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Comment Re:Thanks Obama (Score 1) 223

Hard to believe someone wasn't handing their money over to a private company because the government told them they had to, isn't it? Imagine that, someone taking responsibility for themselves rather than being forced to pour their money down a black hole just to make sure some CEO gets their bonus.

The mind wobbles.

Comment Re:Unauthorized Suspicous-Looking Art in Public Pl (Score 5, Informative) 101

and placed with some kind of sign.

They were. The linked story doesn't say it but this one does. Specifically:

Photos of other cameras show them attached to trees, fences and windows around the city. Some include notes that identify the soda can as a "Georgia State Art Project." Some instruct passersby to "Please do not take down!"

Comment Re:Why don't they know? (Score 1) 87

Meanwhile, why are we even building flammable houses?

Because we don't want to live in caves? Because concrete is too cold in the winter unless you add tons of flammable materials to keep one warm?

In the interest of openmindedness, kindly elaborate on what you think we should be making houses with such that they don't burn.

Comment Re:You are at the other end of the spectrum. (Score 0) 178

Many people in your group go around denying the reality of addiction, saying it is just a choice, as easy as choosing soup over salad for lunch

It is a choice. No one is born needing to shoot heroin or smoke a cigarette since they've never experienced. They make the conscious choice to do so despite the overwhelming evidence of what happens when you use both.. At that point one could argue it becomes an addiction, but no one is born being addicted (assuming their mother didn't make the choice for them).

Comment Re:Office 2007 started the move into alternatives (Score 3, Insightful) 148

Except in Microsoft's recent pattern, FINDING those items is much more difficult and less intuitive. What was once a single-click to see all your options from 'View' (for instance), is now a "click and hope" funfest as you meander from ribbon to ribbon trying to come across what you're looking for.

The layouts are not intuitive, they have moved items from where they used to be, have buried items in sub-entries and it takes longer to accomplish what you want.

By any measure, that is not an upgrade no matter how many people wish it to be so.

Comment Re:Yes. (Score 0) 673

In general, the real silliness of drug tests is when they are used by things like fast food restaurants

Right, because I want to be the customer who has their food spiked by someone who was high or under the influence because they thought it would be funny. Imagine them sprinkling crack or LSD on food and someone has a reaction or leaves in their car and has an accident. That's totally hilarious.

or worse when they are used as a condition of welfare

If you have money to buy drugs you have money to buy food or pay your bills. Or have we abandoned personal responsibility?

Comment Re:No way! (Score 4, Insightful) 514

then "the more you pay the more you get" should be true as well

That's the specious logic corporations use to justify the exorbitant salaries of their CEOs despite numerous studies showing the person at the top has little to no impact on the performance of the company.

Then again, when corporations say they can't their workers more they are by default stating they don't want the best workers because they're not willing to pay the folks on the front line what they're worth.

Some reference material:

Comment Re:One has to wonder (Score 1) 253

My second thought was, if their budget is cut all they have to do is reduce the scope of their mission.

They can't. The scope of their mission is defined by Congress. They are tasked with carrying out what Congress says. They can't unilaterally say, "We're not going to do what we're told to do."

That said, if they wanted to reduce their mission scope they could always ignore trying to collect money from people who didn't hand over their money to private companies since this has nothing to do with the collection of taxes.

Comment Re:My take is different (Score 1) 39

and they charge their customers a small transaction fee in the form of an exchange rate difference.

So you lose money each time you use it? That sucks.

I don't have that problem when I use real money. If something costs $10, I give the person a $20 bill and get $10 back. By your logic I might $9.95 back.

What a horrible deal for the person using this crap currency.

Comment Re:I don't get it (Score 4, Informative) 231

how does empty space have energy?

That was my question as well until I read Brian Greene's explanation in his book, The Fabric of the Cosmos.

In short, the Higgs Field. Long answer, think of what we call space as a fabric (hence the title of his book). The Higgs Field is the fabric upon which everything else "sits". Even if there are no particles in a given unit of space, it is not empty because the Higgs Field is still there.

Start on page 254 of his book and work your way through as he describes the field and how it (supposedly) permeates everything.

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