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User: penix1

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  1. Re:EPA has exceeded safe limits, needs curbing on Senate Advances "Secret Science" Bill, Sets Up Possible Showdown With President · · Score: 2

    While this general welfare clause has been expanded over the years, it still fails on several levels. The courts have only allowed the general welfare clause to be used with the taxing and spending powers of congress. No court and no competent constitutional authority has ever said it extends congress's powers to create departments that can make law independent of congress or constitutional processes nor have they used the clause to establish fines and/or imprisonment terms to anyone. There is simply no constitutional basis for it.

    It is your reading comprehension that needs adjusting. The departments don't create the law. They enforce it. That is what I said. It was Congress that created the department as the Constitution allows.

    Can congress create a department of the second amendment, staff it with a bunch of people who create regulation saying you have to own at least 3 guns per person in the household, molest your children at least once in their life time, spin in circles twice before taking a piss all without congressional action? Can the EPA make any of these regulations? The answer is no to all because there is no constitutional authority for it. The only difference is how silly the regulations might be but the general welfare claim can be made just the same.

    Again, it isn't the EPA creating the regulations. It is Congress. The EPA is merely enforcing the regulations that Congress created. If you want to know the specific act it is NEPA. I leave it as an exercise for you to look it up.

    The rest of your post is totally nonsense repeating the same line you refused to understand... Namely that Congress created the EPA and Congress has the power to destroy it. But know the consequences when you do. Things like the Gulf spill will go unaddressed. The Freedom Enterprises MCHM spill would have no legal recourse. The impoundment failure in Tennessee would be common place. Not to mention Love Canal...

  2. Re:EPA has exceeded safe limits, needs curbing on Senate Advances "Secret Science" Bill, Sets Up Possible Showdown With President · · Score: 1

    I am not going to argue whether or not "secret science" should be used by the EPA. I will point out the hypocrisy in there is no difference between the EPA using "secret science" and the FDA using "secret science" when approving drugs. If you are going to ban it in one regulatory agency then you should ban it in all regulatory agencies.

  3. Re:EPA has exceeded safe limits, needs curbing on Senate Advances "Secret Science" Bill, Sets Up Possible Showdown With President · · Score: 4, Informative

    There certainly is no constitutional basis for the EPA to exist anyways.

    Why do people keep saying shit like this?

    Section 8 - Powers of Congress
    The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States ; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

    It's the Congress that created the EPA. It's the Congress that funds them. It's the Executive that controls them in accordance with the laws passed by... Wait for it... CONGRESS. All that based on the "General Welfare" clause of the Constitution.

    Or maybe you are suggesting that control of commons should be relinquished to the corporations?

  4. Re:well then it's a bad contract on ESPN Sues Verizon To Stop New Sports-Free TV Bundles · · Score: 1

    Yes it is when the choice is all or none. They have the end providers over a barrel in that regard. Just look what happened here in WV when Suddenlink got in a spat over the contract with Viacom. All the Viacom channels were removed hurting the business of that provider.

    A contract by coercion is by definition a bad one.

  5. PR or not, that is the reason they give which is why I say "Every statement they made says that". The point I was making was it isn't the EU stopping American drug companies from distributing them as the GP proclaimed.

  6. The problem States are having is that companies refuse to sell the drugs to the States because of sanctions imposed on them by the EU.

    Oh come on now. That isn't even bullshit. It is horse shit.

    The drug companies that produce the drugs used for execution realized that their drugs, which were originally designed to save lives, was being used to take lives. Every statement made by those companies state that. In other words, they made a moral judgement that they didn't want to be seen as providing death on one hand and life on the other. Sure, the EU pharmacies were the first to refuse but your statement doesn't take into account the American companies refusals.

  7. Re:Doug Williams - Polygraph Countermeasures? BS! on DIA Polygraph Countermeasure Case Files Leaked · · Score: 1

    The problem is people DO believe a polygraph is "accurate" or it wouldn't be used to "weed out" suspects like it is. I watch Investigation Discovery all the time and I find it disturbing that a test that is invalid in a court is still use by police for this purpose. Things get worse if you refuse to take the test or, God forbid, request an attorney be present during questioning. Guilt is then further reinforced with a suspect that invokes those rights.

  8. Re:But not to Nestle. on California Looks To the Sea For a Drink of Water · · Score: 1

    Who said anything about salinity change as the only thing doing the damage? The whole process ignores microscopic organisms from the intake to the filters to the osmosis process.

    You might be able to push it up a little locally if you dump the salt in a harbor or something... soooo... don't do that. duh.

    And that is exactly what they will do because it is the cheapest option that the lowest bid waste contractor has. It wouldn't be the first time humans created a toxic waste dump...

  9. Re:But not to Nestle. on California Looks To the Sea For a Drink of Water · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can see another aspect besides the waste in electricity... The microscopic life in the ocean that is the foundation of the food chain that will eventually lead to us is not considered in the environmental assessments. They are only worried about the higher multi-cellular life. The ocean is one of the most diverse places on Earth. I can see us fucking up that diversity much like we fucked up everything else we touched in nature.

  10. Re:About time. on Ten US Senators Seek Investigation Into the Replacement of US Tech Workers · · Score: 1

    Five hundred IT workers at SCE were cut, and many had to train their replacements.

    It is at this point that I would tell them to piss up a rope and suck on the dry end until it was wet...

    It just adds insult to injury to expect a person you tell you are firing that they have to train their replacement. If forced by contract I would do the bare minimum required by the contract. Nothing compels me to divulge everything. They are, after all, supposed to be qualified for the job right?

