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User: mantissa128

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Comments · 36

  1. Prime Minister's Office on Canadian Couple Charged $5k For Finding 400-Year-Old Skeleton · · Score: 1

    Just get them to sign a cheque for it. They do this all the time.

  2. Re:Or the reverse on New York Pistol Permit Owner List Leaked · · Score: 1

    We would still be honoring Queen Elizabeth as our monarch

    That's worked pretty well for us, so far.

    Sincerely,
    Canada

  3. "Student RSC-0032Q5, you have been penalized 18 EduKarma as you have been found to be in the top 5% in bathroom break time. WARNING: Your EduKarma is critically low. If your EduKarma falls below 25 these gathered statistics will form part of your permanent employment record. SPECIAL SALE: Buy up to 500 EduKarma for 25% off until March 31!"

    Also, Repent Harlequin Said The Tick-Tock Man.

  4. Re:Kudos on Anonymous Hacks Westboro Baptist Church · · Score: 1

    have a right to avoid unwanted speech

    For the record, I hate the WBC but there is no such right, nor should there be.

    Should an extremist somewhere on the other side of the world be able to dictate to me what I can and cannot say? No.

  5. Re:From the original article... on Judge Issues Temporary Order Blocking Expulsion For Refusing To Wear RFID Tag · · Score: 2

    high school funding is based on attendance

    No, the student has to be in class when the morning bell rings or they count as absent, even if they are present in another area of the school. The RFID is to ensure all students in the building are in their classes at first bell, and to capture evidence that this is the case. RFID tags do nothing outside the school building, and do nothing for attendance other than automate the recording of it.

    This is being done solely to meet the definition of attendance as specified by the funding program. Operating costs do not go down proportionally with each student that is away - cutting funding based on attendance as a punitive measure on the schools is breathtakingly stupid. How about funding reform as a better solution than chipping each student like cattle?

  6. Re:School offered to let her wear a disabled ID on Student Refusing RFID Badge Now Fights Expulsion Order · · Score: 1

    The school's attached a condition that the student and her family must publicly endorse the RFID program.

    So this isn't about wearing ID, it's about submission to authority.

  7. Re:Get homeshcooled on Student Refusing RFID Badge Now Fights Expulsion Order · · Score: 1

    If a poor inner city school has a 20% truancy problem, then the budget is cut 20% and the teachers are fired.

    Perhaps then the solution is to change that policy? Good grief. Who on earth thought the solution was to tag every child like cattle?

  8. Re:RTFA on Student Refusing RFID Badge Now Fights Expulsion Order · · Score: 1

    A requirement you did not mention is that Hernandez and her family then have to publicly declare their support for the program.

    What's at issue is not wearing ID, but compliance.

  9. Re:Too bad... on Israel's Iron Dome Missile Defense Shield Actually Works · · Score: 1

    Yep, that's the standard Israeli newsline, alright.

    The truth: "Israel was offered a truce; didn't respond; then tacitly agreed to a lull, which appeared to be working, until Israel shattered it with a massive escalation; in self-defence."
    http://www.newleftproject.org/index.php/site/blog_comments/israel_bombs_gaza_a_chronological_reminder

    Where are you getting your information from? "Isreal" don't real.

  10. Re:and salon on Website Calls Out Authors of Racist Anti-Obama Posts · · Score: 1

    Do you really imagine every time utters the "n" word, they actually believe in the superiority of the white race?

    There doesn't seem to be any allowance here for reality. I mean, every time we say anything, it's true, accurate and balanced?

    Being stupid and socially rude is one thing, and perhaps something to scoff at. But labelling someone as a full-fledged racist because of an online comment beggars belief.

  11. Re:The difference... on Seattle's Creepy Cameraman Pushes Public Surveillance Buttons · · Score: 1

    * Adding it to his private collection of masturbation material
    * Posting it on YouTube for everyone to enjoy a good laugh at your expense
    * Modify the material and use it for blackmail/extortion/public humiliation
    * Worse?

    * Oh noes! Someone is jerking off to a picture of me and I don't like that so it must stop!
    * See just about every YouTube video, ever.
    * If you want to pick your nose and have nobody know about it, do it at home.
    * EMMAGERD TEH CHILDRENZ

    People's sensibilities != what is allowable

  12. Re:Not fiction but... on Ask Slashdot: Mathematical Fiction? · · Score: 1

    I second this emotion - a great read. "No mode bit!"

  13. Re:Socialist agenda on full display tonite on Third 2012 US Presidential Debate Tonight: Discuss Here · · Score: 1

    cannot come up with a better argument than this: "Well at least he's not Mitt Romney!"

    It's the Spoiler Effect that is present in all first-past-the-post systems. You really are throwing your vote away, and the only logical response is to vote for your least-hated candidate. CCPGrey explains it best.

