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Comment Re:shift.... (Score 2) 181

What basis in reality do you have to support that claim? Female and male interests are not identically distributed so why would the outcomes be identical? Do you think that the ratio of men and women that buy/wear dresses will be the same as long as there is equal opportunity for men and women to buy dresses?

I would agree that an unequal ratio is sufficient reason to ask the question if there is actually equal opportunity but it doesn't mean there isn't equal opportunity.

Comment Re:Get a EE degree instead (Score 1) 176

I bet you pretty much all of them have a secondary degree that is not math or they had a technical elective focus that was not math (programming, engineering, economics, etc.). I'm talking about a BS in math without some external, applicable focus. Sure, if you tack on other things you can do well and find non-teaching jobs. It is kind of like a business degree in that it, in and of itself, won't net you a lot of jobs. If you combine it with other things it can make you a desirable employee.

Comment Re:Get a EE degree instead (Score 2) 176

I only know one EE that is satisfied with being an EE. All of the others are trying to get CS jobs and wishing they actually had some CS training. The only EE knowledge I have heard of being widely useful is basic circuit analysis which you can get in just a few classes. Granted, there are going to be some jobs where in depth EE knowledge is actually useful but those jobs are few and far between. What you really want is a CPE degree where you become a competent programmer combined with a basic knowledge of circuits and hardware. EE's go too heavy on the physics, which 99% won't need, and too light on programming, which 99% will need.

Comment Re:Good old American bait and switch (Score 1) 522

Option A: Receive the swift kick in the pants you had coming today.
Option B: Receive two swift kicks in the pants tomorrow.

I don't know much about what the UK is doing but it sounds like the UK chose option A and the US chose option B. The US has serious issues that are getting worse. The longer we wait to face those issues, the worse the pain will be.

You seem to be arguing that you prefer two swift kicks in the pants tomorrow over one swift kick in the pants today. Sounds short sighted to me.

Comment Re:And Yet... (Score 1) 522

First, during Clinton's entire tenure, the surplus was never more than $400 billion. No where near a "multi trillion dollar" surplus.
Second, deficits under Bush never rose over $500 billion. Again, no where near a "multi trillion dollar deficit."
Third, the US took in $1.03 trillion dollars in 1990 and spent a little over $1.25 trillion, taxes were 17.9% of GDP. In 2011, the federal government took in $2.3 trillion and the federal budget was $3.6 trillion, taxes were 15.3% of GDP. That is a lower % of GDP but in order to reach $3.8 trillion taxes would need to be 25.3% which is over 40% higher (in terms of % of GDP) than taxes were in 1990. You are right in that taxes are lower now than they were in 1990. More importantly, you are wrong in that spending is much higher (adjusted for inflation and relative to GDP) than it was in 1990 so the taxes would need to be 40% higher than they were in 1990 to balance the budget.

So yeah...pretty much nothing you said was even remotely accurate.

Comment Re:Been saying that... (Score 1) 376

You are confused. Friedman never argued for a completely free and unregulated market. Primarily, he said that government is responsible for enforcing contracts and prosecuting fraud. Those are forms of regulation. Less != none. I don't know why that is so hard for people to understand. I suppose people choose not to try and understand because otherwise they would actually have to listen to other peoples ideas and consider them instead of outright dismissing them. Summarily dismissing someone is the easy, close minded, arrogant way out of having any real discussion.

Comment Re:I have a better idea... (Score 1) 649

A compromised position would be to only bail out companies that agree to split. That was my main complaint about the bailouts, they left the companies relatively untouched. If they accepted a bailout they should have been forced to split until they were no longer too big to fail.

There are two problems. The first is to keep companies from getting too large. The second is what to do with companies that get too large and then fail. If we always solve the first problem, there won't be a second problem but that is unlikely to be the case 100% of the time.

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