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Comment CITATION FUCKING NEEDED (Score 1) 844

You and a bunch of other ignant fools said "there is actually a disincentive to go out and look for work" here and all over the internet.

And to that, I say: CITATION NEEDED. Citation needed from some sort of authoritative source, not "the man in the pub" or "a radio talkshow host". You self-interested pieces of shit, show us the numbers that say people don't want to work, or that they're living high on the hog on unemployment, on their $400 a month. Show us the data. And not some Heritage Foundation fiction, show us something that isn't coming from a right-wing sewage tank.

We're waiting. We're waiting for all these mythical welfare queens--after decades of existing only in the lies and fictions of the hard right--to turn into reality at last. Only you look around and what do we have? People who want to work hard but the economy's been fucked so they're fucked too. Well, wait long enough and we're all fucked. The line between any two of us is much thinner than you realize, or maybe you're just scared to admit it.

And while we're waiting, let's talk about this "taxation is theft" crock of shit. Taxation is part of your obligation as SOMEONE LIVING IN SOCIETY. Taxation is a part of the social contract, the ethics of which go back much farther than that thoroughly-debunked pseudo-philosopher Rand you're cribbing this nonsense from.

You don't want taxes? Fine, let's take away all the societal support structures that make your money worth anything. Now you can hoard all the useless piles of metal you want, and your faith in its "intrinsic value" will sustain you until you starve to death.

Comment Yeah, neither do I. (Score 1) 791

I don't want to live in a world where other people's actions shape the decisions I make throughout the day, either.

Curiously enough, that's exactly why I'd love to see this sort of frivolous, deeply harmful shit stopped. These people are reckless, and the actions they take day after day make my life harder in a million tiny, indirect ways, along with your and virtually everyone else's life too.

(Note: you may not agree or see it that way, but the world doesn't need your consent or acknowledgement to be profoundly broken and in desperate need of structural repair. So if you're getting ready to type some sort of "no I'm cool everything's cool" reply, just spare us.)

It's just another one of those world-we-want vs world-we-have situations. I want a world where a bunch of shits in a room thousands of miles from me aren't chipping away the economy a billion tiny transactions a day.

In fact, I'd go so far as to say, that's the price you pay for living in society. You give up some freedom (can't wreck shit for millions), and in exchange you get police, fire, sanitation, the whole ball of wax.

Do I think I should be able to tell them not to do that, so long as we're all sharing this same society?

You'll get one guess as to the right answer here.

Comment No, it's not about slavery. (Score 2) 791

It's about the world we want to live in, which stands in ever-starker contrast to the world we do live in.

Do you want to live in a world where the best and brightest throw their efforts away with such mundane, trivial shit?

Again, not where-are-we-now, but where-do-we-want-to-be.

Do you want to live in a world where, thanks to some tricks of law and circumstance, a handful of people have such domination over billions?

Again, not where-are-we-now, but where-do-we-want-to-be.

You don't have to be a slaver (wtf??) to say, the world we live in is wrong, because a lot of people are suffering for what seem like really lousy reasons.

You do, however, have to be a decent human being.

Comment No. (Score 1) 93

There is no such thing as a "free market" because all markets are, by definition, based on sets of rules . That idea of the "market" is already "not free" by its nature. It implies a set of rules.

In other words, there's no such thing as a "natural market" that we can strive for. There is no such thing as an "ideal market" that we can point to as free from human invention. ALL MARKETS ARE A HUMAN INVENTION. Things like "buyer beware" - someone came up with that. Things like "the government should only enforce contracts" - someone came up with that. Things like "don't lie about the ingredients in your prepared food" - someone came up with that.

When people toss around words like "free market" these days, you have to pay very close attention to who's saying it, because some people use it to mean "just enough regulation to help my big business donors" while others use it to mean "just enough regulation to support my every-man-for-himself fantasy".

Nowhere in anyone's discussion is an acknowledgment that there's not really any such thing as a "free market", that it's all a matter of picking useful rules. But that's what it is - picking useful rules that serve the people involved.