  14. Re:Must past this test on California Legalizes Self Driving Cars · · Score: 1

    Nirvana fallacy. The cars don't have to be perfect, just better than human drivers in most circumstances.

  15. Re:Federal Judges Need to Go Back to School on Federal Judge Says No Right To Secret Ballot, OKs Barcoded Ballots · · Score: 1

    Rights are inherently in all the inhabitants

    And unfortunately we cannot all agree on what those rights are. Hence charters and constitutions, to spell them out.

    As well, rights are what we agree we have. Rights are no more real than money. It's only because we all decide to act a certain way that we make rights "real."

  16. Re:It happens again and again in nature on Around 200,000 Tons of Deep Water Horizon Oil and Gas Consumed By Bacteria · · Score: 1

    A meteor impact wiping out 80% of all species on the planet you could deem damaging to the ecosystem

    Yes, you could deem that damaging. o_O

    But since life - technically - will likely survive, it's... completely okay?

    I'm not sure what planet you live on, but it can't be this one.

  17. Re:Why bother? on Photo Reveals UK Plan: "Assange To Be Arrested Under All Circumstances" · · Score: 1

    the allegation is that he had sex with a woman who was asleep, thus unable to consent. This lack of consent was aggravated by his knowledge that she didn't want to have sex without a condom. The other conduct described might be considered trivial by some, but this act qualifies as rape in most civilized countries.

    They had sex four times before the 'rape', falling asleep and remaining together inbetween. In these circumstances, being woken up by being penetrated is hardly the same as sneaking into the room of a sleeping woman and trying to fuck her. So yes, this was a trivial act, rabid sexual politics aside.

    He did indeed penetrate her without a condom. This was wrong. They spoke about it while he was in her, and she let him continue. Consent was given then. She was not under duress to do so. That consent was not given beforehand is truly the flimsiest of rape charges imaginable. The idea that the international community would work together to bring 'justice' to this situation is laughable. Look at Roman Polansky, who drugged and raped a 13-year-old.

    Internet whiteknights aside, this is not about justice for Sofia.

  18. Re:Why bother? on Photo Reveals UK Plan: "Assange To Be Arrested Under All Circumstances" · · Score: 2

    From the testimony of Sofia Wilén:

    They had foreplay for hours. They slept. They woke and had sex. They slept. They woke and had sex. They slept. They woke and had sex. They slept. They woke and had breakfast, then they had sex. They slept. Assange woke her by penetrating her without a condom, which she said she didn’t want. They spoke. She let him continue. They spoke some more.

    "Raaaaaaaaaape."

    Look at all the police outside the embassy.

    If you think that the international community is standing behind these women trying to obtain justice for them, you are insane. Those women are being used, and so are you.

  19. Re:Real Cables on Cables Show US Seeks Assange · · Score: 1

    From the testimony of Sofia Wilén (http://rixstep.com/1/20110131,00.shtml):

    They had foreplay, they carried on for hours. They slept. They woke up and had sex. They slept. They woke and had sex again. They slept. They woke and had sex again. They had breakfast. They had sex again. They slept. He woke her up by penetrating her without a condom, which she had earlier said she didn't want. They spoke. She let him continue. They spoke some more.

    Raaaaaaaaaaaape.

    No wonder there's an international manhunt for Assange. How Sofia is going to rebuild her shattered life is anyone's guess.

  20. Re:National vs. Commercial Interests on Ask Bas Lansdorp About Going to Mars, One Way · · Score: 2

    Mars-y Shore. A one-way ticket for Snooki to Mars. And you say it wouldn't be in humanity's best interest? Live the dream!

  21. Re:Am I the only one ... on Hummingbird-Size Wing-Flapping Drone Unveiled · · Score: 1

    That is both horrifyingly plausible, and obscene.

    Could the thing perhaps package up the food and deliver it to starving people?

  22. Re:The Top 10 on Analysis of 32 Million Breached Passwords · · Score: 1

    Whatever happened to love, secret, sex, and God?

    They are too short to be accepted by most any password-requiring system nowadays. Perhaps "iloveyou" has replaced them.

  23. The future is one word... on Bing To Become Default iPhone Search? · · Score: 1

    Goople.

  24. Re: Now... on Towards Artificial Consciousness · · Score: 1

    TFA doesn't describe the brand, but it does say: "...it is run on a Beowulf cluster of 60 3GHz processors with 1.5 GB of RAM each."

  25. Re:Petard, meet hoist. on Google Trends vs. Community Standards On Obscenity · · Score: 1

    I agree, and I'd like to know too.

    I think it's the awareness factor. Animals can know anguish but not understand the point of it. Somehow, as a human being, knowing what is happening can make it more bearable. As well, there is an implicit trust on the part of the animal that we violate - same goes for child abuse.

    Of course, people are helpless in torture situations as well, and while I find it distressing, it makes me more angry than horrified.