Comment Ancient article just rehashed on a crappy site.. (Score 1) 208
This isn't "news", you can find articles stating the exact same information from like, 2011. Some due diligence please!
This isn't "news", you can find articles stating the exact same information from like, 2011. Some due diligence please!
In this case the "may be refused" portion could be justified under the case where security measures which are required to identify legal tender are not recognisable or have been damaged, which would be sufficient means to refuse the money as legal tender.
"well, russia is a shit-hole"
How much time have you spent in Russia? I'm guessing none.
I think you're missing out on the whole 'public' thing. This situation is so big and so public that it would be devastating for the US gov't to try sneaky shit and get around any legal promises made.
They'll have to install tamper proofing on electrical outlets everywhere to prevent the robots from committing robot suicide?
That's not the problem. The problem it it has been done before for rocket engines that have actually been fired up - the metals used were superalloys, in SpaceX case Inconel specifically. Those rocket engines have been in use for some time - and the problem with this story is that it lacks credibility in the "we're first' market for several reasons.
Not if his name is Jor-El.
RE: "cleaning up hospitals properly" I just recently read about a robot that is designed to keep hospitals clean from a wide variety of pathogens: http://www.xenex.com/ -- looks interesting/promising.
Drug approval requires so much heavy lifting in the US that costs to develop new drugs skyrocket, and the only drugs that get developed are those that are taken routinely for high profit. Boner pills flourish, antibiotics stagnate. The solution here isn't to jack the price of antibiotics to an astronomical level that a very small percent of the population could possibly afford - drugs and surgeries in the US are already way overpriced with major corporations snorting all of that profit up - the solution is to reduce the cost of R&D and approvals.
My last chest x-ray in China took about 25 minutes -- walk in, no appointment, cost $12 USD, includes assessment (albeit I don't know how great the assessment is), and it's not kept in some locked away book.. I take that xray home with me.
Chinese farming is too expensive these days. It's far more lucrative for the Chinese farming businesses to outsource to 'nam.
When the writing is as good as it is - and Oliver is really allowed the freedom to shine in his delivery, that's all that is needed. I've really liked ALL of the key focus segments of his shows, and they're always up on Youtube if you don't have HBO and want to watch it "legitimately". He also makes web-exclusive bits on his channel...strongly suggest subscribing to his channel if you're a fan.
John Oliver has a wonderful gig and his show is fantastic, OP, what makes you possibly consider that as a 'solution' to Stewart's unfortunate departure?
Partisan word count?
Fox is the organisation who decided to post this video.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/...
Fox made the decision, other news agencies refuse to post that shit, social media picks it up of course because anyone can grab everything and throw it online. Fox buys video rights, fox posts on their page, counts the clicks based on the obvious controversy, reaps reward. Yay, partisan criticism? Right.
I think that showing videos with the gruesome truth is perfectly fine - with the appropriate warnings.
What I don't think is fine is violating people's privacy just because they're not Americans and subject to the same privacy 'rights' under US law, and being allowed to identify such people in such a terrible and horrific way on the news is sensational voyeurism at BEST, just sensationalism for the most viewers tuning in. I'm of course guessing that these 'news' agencies didn't contact the victim's family and get permission, of course. You can guess what would happen if this was an American and their family wasn't contacted for permission, yes?
Yay for families that get to relive their loved ones' death repeatedly in full HD. Yay for the public who thinks this is 'free speech' - afterall, since the victims involved aren't Americans, they aren't really people, are they?
re: "isn't practically possible"
That may be the case - and social media/the internet at large may need to be part of a broader solution to help provide privacy for those individuals who are subject to this type of horror, but for an American news agency or even social media site to 'allow' these types of things, I'm saying, they should be forced to, by law, censor the individuals just as they would an American. Sure, there will still be lots of people who get ahold of an uncensored version or whatever -- but they'll likely have to seek it out, not be exposed to it just by watching primetime media or seeing it on a 'top watched' youtube summary or whatever.
Organisations like that, out of 'journalistic integrity', should do their best to facilitate individual's privacy and rights, not stomp on them just because it's the current landscape of media and they want to get the most viewers first.
Reference the NULL within NULL, it is the gateway to all wizardry.