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User: Shade+Everdark

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  1. Different AC here. Those are great stats to throw at people... but if you look at main street and not Wall Street, it is a completely different picture. Those companies making part of that 18.56T are paying little to no taxes. The average person is barely getting by, because the revenue that is generated by those companies flies overseas, tax free, never to be seen again.

    "An enemy so weak..." You mean the one that has stopped the push into Mosul by coalition forces, and is holding strong in their region of Iraq?

    As for the current President-elect, if one had any clue about US history, there is a reason for the Electoral College. Without it, California and New York would decide who would be President, with every other region of the US having zero voice in that election. In fact, in California proper, their bicameral state legislature is all based on popular vote. This means that coastal cities get 100% of the attention by politicians, while everyone east of that has no voice whatsoever. This is why California has fiascos like the Salton Sea going on.

    So tell me something: Why, exactly, shouldn't California and New York dominate the decision to decide who is President? That happens to be where most of the people are. Generally speaking, in a democracy (yes, even a democratic republic such as the US), the choice of the majority of voters is kinda-sorta supposed to be who ends up winning. But ignore that for a moment. You say that California and New York should not dominate the Presidential election. In the system we now have, with the Electoral College, why then should Iowa, Wyoming, or Nebraska disproportionately determine who our President should be? You do realize that, under our current system, the votes of those states, as a proportion of the population, count for more than do the votes of California or New York, or North Carolina, or Florida. Rather a lot more.WaPo A better solution would be to introduce proportional representation, but we all know that's not going to happen.

  2. Re:arbitration != court on Are US Courts 'Going Dark'? (justsecurity.org) · · Score: 1

    And I have difficulty seeing how you could prefer the idea of arbitration, as it exists now, to using the courts.
    Unless, of course, you already have a built-in aversion to anything involving the government.

  3. Re:arbitration != court on Are US Courts 'Going Dark'? (justsecurity.org) · · Score: 2

    Arbitration might be a good mechanism for resolving disputes, if there existed any way to ensure their impartiality. (I am referring here exclusively to the United States, as I lack sufficient knowledge to speak on the laws governing other nations). However, in virtually all cases where a consumer signs an EULA or other agreement stipulating mandatory arbitration as a means of dispute resolution, the arbiter is literally bought and paid for by the corporation, or whoever is selling the product or offering the service. This includes no input from the consumer as to who gets selected to mediate the dispute. Unsurprisingly, as of 2009 mediators found in favor of the consumer in only 4% of arbitration cases, and there have been numerous accusations regarding the influence of corporations on the arbitrators. As far as I see it, forced arbitration is nothing more than an attempt by greedy entities to circumvent the judicial system.

  4. Re:Improvements to Dolphin performance? on KDE Software Compilation 4.11 Released · · Score: 1

    I have trouble understanding how Dolphin is taking 5 seconds to open anything on your machine. As a counter-anecdote, to open any of the largest folders in my filesystem in Dolphin on my laptop takes perhaps a full second. Dolphin taking 5 seconds on anything is, in my humble experience, absolutely unheard-of. Even accessing large network shares takes only 3-4 seconds.

  5. Re:Does *any* industry start a new union anymore? on Ask Slashdot: What Would It Take For Developers To Start Their Own Union? · · Score: 1

    Promotions aren't based on ability as it is. In every environment that might qualify as a medium-sized business or larger that I've seen (I grant you that it's somewhat limited), cronyism and/or seniority rule the day.

    I know, I know, anecdote is hardly the plural of data and all that, but when that's all you're seeing, it sort of becomes easy to draw those conclusions anyway.

  6. Re:Technical ink pens on Ask Slashdot: The Search For the Ultimate Engineer's Pen · · Score: 1

    Warning: not an engineer, please read comment accordingly.

    I have to agree on the Sakura. I've used a Micron, and the non-technical Gelly Roll, and they've both been wonderful: the ink has been smooth, with never a blob, smear, or dry spot, and the pen itself writes quite smoothly.

    I'll also put in a recommendation for the Zebra Sarasa Clip. I use the 0.4 mm tip, and it can feel a little bit scratchy, but I naturally write quite small, so the precision of the fine tip works well for me. The ink is very consistent, with no blobbing whatsoever. Once in a great while I do hit a dry spot, though. It's also light and comfortable in my hand.

    I don't know that you can actually get that model of Zebra here in the States, but I use JetPens. They have a good selection of different writing tools (mostly from Japan), and they're very speedy: I've yet to place an order using regular mail that has taken more than 3 business days to get to me.

    ...ugh, now I feel like a salesman. Which is slightly mitigated by the fact that I'm being a pen salesman.

  7. That's just great on Vivek Kundra Quits As Federal CIO · · Score: 2

    What are Almalexia and Sotha Sil going to do now? Who's going to hang on to the Wraithguard? What does the Nerevarine think about all this?

  8. Atheism might not be what you think on Federal Judge Rules Against Intelligent Design · · Score: 1

    Actually, atheism is not necessarily a worldview. It is generally recognized ( http://www.infidels.org/news/atheism/intro.html#at heisms/ ) as being divided into two camps: those of the strong atheists, who choose to believe that deities do not exist, which is in inded a worldview, and those fo the weak atheists, who simply choose not to believe in any deity, which is really a choice to not have a religious worldview.