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Comment Re:Paying the fine makes more sense (Score 0) 586

It's very odd that you should have such an experience, especially since you say you're relatively young and in good health. Everybody so far who has claimed they had to pay more than four times the cost of their old policy for the same coverage has proved to be a bare-faced liar.

You might be the first person in the United States to have such an experience, so it would be wonderful if you'd provide enough information that your allegation could be verified by an objective party.

I mean, I believe everything you say, but wasn't it the godlike Ronald Reagan who said, "Trust but verify"?

And who am I to question god?

Comment I have a thought about where this all came from (Score 2) 287

Bitcoin has been around for quite a while, and nothing special seemed to be happening with it. Then along came the Wikileaks release of information that genuinely infuriated the United States. All of a sudden, PayPal, several imitators and all the major credit card companies decided not to process donations to the organization.

Time passes, and people who might not want the United States to have final say over their financial arrangements were just starting to move lazily toward some form of anonymous money transfer.

Then the Snowden situation arose, and those people got their noses rubbed in the fact that the kind of spying and control they were worried about in a vague way was on-going, comprehensive, and aimed at everybody from heads of state to some granny who attended an Occupy demonstration.

So they got the message: We need a way to move money anonymously, and we need it right this minute.

Enter Bitcoin. (dramatic music)

Comment This is a surprise? (Score 1) 1030

When it comes right down to it, the Republican Party has never stood for anything except keeping the foot of rich people planted firmly on the neck of everybody else.

The fact that they've managed to fool a bunch of drooling, ill-educated, propaganda-loving morons into backing them is no reason to believe they want anything for the middle class except abrupt reduction to slave status.

Comment Re:The Direct Access Argument (Score 1) 159

You're absolutely right about the mechanic having easier ways to sabotage a car. But I was thinking more of situations where anything that happened to the car (or fleet of cars) would happen at the hacker's convenience, maybe weeks or months later. I don't know of too many modifications a mechanic could make that would work on that basis. I'm no car expert, so my opinion on that is by no means unarguable.

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As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. -- Albert Einstein

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