  11. Fines don't work at all. It is built into the price as a "cost of doing business".

    Hit the corporation where it really does hurt. Suspend their corporate charter. That removes the legal protections the corporation has allowing the shareholders as well as the executives to be held liable for illegal misdoings. You will quickly see a change in their behavior once the shareholders can be sued for enabling the bad conduct...

  12. Re:WAHT TEH FUCK` on Prosecutors Get an 'A' On Convictions of Atlanta Ed-Reform-Gone-Bad Test Cheats · · Score: 1

    Cheating on tests is not criminal.

    It is when money is tied to it like it was in this case. You are acting as if it was the students that were cheating. It was the teachers changing wrong answers on the tests after the students were done. They did it for the money plain and simple since they got bonuses based on those test results.

  13. Re:Well they wanted the results on Prosecutors Get an 'A' On Convictions of Atlanta Ed-Reform-Gone-Bad Test Cheats · · Score: 3, Funny

    There was a joke on NPR the other day it went like this:

    3 economics statisticians went deer hunting. The first just missed the back end of the deer while the second just missed the front. The third yelled, "We got him!"

    What this shows is there is always a margin of error and as long as the numbers are within that range they got it.

  14. Re:WAHT TEH FUCK` on Prosecutors Get an 'A' On Convictions of Atlanta Ed-Reform-Gone-Bad Test Cheats · · Score: 1

    How on earth does cheating on some tests in any way compare to racketeering?

    Because their salaries, bonuses and the school's reputation (hence more funding for being a "good school") were based on the test results and they all colluded to change the scores to achieve the higher salaries and bonuses. In short, they colluded to illegally enriched themselves.

  15. Re:How are these related? on Prosecutors Get an 'A' On Convictions of Atlanta Ed-Reform-Gone-Bad Test Cheats · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We've been obsessing over test scores for a while now and it doesn't seem to improve the quality of education.

    That is the fault of the No Child Left Behind Act. The act that tied teacher / administrator salaries to the test results. Public schools across the nation stopped worrying about a kids learning and worried about their bottom line. That leads to doing whatever it takes to make sure the test results are positive.

  16. Re:The future is here on W. Virginia Bans Direct Tesla Sales, With Urging of Car-Dealer Senate President · · Score: 1

    Only by people like me who are constituents....

    Earl Ray IMO is a "company man" from Logan County (the county where the most mountain top removal is happening). He was the president of the Senate here for ages before taking over for Manchin. It needs to be stated that this year was the first in over 3 decades that both houses went Republican in WV and they have done nothing but passing idiotic laws to include getting rid of the conceal-carry laws and gutting the above ground storage tank law that was passed after the Freedom spill that affected 300,000 residents and businesses for weeks.

    The problem is that even though the governor has line item veto all it takes is a simple majority to override that veto.

  17. Re:I am not worried on RadioShack Puts Customer Data Up For Sale In Bankruptcy Auction · · Score: 1

    I too started on a Coco 3. And worse, I recently found this:

    http://www.coco4.com/vcc/

  18. Re:Appropriate action ? on RadioShack Puts Customer Data Up For Sale In Bankruptcy Auction · · Score: 1

    High pressure commission sales staff

    It is great fun when they mob yo at the door with, "Can I help you?" to answer, "No thanks. Just shoplifting." They then follow you real close after that...

  19. Re:No deadly force to protect property on RadioShack Puts Customer Data Up For Sale In Bankruptcy Auction · · Score: 1

    Many states, including my home state of WV, have "stand your ground" laws where the bar to use deadly force is very low. In WV all that is required is a notice posted "Private property. No trespassing. Violators will be shot" notice. It is quite silly really. Our stand your ground law puts Florida's to shame!

  20. Re:"Free" with restrictions is not Free! on Pixar Releases Free Version of RenderMan · · Score: 2

    Oh it gets worse...

    In order to download this you are required to sign up for their spam newsletter AND their forum as well as register it. So in exchange for your personal email and other personal info they are giving you this "free" tool...

  21. Re:Of course! on Prison Program Aims To Turn Criminals Into Coders · · Score: 1

    Protected ones are race, religion, national origin, disability, age, sexual orientation.

    Sexual orientation isn't one of the "protected species". Sex (meaning mostly female) is though. Disability also isn't enumerated in the Constitution however there is the Americans with Disability Act that covers them. So to restate it they are race, religion, age, national origin and sex.

  22. Re:In the case of the nudes on Twitter Will Ban Revenge Porn and Non-consensual Nudes · · Score: 1

    Geolocated of course...

  23. Re:Overblown Hyperbole on Lawsuit Claims Major Automakers Have Failed To Guard Against Hackers · · Score: 1

    So in other words you are saying someone should die because of an exploit before something should be done? Sounds reckless to me. The car companies have been warned by many of these studies and still haven't done anything about it. Maybe this suit will get them off their asses. I won't hold my breath though...

  24. Re:Well done FCC on As Big As Net Neutrality? FCC Kills State-Imposed Internet Monopolies · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I absolutely agree.

    This might just be coincidence but since the net neutrality decision, my night time speed has gotten way better. Ever since I started the service at about 6:00 PM until midnight the service would slow to a crawl making it almost totally unusable. This has been going on now for the 5 years I have been on Suddenlink. Now, I am getting the 20 MB/s all day long. Granted, 20 MB isn't blazingly fast but it beats the drop to roughly 1 MB/s I was getting between those times.

  25. US==3.806,000 sq miles (9.857 million square km)
    Japan==145,925 sq miles (377,944 square km)

    Therein lies the problem with comparing the US to very small (in area) countries. Also, the population of Japan is far denser than the US which makes it more profitable to offer the higher speeds at a much lower cost. That is why you are seeing the better speeds as well as more choices in provider in metropolitan areas in the US. While us in the boonies may have at most 2 providers and they both suck.