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Comment How about being less tyrannical? (Score 1) 509

How about we ask Keith to ask of his people to quit, and tender his resignation voluntarily? No questions asked.

There, solved that for ya. It would be really easy to lower taxpayer liability by just putting organizations like his on the chopping block, and ending all overseas adventures. Please don't patronize us with your idealistic beliefs in safety -- one could only imagine what D.C. would be like with a Kiev-style protest.

We're asking you nicely now -- and putting it into public discourse. The next time time, I don't know how nicely people will ask. I think it might get ugly.

Comment Re:"Towards the northern hemisphere" (Score 1) 398

I think that is the key point. People should also realise that places that are currently green further south may well become desert - this doesn't mean more green it means green further North. It seems to confirm predictions that the "Wheat belt" may move North from the contiguous USA and central Europe to Siberia, Northern Europe, Canada, and eventually possibly Alaska.

It's the blind faith in speculation of things that may happen that just disturb me, and probably should disturb any logical thinking person.

Just like the guy above in Alaska citing anecdotal evidence that the presence of earthworms in mum's garden and the forest line increasing, no one can definitively prove that a localized warming cycle is part of a part of a multi-millennial trend. Since there have only been accurate thermometers measuring data for a couple hundred years, one could easily conclude there is too small of a sample of temperature data being presented. At best, climate change illustrates a trend of a small sample space, and it worst it represents a political bold-faced lie.

Sorry, but the unprovable mays that you present are equally as likely as donkeys flying out of my ass.

Comment A lot of these insensitive clods... (Score 2) 470

Tend to blame the victims. Most modern processed foods are full of inflammatory poisons (HFCS, artificial sweeteners, hydrogenated oils)

Paleo and Atkins work for some, not for others. Blaming people for being fat is like blaming people for being poor and uneducated.
Additionally, fast foods today aren't as healthy as they were years before (HFCS, hydrogenated oils, soy, fillers, artificial colorings, and other carcinogenic preserves using benzenes,) no longer using animal fats, and quality foods aren't subsidized while healthcare is. Juice feasting and lots of water works for many , Paleo and Atkins works for some, but have a crouton and you blow up like a blimp from the "carb starving".

The societal equation is wrong. Food is medicine, when used properly.

People who are struggling with this should at least consider the documentaries : "Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead" and "Forks over Knives" and watch the tons of videos on YouTube that show people transforming their lives and regaining control.

Comment Mostly missing the mark. (Score 1) 291

The point of a patent is to gain a limited monopoly on an invention in the marketplace. People invent things, companies do not.
The fact remains that unless the employee is sharp witted on legal matters, the employer is going to unconscionably screw them.
Sadly, the employee must remain vigilant and not agree to such restrictive nonsense. (and not just in terms of purported ownership, but also in terms of arbitration). Friends don't let friends use the government to solve their problems.

We're in an era of reputation (look at LinkedIN, and Klout), and the patent system will inevitably revisit the concept of reputation inadvertently.
Depending on what political and philosophical angle you are coming from, the whole patent system looks like pure evil, or good in a "screw them before they screw us" sort of way.

Without artificial monopolies, companies would have to depend purely on their product quality, source authenticity, and reputation.
Employees should not also be monopolies.

Comment Re:Cuts (Score 1) 473

The entire "public is less efficient than private" lie that had been repeated so often that everyone now believes it is just that. A lie. The reality is that private industry is far more efficient at corrupting and side stepping morality issues in the quest for a dollar.

Spooner and his American Letter Mail Company's challenge to the postal monopoly at least brought prices down (temporarily). Competitive pricing is moral. Monopoly under threat of caging is immoral. Any questions?

History is a funny thing, sometimes it even makes people who thinks there are "lies" out there have a nice tasty bite of crow.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Letter_Mail_Company

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