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Comment Re:Student Interest Does Not Equal Employer Intere (Score 1) 225

Who is going to coordinate the development efforts between the various departments? The best person in each category is likely to know jack about the other category, and you're not going to effectively turn talent into an actual finished game unless you can get some communication going between the different departments. Programmers don't want to have to deal with art issues, and artists really don't want to have to deal with scripting or programming.

This is where the tecnical artist (AKA technical director) steps in. He bridges the gap between programmers and artists, providing tools for artists and ensuring that art gets smoothly integrated into the game (among other things.) It's an unglamorous job, but technical directors actually tend to get paid more than other positions because it requires a solid understanding of both aesthetics (art) and function (programming.) So in fact, someone with "all of those skills" still plays an important role in game development - he lets the other departments focus on being the best at what they're doing :)

Comment Re:Africa (Score 3, Insightful) 146

How in the world would another nation or continent regress simply because conditions in Africa improve? I guess you could make an argument that there are limited resources in the world - but I seriously doubt that another developing or developed nation would suddenly plummet into the stone age simply because Africa is catching up with the rest of the world. Whether or not the rest of the developed world wants to share any of its resources with Africa is another story, however... how many Americans would give up their oversized homes and cars and reduce their ridiculous consumption of meat, water, and so on just so that some far-off distant nation can fare a little better?

Comment Re:Insane (Score 4, Informative) 216

Not everyone has hundreds of dollars to spare for a fuckup like this - some people were charged upwards of a thousand dollars! Not everyone can afford the tens or hundreds of dollars of fees they'll be facing, not just in overdraft fees, but also fees for bounced checks, etc. There are lots of people who live paycheck to paycheck - they feed themselves, maybe their kids, they pay rent... but there's not too much left over to save up after that. Even just a few days in which someone can't pay bills can cause a great deal of carnage in someone's life.

Comment Re:Practice and prepare yourself for death . . . (Score 1) 692

As far as I understand there is no actual evidence to back up the claim that DMT is released at birth and at death - it's just interesting but ungrounded speculation. The human brain does produce extremely small amounts of DMT naturally, however.

Dr. Rick Strassman, while conducting DMT research in the 1990s at the University of New Mexico, advanced the theory that a massive release of DMT from the pineal gland prior to death or near death was the cause of the near death experience (NDE) phenomenon. Several of his test subjects reported NDE-like audio or visual hallucinations. His explanation for this was the possible lack of panic involved in the clinical setting and possible dosage differences between those administered and those encountered in actual NDE cases.

There are some striking similarities between NDEs and DMT experiences, however, such as the "tunnel of light."

Comment Re:Not seeing the problem here (Score 1) 336

The "massive fine" that Pfizer was charged amounted to 3 months' worth of profit (FTFA.) As others who replied pointed out, this lighter "punishment" wasn't levied to fit the crime - it was because Pfizer is "too big to fail."

As others have suggested, there are many other ways to actually punish Pfizer: the government takes over a percentage of ownership of the company; the government forces some of Pfizer's patents to become public domain or to be sold off to another company; etc... A relatively tiny fine, in the context of how much profit pharmaceutical companies make, is not a punishment; it's a cost of doing business. Hell, why not take a percentage of Pfizer's profit for x amount of years? To put it in context, Pfizer made $13 billion in profit from the sale of Bextra alone - twice as much as they would have made had they promoted and sold the drug only for FDA-approved purposes. Factoring in the fine, Pfizer made a net $4.5 billion additional profit by ignoring FDA regulations and then simply dealing with the "punishment" when they were caught. Where, exactly, is the disincentive for this sort of disgusting behavior?

Furthermore, regardless of the punishment the company receives, the actual INDIVIDUAL PERSONS responsible for this travesty should also be prosecuted and punished separately. Discourage the company from hiring these conniving salespeople by punishing it, and discourage conniving salespeople from being conniving pieces of shit by punishing them.

Comment Re:drugs are bad, mmkay? (Score 1) 147

I honestly believe that the main reason people still continue to oppose drug policy reform is ignorance. Many people have false notions about drugs and their effects on individual users and society, largely thanks to decades of propaganda and societal notions that get drilled into people's heads generation after generation. While sure, some people are never going to change their minds no matter how much you try to educate them, the vast majority of people would be willing to stop and reconsider their opinion if you show them the unbiased evidence that indicates that our current drug policy is not ideal - not for the individual user, not for the economy, and not for global society.

I think it's also very common to underestimate the importance of drug policy reform - the article summary here is a great example of that. The thing is that drug policy reform isn't just about the rights and freedoms of individual users; it's not even about the potential tax revenue we could generate. The fact is that we are never going to eliminate the demand for drugs, and as long as drugs remain illegal, criminals are going to reap those bountiful profits - which are then used to recruit young, impressionable thugs, buy weapons and ammunition, bribe government/military/police officials, and generally cause violence and chaos. Mexican drug cartels and the Taliban are both a direct threat to our national security, and both derive a great part of their funding from the drug trade. We stand to increase our own national security by legitimizing the drug trade, alongside all the other almost uniformly positive benefits that arise. Those billions of dollars will now be flowing through the legitimate economy, where they will generate taxes, create jobs and businesses, and more. Not only that, we will save tax money on law enforcement and prisons. Crime across America would be reduced - not just the obvious, but also because otherwise non-criminal drug users would no longer be forced to consort with real criminals in prison, and also because there would be no more crimes incidental to drug use or trade, such as addicts stealing to get their next fix (when was the last time you saw a tobacco smoker stealing cars to buy a pack?) Addicts would be able to seek real treatment for their problems without being stigmatized as a criminal, and the rate of injury and death related to drug use would drop significantly since drugs would be regulated for dose and purity.

