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Comment Re:Silly (Score 1) 388

I wish Abita would put out the Belgian Ale, S.O.S. and Andygator in cans. All 3 are awesome. Makes me miss living closer (in the Memphis area it's pretty easy to get the big beers - i occasionally find them here in NC but I haven't tried the Amber or Purple Haze partially because I'm fond of good hi-grav beers when possible).

Comment Re:Silly (Score 1) 388

Milk (the organic variety as well as the door-to-door delivery of old) is often in 2L/QT glass bottle. It's much heavier empty, but the difference is not so bad when you're talking about up to ~4 lbs of milk in them.

Comment Re:charity (Score 1) 216

Math fail. 40000*.31=12400 40000*.19=7600 Plugging the other factors in, you get 22600 for the socialist example, and 22400 for the capitalist example. Even if your math were correct, these tax figures are not. In any case, please check your work next time. There are advantages and disadvantages to both systems, and if the USA system were less poorly/greedily administered the numbers could be notably better for its citizens, at almost any income level.

Comment Re:Yawn (Score 1) 94

Emacs is a pretty cool project, and preferred mostly by coders, in my experience. Vi, on the other hand, is the only full screen text editor that is almost guaranteed to be in a default UNIX-type install, and if you work on many machines in a standardized production environment, you'd better at least learn the basics. I may not always use it at home but it has been the standard in almost every non-windows environment I have ever spent time on.

Comment Re:Pollution not a valid argument for the left (Score 1) 545

The change in carbonate vs carbonic acid in the ocean is telling (and making life for carbonaceous shelled sea life growingly more difficult.) The loss of glaciers and polar marine ice while possibly enhancing navigation, is already having significant impact both in rising sea levels and changes in ocean salinity. In fact a recent report suggests that as much as 40% of the increased sea level and reduced salinity is directly attributable to human enterprises over the last 2 centuries.

Are you referring to the study about underground water draining out to the sea? It was on here last week, and conjecting the speculated effects of well and other pumped out water usage like this is exactly the kind of illogical contrived causal link that leads people to calling the AGW hypothesis junk science. If you have 2 separate points about possible earth-altering effects, cool, but don't just mash them together in a paragraph as if they have some relation to one another. Aside from this, while the science is still young and not well-vetted (I.e. the models, while making improved correlation to past data, are still consistently incorrect in actually predicting climate), I think your points make some sense and I am highly in favor of trying to keep a balance with nature, as long as we don't do anything that punishes regular people unduly to the benefit of huge corporations and the filthy rich (which is exactly what forcing far greater costs for energy production would do).

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