Comment Re:How to build a just society. (Score 1) 433

First off, a lot of failure is people's fault. The left has to own up to this, and it is true, moral failures have a lot to do with it. Too much drinking, drugging, gambling, womanizing, entertaining oneself, the whole liberal idea that if it feels good do it, is just totally wrong. [Citation needed] (emphasis mine)

Comment How apropos. (Score 1) 467

I had a Patriot 64gb SSD in a small, low-traffic Ubuntu server (several services were running but no specific tuning options were set) that died this weekend. Sunday afternoon, several Apache processes pegged the CPU at 100% between them (load average climbed steadily up to 40ish, and I was unable to start or kill anything else). Thinking that one of my users had written some bad PHP, I rebooted the machine. It wouldn't restart (Grub loading...please wait...). Booting into System Rescue CD, the partitions on the SSD were detected, but none could be mounted due to bad sectors all throughout. dd_rescue was able to retrieve the important data (that which hadn't been backed up..), but the time/money spent bringing the server back online seemed a totally unnecessary hassle. SSDs were supposed to be reliable (no moving parts, right??), but I'm definitely going to wait for a few years before buying another. The drive was less than a year old.
NASA

ISS's Node 3 Might Be Named "Colbert" 276

Panzor writes "NASA is running a contest to name the new addition to the space station, Node 3. The polls are open until March 20. The selection that is getting the most votes is 'Suggest your own,' and the leading name besides the official four (Earthrise, Legacy, Serenity, and Venture) is 'Colbert.' Comedian Stephen Colbert suggested on the air that fans write in his name. On March 5th, his vote count passed that of Xenu and Colbert pronounced himself Scientology's 'Galactic Overlord.'"
Medicine

Valuable Objects Stimulate Brain More Than Junk 118

Roland Piquepaille writes "According to researchers at the University of California at San Diego, visual areas of our brain respond more to valuable objects than other ones. In other words, our brain has stronger reactions when we see a diamond ring than we look at junk. Similarly, our brain vision areas are more excited by a Ferrari than, say, a Tata new Nano car. In this holiday season, I'm sure you've received gifts that excited your brain — and others that you already want to resell on an auction site."
Image

Researchers Test Whether Sharks Enjoy Christmas Songs 142

Scientists plan to test whether sharks enjoy listening to Christmas pop songs, after US research showed fish could recognize melody. Chris Brown, senior marine biologist at the Loch Lomond aquarium, said seasonal music would be played through walkthrough underwater tunnels where they can be heard by dozens of nurse sharks, black-tip reef sharks, and ray species. Experts will then monitor the sharks' reactions to different songs. We'll play everything from Kim Wilde and Mel Smith's Rocking Around the Christmas Tree and Merry Christmas Everybody by Slade to Wham's Last Christmas. We may find they prefer something softer like White Christmas by Bing Crosby," Brown said. Thank you for answering this question science.
Input Devices

Nintendo Slapped With Wiimote Strap Lawsuit Once Again 356

GameCyteSean writes "GameCyte is reporting that a new class-action lawsuit has challenged Nintendo's Wiimote straps once more. Interestingly, the suit was filed by the same lawyer who led the original 2006 attempt, and now argues that Nintendo hid records of broken TVs from the Consumer Product Safety Commission. From the article: 'This doesn't seem like a spurious accusation, either. Attached to the court filing (PDF) as a matter of public record is the very evidence Nintendo allegedly tried to hide: actual, internal Nintendo documents (PDF) where customer service reps received complaints of cracked televisions and broken Wiimote straps — and the corresponding Monthly Reports that Nintendo was compelled to file with the CPSC as part of their agreement.'"
Microsoft

Maine To Skip Vista, Go Directly To Windows 7 242

Preedit writes "The State of Maine is the latest organization to skip Windows Vista, which has been a near-disaster for Microsoft. An internal state document (dated September 15) uncovered by Infoweek reveals that Maine will not be upgrading its more than 11,000 personal computing devices from XP to Vista — ever. Instead, it's going to wait until Windows 7 ships in 2010 and hope for the best. The news is in line with a survey that shows only 4% of businesses in the UK have upgraded to Vista, the story notes. So much for that $300 million Seinfeld campaign." A commenter on the article makes the point that Maine's signing an enterprise software license with Microsoft means that Redmond doesn't really lose out on this deal; it simply allows the state to upgrade its equipment and software on its own time.

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