Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:bankrupt then what? (Score 1) 492

I appreciate your continuing engagement in this subject, and your discomfort with being forced to have some sort of insurance. However . . . I imagine the lenders who ate your debits are just as annoyed with bankruptcy as you are at the thought of mandatory heathcare. Why should they be unable to contract for an inescapable debit? Why should you be unable to risk an escapable debit in the form of healthcare bills (if you think that is a good bet)?

Since universal healthcare would help creditors and debitors alike, and since borrowing is a voluntary transaction, would a tax on credit be an acceptably noncoercive way to fund universal healthcare?

Comment Ugh (Score 5, Interesting) 201

It is a huge industry that I understand deals in a widely dispursed form of petty graft. I'd much rather we use our public university system (which is well regarded) to compile text books and withhold state funds from districts that insist on going elsewhere. Of course, we would have to pay the UCs something, but we wouldn't have to pay them enough to bribe local school districts. I think textbooks are a racket all up and down the line, but up through the HS level I have a hard time believing that you need or can even attract top level scholars to explain Algebra II (as someone else mentioned) or the Whiskey Rebelion or TekWar.

Comment Re:Fascinating (Score 1) 136

I disagree. The humor of "I'm *, you insenstitive clod!" is fairly transparant: it isn't about animus it is about insensitivity (and clodishness).

I try not to make fun of people who suffer from some bizarre and cruel disadvantage because I don't know what it is like to, say, have my family mauled by amok giraffes. If I make a joke about that unfortunate circumstance and someone says "My family was mauled by amok giraffes, you insensitive clod!" the humor is 1) that there is no misfortune so unlikely that someone hasnt' suffered from it and 2) that I really should have known that someone sho suffered such a fate was likely to see their personal trajedy made into a punch line.

I think what makes the invocation of this line from an actual sufferer of the malady when it wouldn't be OK otherwise is that the statement is both true and a punchline and therefore the joker presumably has some insight into the actual amount of hurtfulness that is going to be inflicted (I've given the matter less thought than the length of this post would indicate, so there are likely other reasons as well).

Comment Re:Econ 101 (Score 1) 508

The biggest profit you are going to make is manufacturing the drugs that wealthy people need to live in style. $1 a day to alleviate your allargies, $1 a day to keep you from getting pregnant, $1 a day so you can eat what you like and keep your cholesterol in check. There is sim[ly too much low hanging fruit to make highly speculative reasearch an appealing investment.

Comment Re:Signatures not required (Score 1) 324

IANAL either, but . . . You can waive your right to sue by contracting to have any dispute settled by binding arbitration. Even then you can sue, but you have to argue that the contract or arbitration should not be acknowledged by the court before you can sue for them amputating the wrong leg. I suspect that most state medical boards have some ethical prohibition on conditioning care on the patients subsequent behavior (other than litigation and payment), if they don't they should.

Comment Re:Ahh, fair use (Score 1) 175

I agree that copyrights are too long, but ... A patent deprives the public of something that is useful. A copyright only deprives the public of something pleasureable (software excepted). There is a quote somewhere about invalid patents serving as scarecrows in the fields of innovation; I don't think the same can be said of copyright because I doubt people refrain from writing a story or song or game for fear of infringing the work of some obscure author.

Slashdot Top Deals

Neutrinos have bad breadth.

Working...