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Comment Re:Can we get rid of the US Congress so easily? (Score 5, Insightful) 227

The cameras in people's homes are a UK Gov plan that the councils have no choice but to follow - blame the cabinet for that cracking idea

There is always an alternative choice, though it may not be the most pleasant of things to think about. Us American's kicked your government to the curb over a few tax disputes (and a few other issues). Placing cameras in private citizens' homes seem to me like a much bigger issue.

You guys could at least throw a few riots or something. And no, angry postings on slashdot do not count. By excusing this sort of behaviour all you are doing is shifting blame from your government to yourself.

Three big flaws in your argument here even at a casual glance:-

1) The proto-Americans had the advantage of an ocean between them and the people they were rebelling against, and the advantage of being on home territory against an enemy who had generally never even been to the rebels' continent. The situation would have been radically different if the American rebels were living in Clapham.

2) It's not "Us Americans" who rebelled at all - you personally had nothing at all to do with it - so it's rather precious of you to advocate that others risk their lives to do something that I suspect you have never done yourself.

3) The modern USA is exactly the sort of imperialist superpower that England was back then.

Overall, the pretense that modern Americans are some kind of ninja rebel outfit who would overthrow their government at the first sign of totalitarianism isn't helping anyone, especially when you sit in your comfy chair behind your (no doubt very rebellious) warrior keyboard and advocate that others risk their lives.

Comment Re:Okay, but... (Score 1) 107

Yes... and this is hardly the first time recently that Sony have erred on the side of openness. The PS3 uses a standard laptop hard drive (even replaceable by the user without breaking warranty), standard USB keyboards and gamepads, standard USB mass storage driver, standard bluetooth for headsets and even (at least on the original models) had card reader slots for a wide range of standard memory cards. It's the most open interconnected console ever.

Compare it to the Micro$oft XBox 360 and it's practically the posterboy of openness.

Sony did a bad bad thing for a long time, but they are *really* cleaning their act up now. Time for them to get some positive karma for it, eh?

Comment Re:socialism (Score 1) 192

But how does this GBP250m investment constitute half your income, as you claimed? Do you mean that the *extra* expenditure pushes the tax take to half your income? If so, you need to read the article again - it's paid for by monies already collected by the BBC for digital switchover. There is no extra taxation for this proposal.

Celarnor suggested that people would have access to services that they would not otherwise, to which you replied "...by giving up half of your income?".

And yes, government gains income from non-voluntary taxation. That doesn't help in any way to establish the accuracy of your observation.

By the way, your use of somewhat juvenile perjoratives like "forcibly removes" and "extorts" makes me think I'm in discussion with a Randroid Libertoonian. And since that bores the living shit out of me, you're welcome to the last word.

--Ng

Comment Re:socialism (Score 1) 192

How do you figure that? Are you referring to the 50% marginal tax rate introduced for next year? You do know that only applies to income over GBP150K (say $225,000), right? Scarcely half of most folks income.

Anyway, the lions share of this investment comes from money not spent by the BBC for switchover to digital TV, rather than direct taxation.

And no, the BBC licence fee is not 50% of anyone's income. It's about GBP 142.50 (~ $220) per annum. If most people where you live earn about $440 a year, you have my undying pity.

--Ng

Comment Re:Propaganda reached a new low (Score 1) 1297

You seem to be suggesting that the actions of people in the same country of the poster's grandparents (not even necessarily any direct relation) before he/she was born remove their right to hold a decent moral or ethical opinion or admonish others for their lack of decency.

I guess all citizens of the USA will have to shut the fuck up for about 100 years if you're going to take that attitude, based on the shameful and morally bankrupt actions of George W Bush and his supporters.

Or you could stop being ridiculous, stop making Ad Hominem attacks, and discuss the actual point that the gp was making, which had the advantages of being reasonable, infomative, insightful and well-expressed.

Comment Re:Not fun anymore (Score 4, Interesting) 337

I'm in Norway, noone here seems to have the balls to stand up to the EU, which has become the place to pass all the unpopular laws and for national politicans to just throw up their hands and say "we must"

You miss the point of the EU. It's one of the most successful policy laundering institutions in the world (WIPO is another).

The EU isn't punting the Orwellian crap: the national governments push it to the EU, knowing that it will be as popular as a rat sandwich to their domestic populations. So, once it gets bullied, cajoled and pushed through as an EU directive, those same governments turn around to their electorates and say "Oh, we have to do this now, it's an EU directive, and we ain't got no say in the matter".

The Data Retention Directive, for instance, is a creation of the UK government. When introducing the legislation to Parliament, they specifically said that it had to be done because it was an EU Directive. No mention that it was their EU directive.

Bastards.

--Ng

Comment Re:Been following this for awhile. (Score 1) 1240

The school district does not contest that Ms. Redding had no disciplinary record, but says that is irrelevant.

"Her assertion should not be misread to infer that she never broke school rules," the district said of Ms. Redding in a brief, "only that she was never caught."

Wonderful. So, the absence of any conviction for paedophile rape by the school officers isn't grounds for suspecting that they are innocent of such a crime, merely that no-one has managed to make such a charge stick?

Are they fucking serious? They expect that shit to fly in a court? A real court? I'm in the UK, so I suspect that no school officer would try a strip search here without an army of lawyers, social workers, doctors, parents and the Queen for good measure, but if they did this to my kid, I swear to God the consequences for those responsible would be dire indeed.

--Ng

Comment Re:so much for change... (Score 1) 186

It's true that most internal decisions are derived and implemented via Holyrood now, rather than Westminster.

Treaty negotiation, however, is not an internal matter, because Scotland is not (yet) a sovereign state. ACTA is being negotiated by the UK government, and will apply to Scotland as well, if the UK Parliament approves.

You can always vote SNP if you want this changed. Pity that the clown contingent is so strong in the SNP though - the basic independence policy suits me fine.

--Ng

Comment Re:Too many loopholes (Score 1) 230

One of the tasks which the police has to solve, is to process the stupid criminals quickly, so that they have resources left for the more intelligent ones

I wish this were the case - I really do. Unfortunately, in all major democracies, the police are rated by the number of crimes solved, rather than the subjective seriousness of the crimes. A thief who steals $10 counts in the stats for the same as someone who stole $10000.

So large scale (and illiberal) attempts to dredge low-hanging fruit from the stupid sector is probably enough to give the cops the right sort of cleanup rates. The remaining 10% will be in the bucket of "no policing system is perfect".

And the clever crims? Well, we'll probably wait until their efforts are copied and replicated before some politico decides that Something Must Be Done. By which time the clever ones have moved onto some newer mechanism for crime.

--Ng

Comment No evidence of £20 tax (Score 2, Informative) 309

As I posted in the £20 tax thread, I can't find any evidence that such a proposal even exists.

The UK government did propose, in the interim Digital Britain report, to explore the willingness of rightsholder organisations (eg, the equivalents of the RIAA and MPAA) to fund a Rights Agency [which is stupid idea, but still...] but there never was a "broadband tax" proposal.

I think that the Times article was simply wrong (did you see it quote anything or anyone? Thought not). However, if anyone can find some counter evidence, then I'd like to read it.

I hold no candle for the Labour government - bash away, but when you bash at a non-existent straw man, then you undermine all your legitimate arguments against the real world shit that the bastards try to pull (ID cards, Internet use database, DNA records, etc.)

--Ng

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