Well, I'm yammering, and I'm sure you agree with what I'm saying - but the point is that the rest of the world needs to be told all of this. We could gain so much even just from decriminalization (just see all the positive results in Portugal!), but full legalization is truly the way to go. Unfortunately, I don't believe I'm going to see full legalization in America in my lifetime - maybe of cannabis, but not of any other drug. It's unfortuante, because as a result of our drug policy, our country is causing great harm to both itself and to the rest of the world. But I can only do my part in trying to educate people, to bring us just a bit closer to the day when we'll finally have the sense to say that our drug policy just doesn't work.

Comment Re:drugs are bad, mmkay? (Score 3, Informative) 147

Continued anti-drug propaganda? Have you never looked up any kind of statistic relating to programs like DARE or anti-drug PSAs? They have absolutely no effect on whether or not kids use drugs. Period. Teenagers such as myself don't take these programs and PSAs seriously because we know we're being lied to. Even the dumbest pot-smoking teenager knows it.

Your assertion that pot smoking can "totally ruin your life when you are about 15" is false; "amotivational syndrome" is a load of shit. Most people who smoke pot in their adolescence try it just a few times; even regular smokers only smoke for perhaps a few years before they lose interest and get on with their lives. Even lifelong smokers are capable of leading successful lives; Carl Sagan was a well-known cannabis user and advocate of its use, and has even said that cannabis has helped inspire his ideas, writings and experiences. As for the link between cannabis and psychosis, it's just that: a link. Not a causal relationship. There's no evidence at all to suggest that cannabis use causes psychotic disorders barring any other confounding factors - such as a genetic predisposition towards psychotic disorders. In most people, psychotic disorders, especially schizophrenia, don't show up until around the age of 19-22. It is very possible that cannabis can trigger psychotic symptoms in people who already have a predisposition, or that people with underlying psychotic disorders are drawn to drug use, or both. Either way, the statistics suggest that you'd have to stop 2,800 heavy male cannabis smokers, or 5,000 heavy female cannabis smokers, to prevent one case of schizophrenia.

In short... cannabis, used knowledgeably and responsibly, isn't dangerous. Anti-drug propaganda is a gigantic waste of tax dollars, and saying that "drugs will continue to be villified" and use viewed as a "contemptible habit" is nothing more than a continuation of that sort of misinformation, and an unfair, baseless discrimination against drug users. Drug use is not inherently irresponsible. Your example with alcoholism is exactly the crux of the issue here. You're blaming the drug (alcohol) for the problem it creates in society, even though you just said that alcohol, when used in reasonable quantities (i.e. when used responsibly) has no significant negative long-term effects. If that's the case, then how can alcohol be causing problems in society? The answer is that it doesn't. Irresponsible people cause problems in society, and drinking alcohol is merely one of many ways in which they act out irresponsibly. Irresponsible people also drive cars and kill people (even without any substances to help); shall we villify the use of cars because they cause such a problem in our society?

The vastly more important thing is to educate people on how to behave responsibly. Yes, it is possible to use cannabis responsibly, just as it is possible to use alcohol responsibly, and the important thing is to show people that it's possible to enjoy these substances - and all the other conveniences of life, like cars - as long as they are careful and responsible about it. That is the kind of drug education we need, not continued villification, which doesn't do anyone any good (after all, we saw how well abstinence-only sex education worked.) I hope this post has opened your eyes to a new perspective on the issue and that you will find at least some validity in what I am saying.

Comment Re:crimes without victims (Score 1) 630

Except that this isn't anything even slightly resembling how government drug policy actually works. Marijuana was made illegal primarily because of a mass hysteria campaign and widespread racism towards Mexicans, who were associated with the drug. Marijuana is comparatively harmless, and yet the government continues to spend billions of dollars trying to quash it.

Even today, the government's reaction to new drugs is nothing more than knee-jerk mob mentality. Just look at Spice and K2, smoking blends of synthetic cannabinoids that were recently banned in Kansas in a matter of weeks after a major vendor of entheogens, Bouncing Bears Botanicals, was raided for selling these blends (they carried a lot of other items of questionable legality, but it was the sale of these formerly-perfectly-legal smoking blends in Kansas which initiated the investigation.) Was there any research at all to justify banning these synthetic cannabinoids? Were they proven to be dangerous, toxic, maybe even lethal? Of course not - the second the newspaper headlines start ranting and raving about "kids using a new, dangerous, legal drug to get high!!1" all rationality flies out the window and the "think of the children" brigrade marches in to legislate it out of existence. Nevermind the fact that headshops card their customers while pot dealers don't - we have a duty to keep our children safe!

Comment Re:of course drugs are different (Score 2, Informative) 630

More unnecessary and ignorant hyperbole. Believe it or not, it's actually possible to be a functional, productive member of society while addicted to heroin. My boyfriend was a heroin addict for nine years - it took him two years to even realize that he was addicted, simply because he'd had continuous access to heroin up until that point. Heroin, on its own, is cheap - its illegality is what drives up the price and reduces accessibility. Make heroin legal, and addicts will be able to resume their normal lives, just like how tobacco smokers mysteriously manage to lead perfectly normal lives while being addicted to nicotine.

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