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User: Paladeen

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Comments · 175

  1. Re:Best Missile Defense Shield on Israel's Iron Dome Missile Defense Shield Actually Works · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wow, real intelligent contribution you just made there.

    Obviously these crazy "islamists" are much more unreasonable than the kind-hearted Israelis, who are all good liberals, devoid of any fanaticism, religious bigotry and nationalism.

  2. Re:OMFG Reagan was right? on Israel's Iron Dome Missile Defense Shield Actually Works · · Score: 1

    "... that the Muslims are terrorising Israel with..."

    These are Palestinians, not "Muslims". And many of them are Christians.

  3. Re:Two can play at this game on White House Pulls Down TSA Petition · · Score: 1

    "the real time when USA was actually a real economic power, when people truly had individual liberties was not any time past WWII, it was the time from the 1870 to 1913"

    False. The USA was, relative to the rest of the world, at its economic power peak in the years immediately following WW2.

    Economic liberties, on the other hand....

  4. Re:Drones strikes are great... on Harvard Study Suggests Drone Strikes Can Disrupt Terror Groups · · Score: 1

    I listen, regularly, to fairly ideologically driven media (e.g. Democracy Now!)

    And mainstream US media isn't ideologically driven? I calll bullshit on that. Most US sources of news are incredibly ideologically slanted and gung-ho. Democracy Now is one of the few US news programs that doesn't spoonfeed its viewers Whitehouse press releases unthinkingly.

  5. Re:Privacy or Convenience? on The Average Consumer Thinks Data Privacy Is Worth Around 65 Cents · · Score: 2

    Mind yer souls, ye young whippersnappers!

    14 years of Slashdot and articles respond to me in my head, day and night, awake or asleep.

  6. Re:Not smart Enough? on Scientists Say People Aren't Smart Enough For Democracy To Flourish · · Score: 1

    "for reasons that are mutually sound"?

    That's very naive. There is no agreed upon definition of "sound" here -- sound for whom? For you? For Obama? For Bush? A powerful politician's agenda is not very likely to coincide with yours.

  7. Re:Nobel prize for literature is irrelevant on JRR Tolkien Denied Nobel Due To Low Quality Prose · · Score: 1

    Give it a chance. I read it in English translation and it was a truly great book.

  8. Re:Tolkien's prose on JRR Tolkien Denied Nobel Due To Low Quality Prose · · Score: 1

    Painfully "droll"?

    Droll \Droll\, n.
              1. One whose practice it is to raise mirth by odd tricks; a
                    jester; a buffoon; a merry-andrew. --Prior.
                    [1913 Webster]

              2. Something exhibited to raise mirth or sport, as a puppet,
                    a farce, and the like

    I think you may have meant "painfully dull."

  9. Re:Stand up, people! on SOPA Makes Strange Bedfellows · · Score: 2

    Their chances of re-election don't hinge on the experts, but if enough of their constituents kick up a fuss, they might think twice.

    Or maybe I'm just being hopelessly optimistic.

  10. Re:"Iran's 'leaders' call for [blah blah]" on Israeli Spyware Sold To Iran · · Score: 1

    There is a difference between formal power and real power.

    The President of the United States has a great deal of formal power, but very little "real" power. His decisions are constrained in many complex ways by his party, his backers, his financial contributors and the various civil and military services in the US, which are the real creators of policy. They are the ones that present the viable options the figurehead chooses from.

  11. Re:Flash to HTML5 movement is not new to Adobe on Adobe Ends Development of Flash On Mobile Browsers · · Score: 1

    "removing support for PowerPC binaries starting with Snow Leopard"

    Surely you mean starting with Lion, 6 years after the transition to Intel? Rosetta runs just fine on Snow Leopard.

  12. Re:Normal with the new Google policy for gmail ... on Hotmail Mobile Usage Spikes Thanks To Apple iOS 5 · · Score: 1

    The phone number thing in Gmail useful, though. It can prevent permanent hijacking of your account. You can always request a new password and have it sent via SMS to your phone.

    My mom's Hotmail account was hijacked by some clever phishers a while back, and I try as I might, I was unable to get it back under her control. No support from Hotmail, no replies to my queries, nothing.

    So, the phone number request is not without its reasons. But hey, if you don't want Google knowing it, just provide a fake number.

  13. Lord Acton put it nicely on Jobs Wanted To Destroy Android · · Score: 1

    "Great men are almost always bad men."

  14. Re:Science 1000000001, god 0 on HIV Vaccine Trial Shows 90% Immune Response · · Score: 1

    Get a sense of humour, fer God's sake. If He does exist, he must be the ultimate joker. I have a feeling he'd like our OP's tongue-in-cheek flippancy.

