Comment Re:"equal treatment" (Score 2) 779
... and if girls didn't get in with equal numbers, that is ipso facto evidence of having been steered away for sexist reasons then or earlier in life.
... and if girls didn't get in with equal numbers, that is ipso facto evidence of having been steered away for sexist reasons then or earlier in life.
"I mean, there's a reason why we have education accreditation
boards, right?"
That would make a good line in a lullaby.
Government accreditation, certification, regulation, are all just well-intentioned market-suppression efforts. With information flowing so freely now, these will be routed around.
"If a U.S. company designs products in one country, manufactures them in another country, and sells them in a third, in which jurisdiction should the company pay tax? The country in which it's domiciled?"
Why, none of the above. Taxes should be on consumption or cost-recovery basis or something
You were implying that because apple products were supposedly designed in the states, this taints them with such a strong us nexus that foreign sales to foreign individuals should naturally be included in apple's us taxes. Because Design!
You've changed tacks a couple of times now. Try a third one, maybe it'll be less of a reach.
On the "design" part, i.e., salaries of the designers, Apple & the employees pay tax aplenty already.
So your theory of tax fairness is based on infrastructure usage cost? The foreign transactions with foreigners should be 0% taxed, by that metric, and probably there goes progressive taxation on personal incomes too...
"to avoid paying their fair share"
That phrase "fair share" is dishonest. It is vague and subjective, while pretending to be objectively normative.
... or campaign to get the feds to bud out of this issue entirely, so that there would be no lobbyists to be feted by, and no telco companies to bail out.
It's not "always wrong, no matter what". It merely lacks incentives and feedbacks to produce what the people actually value. It has power without responsibility. It can be wrong, and suffers nothing. (Was the FCC wrong to make the "standard" 3/1M so long? How has it suffered for that? A business wrong for too long would die.)
"When 80 percent of Americans can access 25-3, that's a standard. We have a problem that 20 percent can't. We have a responsibility to that 20 percent,"
So the FCC gets to change its own standards, then impose its jurisdiction on the new stragglers. Typical regulator. No skin in the game, but always knows what's good for everyone else.
more like 11.4 years
In those few cases, they may need to take the bullet. Or use other technologies to protect themselves while politely inquiring at the doorstep.
"I'm not sure why they shouldn't prep a raid."
I thought the TFA (which you "actually do read") and this subthread is exactly about reasons for that.
Taking the situation seriously
Staging a raid
"seem like"
There's the problem there. The burden of proof for "seeming" is pathetically low, and yet the police create huge risks to the lives of the people they raid, and their own lives, by acting on such impressions.
The cost of feathers has risen, even down is up!