this is simply a hidden tax on cable subscribers, who will now be subsidizing municipal cable.
Not only that, but they're lying about the capabilities. It's only 2X the resolution (which is a linear measurement). That gives it 4X the pixels.
Stop being so intolerant of the troll.
A straw man, but thanks for admitting my point by changing your argument to the amount of risk, not its presence.
Name something which doesn't carry a legal risk in the US, where people will sue for anything. Disney's just as likely to get sued by employees who get infectious diseases because they didn't take well know, very safe, measures to help prevent their spread.
Requiring employees who have extensive contact with the public, especially the young and elderly, to have vaccinations for highly infectious diseases is also common sense.
"Employers should not be put in a position where they are giving medical advice or direction. "
So, Disney shouldn't even be quarantining those employees with measles?
"i keep hearing about this social contract, I never seen it, i never signed it. "
So, you've never read Rousseau, and are illiterate with regard to political philosophy.
No one would be forced to get a vaccination, and everyone has a choice. It would be a condition of employment, anyone would be free to quit if they chose not to get vaccinated.
It's "new math." You don't have to show your work.
Does a philosopher shit in the woods?
Before I deleted my FB account, I don't remember having to agree to a TOS every time I signed on. AIR, it was only the first time. But, maybe I mis-remember.
Huh? Exactly what makes a school (or employer) subject to the Facebook TOS agreed to by the student (or employee)?
Where have you been? That's never stopped them before.
Plus, you can't buy beer. You can only get it on a rental basis.
IT make us change them, so mine is now 123457, which isn't on the list!
You think a company who doesn't bother with even simple security is going to do that?
OBD monitoring may not be require in OZ, but it is federally mandated in the US. It monitors things which would pass a simple tailpipe test. You're obviously unfamiliar with what it does, and unqualified to comment.
No you can't, not completely. Why do you think OBD monitoring is required, if everything can be checked through simple inspection?
So, how can you tell by simply looking whether the catalytic converter is working properly?