Let's assume I get on a toll road and pay my $0.06/mile (roughly) which is a fee whose stated purpose is for maintenance, repair, and depreciation. Let's also assume that the mileage tax is in place, whose stated purpose is for maintenance, repair, and depreciation of the roadway. So, I drive 30 miles on the toll road, and pay about $1.80 in tolls. I then pay my $0.02/mile tax, which amounts to about $0.60.
Alright, so with the scenario laid out, two things should be glaringly obvious. First, the amount of money the mileage tax takes in, as a means of ensuring upkeep on the tollroad plus as a cost offset for the upkeep of significantly less traveled roads is 1/3 of what we pay in tolls. One has to wonder why the tollway needs 3X as much money to upkeep their roads. Second, government is excellent at implementing taxes and fees and other revenue generating schemes, but they are reluctant to get rid of such programs. Understanding that in all likelihood, I will be paying a toll and a tax that independently serve exact same purpose seems unreasonable.
Santa Rosa Junior College is threatening to sue several hundred students and faculty members who have created private e-mail addresses that use the collegeâ(TM)s name without permission.
Now, it sounds to me like the cease and desist was sent to students and staff, not to the actual offending email addresses. In fact, this is supported a few paragraphs down...
The college offered little explanation when it announced the crackdown in e-mail messages sent to all faculty Tuesday and people it had identified as violators of its new policy.
In summary, you are wrong. Have a nice day.
Your comparison isn't a good one. It would be like losing your vision for 40 minutes and wandering around with deep holes around for you to fall in. Once you're in those holes it's a fair chance you won't survive unless someone helps you out.
OP was examining the long term effects of this experiment on the dolphins being experimented on and not the short term effects of SONAR use in the wild. His comparison holds, as it does a better job illustrating the point OP was trying to make.
Anything that is used for prolonged periods (16 hours) is going to have detrimental effects on the mammals' methods of navigation. Why is it such a terrible crime that the Navy consider what damage it does to its surroundings? Not implying you, it's just their stance is TeRRorisM! our actions can't be hindered.
Again, I'm not quite sure how this is related to the OP whatsoever. The OP was denouncing the experiments not because he felt the Navy shouldn't be concerned, but rather because the unreasonably high dBs that the dolphins were being subjected to.
Just as an interesting aside, one of the more sensible ideas of gene function is as a "context sensitive difference maker." In this definition, genes don't code for anything by themselves, but only through environment do they allow for phenotypic expression. In the measles example you gave, the measles may have robbed the environment from something required for the genes that code hearing to express their phenotype.
Given that possibility, it would be interesting to determine if the thumbless person has a sequence that, given certain environmental conditions, does not express its phenotype or if there is a sequence actively coding the lack of thumbs given a certain environment.
Can this country really allow something like this to happen? Why isn't there general outrage on the front page of every newspaper? Why aren't those responsible being flooded with calls and emails from angry citizens?"Julie Amero was a victim of a school that couldn't be bothered to protect its computers, of a prosecutor without the technology background to understand what he was doing, a police "expert" who was not, and a jury misled by all of them. "Miscarriage of justice" doesn't begin to describe it."
No man is an island if he's on at least one mailing list.