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Comment Re:Well, that was your mistake. (Score 1) 627

He may not (on purpose) have tons of cash, but he has 7% of the vote, in one poll, one debate, zero advertisements. 500 whackjobs * 7% = 3500% of the population. Elections should be about voters, not cash. In my perfect world, campaigning would be limited to large number of debates, and a rotating segment on pbs or c-span or some other public tv. No room for BS.

Comment Re:To put it in undying words of Alan Greenspan (Score 2) 141

Why wouldn't they? If someone can run off with billions of dollars with (seemingly) no consequences, why wouldn't they? For how "brilliant" guys like Greenspan were supposed to have been, they seem frightfully naive in retrospect about basic human nature. The "market" can only punish misbehaving companies if there is complete transparency, which is a fantasy... obvious solution is to just hide what you're doing. They fail to realize that regulations (rules) are needed to protect a free market, just like laws and the constitution are needed to protect individual freedom. Without regulation there is not market freedom but market anarchy. Although in regard TFA what these traders did was always very against the law.

Comment Re:Not surprising... (Score 4, Insightful) 248

As a Jewish kid growing up one of the most important lessons I learned about the Holocaust was not to dehumanize the Germans as a people or as individuals for what happened, as that would make me no different than the Nazi's themselves, rather I should understand why and how they did what they did so that I could do my part in preventing it from happening again. When I try to apply that logic now to Islamic extremism, and Israeli extremism for that matter, I'm surprised at the vehemence of the pushback I get, even from people that really ought to know better (I think deep down they do, that's why they deny it so hard). To say that we "can't understand terrorism or extremism so don't even try" is insane to me. They're just people. Hell international business and finance these days is way more complicated and at least as sinister as any terrorist...

Comment Re:Not surprising... (Score 1) 248

Well, they are developing a new Counter-Strike... I wonder if you'll be able to play a terrorist in a "modern shooter" capacity. Hostages, bombs and everything I hope. I remember on 9/11 I came home from school and loaded up cs (as a terrorist naturally) cause well that's what I always did, hesitated for a second, then thought, "Hell if I stop playing my favorite game cause of this then the terrorists really do win."

Comment Re:Unfortunate (Score 1) 507

Vote for whom? Republicans? Clearly no. Obama? All his campaign sponsors are Wall Street firms. The whole point is that there is no one to vote for, and little / no recourse within the system.

Comment Re:Easy solution (Score 1) 318

how I long for a "make it impossible to tag me" feature on FB

This is why I deleted my account. My parents' friends started adding me, as well as the kids I teach karate to... I really don't need those groups of people seeing every compromising picture that gets taken of me at parties and promptly plastered all over the internet, and it seemed kind of rude to not accept them as fb friends. If I ever go back it will be with a pseudonym (and mayyybe a whitewashed "real" account), or not at all. But tbh I don't feel like I've lost anything for not having one anymore...

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