Comment Eased out? (Score 2) 147
Sounds like he's been promoted into a position where he'll have more prestige but less say in what's going on. Is he being eased out?
Sounds like he's been promoted into a position where he'll have more prestige but less say in what's going on. Is he being eased out?
No, I'd invest the money into getting Bob off the streets and turning him back into a productive member of society.
Bob would rather do coke. And it would be an affront to his dignity or whatever to condition "helping" him on any change on his part.
However, as a society, we have decided that we are affluent enough to be able to help the less fortunate
Naa, you've decided that I'm affluent enough to be able to help the less fortunate. Of course, the "helping" never ends. If the people involved consisted of just me and an unemployed Robert Downey Jr, you'd note that Bob was homeless and hungry on the street. So you'd take some money from me and give it to Bob, and he'd put it up his nose. Then you'd look and you'd see that I still had a good deal of money and Bob was still homeless and hungry, and you'd take more money from me and give it to Bob, who would put it up his nose. Repeat until I'm homeless too.
With the rapidly rising influence of feminism on the Web and the related backlash movements, it seems like we could be having an interesting, intellectual discussion about what is going on, and how it's affecting tech culture.
Seriously? Have you ever tried to have a discussion with a (third-wave intersectional) feminist? First they yell mansplaining, then they yell derailing, then they yell for the authorities, and if that doesn't work they cut off communication.
Gasoline doesn't explode, it burns. Of course, as our resident expert in IEDs and Constitutional Law, you already knew that, right?
Pressure cookers neither explode nor burn, unless you pack them with explosives. Gasoline vapor mixed with air, however, explodes. If you want to make a car bomb, you don't need a pressure cooker. Ask Dateline NBC.
In New York State you can get expired registration and/or inspection citations while your car is parked.
Yes, but you can't get driving on a suspended/revoked license citations while the car is parked. There's a difference: expired registration/inspection applies to the car, revoked license applies to the driver. If my license is revoked, it's still legal for me to allow anyone else with a valid license to drive my car, and it is still legal for the car (assuming its registration and inspection remains valid) to be parked on public streets where parking is permitted. (There was a meter in front of the car, so parking was clearly permitted at least some of the time).
"Did you know that in the District of Columbia, the Mayor or his representative can revoke your license for any reason at all, and the only appeal is to the Mayor?" No. Could you please point us to the law that authorizes mayoral driver's license revocation? (I'm betting you can't.)
You lose. DC Code 50-1403.1(a) and (c).
The great thing about a smell of gasoline in a car is that it can both be made to sound suspicious and that it's completely non-disprovable; if the cops claim to smell pot and they destructively search the car and not a microgram of pot is found, the cops look pretty foolish. But gasoline? If no one can smell it later, maybe it was just a bit of a spill which evaporated since... who could know?
Have you ever heard the expression, "Just because you can, doesn't mean you should?"
Yeah, usually from authoritarians who think it's perfectly OK to enforce laws which they couldn't be bothered to actually enact.
Fucking common sense says don't park your fucking car a block away from the United States Capitol with anything inside that could be misidentified as an explosive device.
Like its gas tank?
It also says you should keep your drivers license current and in good standing.
It was revoked. Did you know that in the District of Columbia, the Mayor or his representative can revoke your license for any reason at all, and the only appeal is to the Mayor?
You think they just cited him for that offense without checking to see that he was actually operating the vehicle?
Sure, why not? Now they can leverage dropping that charge against his not filing a lawsuit for the damage to his car.
He's not getting the book thrown at him in any of the media accounts I've read, he's getting the same treatment he would have received if he was pulled over for a routine traffic stop.
I don't know about you, but I've never been pulled over for a routine traffic stop when I wasn't driving.
Also, given the area described, it was parked more or less in front of the Capitol Reflecting Pool, which is not an area where people tend to park and sit for long periods of time.
Really? Then why was there a parking meter there?
They broke the rear window and blew up the pressure cooker outside the car. Reimburse? No, they didn't reimburse him; instead they arrested him for operating a vehicle after license revocation, just to cover up for their incompetence. Obviously if a car belonging to someone has moved, it must be that person who moved it, right?
According to Smith v. Maryland, Law enforcement doesn't need a warrant for pen registers, because people have no expectation of privacy in the numbers they called. That one decision has led to the entire NSA metadata collection, as well as unrestrained use of Stingrays and similar devices. Remember that next time someone sneers at the slippery slope.
It turns out that in countries where more scientists are men, more people associate men and scientists. Total shocker, I know.
Next up: someone who's programmed devices with less than 8KB of RAM.
Yep. 128 bytes. With 4K of flash, granted. And we did have to upgrade to the 16K version eventually (still 128 bytes of RAM, we got 256 in yet another revision though)
He's probably heard something somewhere and made a stupid assumption. Road wear is heavily influenced by the pressure between the tire and the road. (ie: the weight per square inch. Or pounds per square inch). And little to do with the pressure _inside_ the tire. (It has _some_ effect, higher tire pressures generally reduce the tire's footprint on the road, increasing the contact PSI.)
Pressure inside the tire and pressure between tire and the road are very close to equal. A 120psi bicycle tire really is putting 120psi on the contact patch. And this has a small practical effect: in very soft asphalt you can sometimes see ruts caused by bicycles.
But road damage isn't entirely dictated by tire pressure
David Sternlight is that you? You know you can legally buy both ski masks and crow bars, right? In fact, I think REI sells ski masks, crow bars (cleverly disguised as climbing hardware), and backpacks all in the same store, and they haven't been shut down yet.
"Show business is just like high school, except you get paid." - Martin Mull