I live in Boulder, I bet you don't.
That'd be correct. I live a few states east of you.
I stop, check the road, make sure no cars are coming, and if it's clear, then I'll go
This is the stop sign maneuver, also used at a flashing red signal or a right turn at a steady red signal. At a stop sign, I make sure to slow enough to put weight on my foot before proceeding.
but only have waited twice what the usual time it takes for that light to change (yes, I keep track of that).
I too keep track of how many cycles have elapsed, and I report problematic intersections to the city's hotline once I do arrive. But in the 35 states without a dead red statute, even waiting an hour isn't good enough for the letter of the law. Until about a week ago, it was 36; Indiana's dead red statute took effect on July 1 of this year. Before that, there was one intersection on my way to work where I often had to wait over five cycles for some SUV to pull up behind my bicycle. Oncoming traffic kept getting green left turn arrows while I got an eight-minute steady red in the straight lane. I reported that one to the city and the state, which kept pointing fingers at each other.
But if you do all that, then they won't ever see you do it, and there will be no grounds for them to complain.
Treating a red light as a stop sign works unless there happens to be a police car parked in a nearby parking lot.
Nobody can avoid killing you if you don't even pretend to follow the rules of traffic.
I'm a cyclist, and I follow the rules of traffic to the extent that I can. But the metal rims of my bicycle don't have enough surface area to consistently trigger the vehicle-sensing induction loops at intersections. At some intersections in my home town, I've seen even a bicycle and a motorcycle put together fail to trip it. So in the 35 states that haven't passed dead red laws, I don't understand how to follow the law against crossing the street at a red light, other than by not traveling at all.
Their answer to an OS not properly doing something is "fix the OS".
How would someone go about fixing an operating system whose biggest problem is that it can't run many of the proprietary applications on which he relies? There are plenty of applications for Windows that aren't ported to any *BSD.
Do you go to homeless shelters and ask for donations from the homeless too?
If by "donations" you include donations of one's time, yes. Some homeless shelters expect those people who are able to perform some sort of work to do so.
Sometimes, an event happens which begs (for) the question of why nobody planned for it.
This raises the question of why people don't just avoid the pedantic bickering by saying "raises the question".
Besides, this is State government not Federal requiring the license.
Congress forces the states to incorporate certain uniform provisions in traffic laws, such as a drinking age of 21. It does this by bribing the states with "highway funds" taken from citizens of other states under authority granted through the postal and commerce clauses.
Perform in costume: That is a city ordinance. Again, not fed and not even State. I am sure NYC has a reason for that ordinance, take it up with them.
In the case of dressing up as an identifiable character from a non-free work of fiction, it could be a Lanham Act violation or copyright violation, which is federal. But otherwise, such an ordinance amounts to a dress code for appearing on public sidewalks. How would I go about searching for what other cities have an analogous ordinance?
Why should [companies] be allowed to derive revenue from patents?
As part of an economic bargain established "to promote the progress of science and useful arts", as one country's constitution puts it.
Since we live in a democracy and the vast majority of people will never be in that position the point is moot.
How many people are employed by companies deriving revenue from their patents?
"If I do not want others to quote me, I do not speak." -- Phil Wayne