  15. Re:Dumbing down of interfaces on Is Final Cut Pro X Apple's Biggest Mistake In Years? · · Score: 1

    >Or that simple functionality like Refresh isn't available in Finder

    As of Mac OS X 10.4 (released in 2005 -- 6 years ago), the Finder receives event messages whenever the content of an open folder changes, and the file list is updated automatically.

  16. Re:public-private partnership on Iceland Taps Facebook To Rewrite Its Constitution · · Score: 1

    As an Icelander who follows things at home quite closely, I'm telling you you're in for a disappointment. Things are not going well.

    Unemployment is still high, about 7.5%. Our currency has fallen (and we live with currency controls), so wages here are now among the lowest in the OECD (software engineers now earn about 400000 ISK/month, ~2000 GBP, before income tax (38.5%)) and the prices of imported goods has skyrocketed (and we import almost everything). The price of our exports go up, so the large fishing companies and their owners benefit, and Iceland's government gets foreign currency to pay off its huge and debilitating foreign debt (interest payments alone amount to about 1/4 of government income).

    Almost all household debt in the country is price-indexed (!!! -- an almost unique situation). E.g. the war in Libya increased oil prices == more expensive gasoline, which raises the Icelandic CPI and so everyone's loans go up. It's a crazy system. Many Icelanders struggle under overbearing debt, which can only become worse.

    To put it bluntly, Iceland's financial woes have been very firmly placed on the working people of the country. Just because we refused to pay the Icesave debt, it doesn't mean that everything is well. A

  17. Re:public-private partnership on Iceland Taps Facebook To Rewrite Its Constitution · · Score: 1

    You, sir, make some excellent points.

  18. Thomas Friedman on Have We Reached Maximum Sustainable Population Size? · · Score: 2

    Who cares? Thomas L Friedman is an obnoxious windbag mostly famous for being wrong about pretty much everything.

  19. Re:is it just me? on Iceland Votes "Já" To Proposed News Haven · · Score: 1

    "As for Iceland, yo do realize the country went bankrupt because they insisted on having state controlled banks and made laws against larger international banks being owners/part owners"

    This is complete and utter nonsense. The Icelandic banks Kaupthing and Landsbanki were privatised in 2003. They consequently became huge, borrowed vast sums of money and then crashed, tanking the Icelandic economy. Now they've been taken over by the state, and ordinary taxpayers are made to fork out to cover their private debts, much like in the UK and USA. No, Nordic welfare socialism is certainly not to blame for the state of the Icelandic economy. On the contrary, the reason the Icelanders are fucked now is because of their experiment with neoliberalism and mass privatisation -- an experiment that the next couple of generations will have to pay out the nose for.

  20. Re:It could be that... on Caffeine Addicts Get No Additional Perk, Only a Return To Baseline · · Score: 1

    Mod this UP!

  21. Skewed incentives on Learning About Real-World Economies Through Game Economies · · Score: 1

    I very much doubt that online games can ever provide any decent economic modelling. The things that make most people risk-averse in the real world are largely mitigated online.

    It may be terrible to lose your character or his equipment in the MMORPG universe, but you'd have to be pretty far gone in order to feel the same way about that as you would about losing your job / house / car.

  22. Century or two on French Deputies Want Labels On Photo-Altered Models · · Score: 1

    "... Doubled the number of customers for its product. This was only a century or two ago"

    I very much doubt that it was "only a century or two ago." I don't think many women removed their body hair in 1800, or 1850, or even 1900. More likely, it was a marketing gimmick in the post-war years, when Edward Bernais got up to his clever tricks.

  23. Gays in the fashion industry on French Deputies Want Labels On Photo-Altered Models · · Score: 1

    The popularity of the stick-figure female model built like a boy in early pubescence is due to the prevalence of gay male designers in the fashion industry. They like skinny young boys, and so they want women to be as close to that ideal as possible. That, at least, is my theory.

  24. Re:National security? Nah, that's not possible on Censorship Struggle Underway In Iceland · · Score: 1

    In theory, the government could assert direct control by passing special laws to that effect.

    However, it is usually considered a bad idea to have politicians directly running and controlling state-owned companies. Tends to foster corruption, although in this context all talk of worries about corruption is pretty ironic. The whole bloody system was corrupt, and pretty much everybody was in everybody's pocket.

  25. Re:National security? Nah, that's not possible on Censorship Struggle Underway In Iceland · · Score: 1

    When one talks of the "Government", one usually has in minds the upper echelons of the executive, not the petty beaurocrats and officials that make the whole battery work. These are usually collectively referred to as "the State." For example, we change our government regularly, every time somebody new gets elected into power, but the State (i.e. the aggregation of individuals that keep things running) stay mostly the same.