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Comment Re:it is the wrong way... (Score 1) 291

Poor baby is tired of people criticizing his boy. People just don't understand! He's trying to do the best he can, and everybody's being MEAN to his baby! Blaming his snookums for EVERYTHING! Mean, mean people!

A childish come-back is not a good refutation of a childish argument.

Comment Re:Congratulations? (Score 1) 590

His talents were drinking, roughhousing, strength, hammering things, and blind (e.g.foolish) courage -- none of which are associated with a believable female avatar

Wow, just... wow.

Nearly all of them are nicely associated with Karen Allen's character from Raiders of the Lost Ark (when she wasn't shouting "IIINDYYYYYYY!!")

Comment Re:Ridiculous! (Score 1) 590

Easy solution: Don't buy and in a few month this joke is over.

That's true. It feels like the "Death of Superman" situation again. Every once in awhile Marvel and DC have to make a controversial announcement to try to attract attention, but give it a little while and the most important rule of all will be invoked: Status Quo is God. Almost no big hero (and few big villains) can have anything that changes their fundamental nature in the long run. Like the others, this change will be short term. See: Death of Jean Grey, Civil War, House of M, etcetc.

Comment Re:Ridiculous! (Score 1) 590

Thor is a Norse God, NOT a USA Hollywood invention

To be fair, the Thor retcon had little to do with Hollywood and happened decades ago in the comics.

It was the only way to have the Norse gods, and the Greek gods, the South American gods, the Japanese gods, etcetc all exist in the same universe without much narrative conflict.. to say they weren't REALLY gods in our modern conception, but that they were super-powerful beings originally worshiped as gods by earlier cultures.

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 753

That's not the way it worked for us. Overdraw charges? Sounds like you're talking about a debit card, not a credit card.

For most people now, their debit card is a credit card as well. Thief charges the credit card, then you rack up overdrawn charges when you try to online bill pay, use the ATM, etc.

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 753

That sort of stupidity has no business existing.

Fair 'nuff.

The government put Japanese-American citizens in internment camps

They had reason. We may think it's a totally bullshit reason, but it's an easily understandable reason.

spied on civil rights and anti-war activists

They had reason. We may think it's a totally bullshit reason, but it's an easily understandable reason.

is doing all sorts of unconstitutional things

See above. Though that's pretty vague.

So "they refuse to give me any reason for why I owe $37,000" strains credibility. The AC is leaving something out, making it up, or is entirely and utterly incompetent in financial matters.

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 753

...I said to get a good lawyer.

You know, here's the thing about good lawyers -- they like to get paid. They take cases where you'll be able to afford paying them.
Defending against this $37k lien or whatever it is may not be worth their time. It can be quite difficult to find a good lawyer willing to take on a shit case with little payout.

Comment Re:Cash Needs To Go Away (Score 1) 753

If a tampered vending machine takes my cash, it's my word against theirs that it's my money they stole.

And woohoo, you're out $1. If your identity is stolen, if your card information is relayed and used, that's a hell of a lot more money available. My five-dollar bill is great because... it can't be used for anything other than five dollars. There's no way for that five dollars to be used to get at more of my money.

Writing the mag strip to a new card won't work for long anyway, since every time I put my card in an ATM machine, the mag strip is re-written

And yet card skimmers are currently quite profitable. The local Costco just found a bunch of them combined with pinhole cameras on their gas POS kiosks. Why would people go through all that effort if there was no financial payday?

If they use my credit card details, I get the money back. The insurance for that is paid by the merchant fees. There is no cash insurance.

All of that drives up fees -- that insurance is passed onto you. No one else is eating it, you're paying the cost through higher prices.

Comment Re:Cashless can't happen, here is why ... (Score 1) 753

And tipping a bellman for getting my luggage to my room - in a busy hallway it's far easier to give him a 5 or a 10 with my room number. Paypal/Square/... are slow compared to handing off a fiver. And, at least in the US, a discreet monetary thank-you is appreciated far more than a "transaction" that requires a 30-40 second interchange of electronics.

I'd also have to say that in the US at least, the reliability of electronics and networks is greatly exaggerated. I've gone to plenty of places where the CC reader was down, but you could still pay cash. And there are huge, huge swaths of the country where you cannot get even piss-poor cell phone service, not with any sort of reliability. Would you want to limit them to network-required payment methods? >_>

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