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Comment Re:money and acturial medicines (Score 1) 197

Simply stated, the psychological industry has a monetary profit motive in getting more people on daily maintenance medicine.

Not really. While some pharmaceutical reps may still find ways to provide monetary rewards to some psychiatrists for prescriptions, the majority of psychiatrists don't have a path to profit by prescribing medication. Then there's the fact that psychiatrists are outnumbered by psychologists, who can't prescribe drugs by about two to one. Also, if the drugs are effective, that can mean less paying work for either. People whose conditions are handled by medications tend to be less likely to come in for therapy.

Each person on a daily maintenance medicine means 2 to 4 office visits per year allowing a psychologists to have a steady stream of paying customers.

Except that psychologists are not MDs and can not prescribe medications.

Factor in that each of the "needs accommodation in school" requires a battery of expensive paid testing and you have a large amount of, mainly insurance money, supporting an entire industry and thousands (tens of thousands?) of people working in that industry.

Most of that testing is not done by contract professionals unless the school refers them though. Schools actually have a financial incentive for students not to be diagnosed with any sort of condition that requires accommodation. IEPs are expensive.

If the person was treated, heals and is OK after 6 months of treatment, then how would the psychologists stay in business?

Well, I would say through new patients since there's frankly a shortage of such professionals compared to people who need treatment.

This is not a dismissal or downplaying of conditions and treatments. It's a question of is treatment or profit and where is the line between the two.

Sure, I see your point despite my rebuttals in this post. I would refer you to the APA's ethical code of conduct though. While certainly some in the profession can violate those rules, many practicing in the profession seem to care about the rules

Comment Re: Good for her! (Score 1) 141

Ugh. That would be a scary incentive for the government to introduce contract police who are totally government officials, but somehow magically skirt around the requirement. No, what you are proposing would, one way or another, be a slippery slope towards losing the ability to record police. Also, although that is a compelling reason to not take away the right to film in public, it is hardly the only reason. There are other areas of public good. Lots of them. What about recording criminals, for example. Or any sort of reporting? Taking family photos in public places? Any of hundreds of other reasons people find cameras desirable inventions in the first place?

Comment Re:Old News? (Score 1) 99

Sorry, I am not sure what any of your comment has to do with my comment. I was pointing out that it's incredibly unrealistic to claim that, if the Russians hit the Chernobyl dome it most likely purely accidental or that it wasn't even the Russians, but a fragment of a Ukrainian anti-air missile. The reason is big sky theory. There are no valid targets remotely near the site of the strike. So, if it was a completely random hit from something many, many miles off course, it would have been an amazing coincidence.

Maybe you meant that hitting the dam was also some sort of coincidental hit? It does not seem likely though. That seems like it hit the target it aimed at, just like it seems that the drone that hit the Chornobyl dome hit the target it was aimed at.

Comment Re:Also the right wing manipulates elections (Score 1) 96

You're right- maybe you didn't fall into a rhetorical trap. You are actually just a gaslighting piece of shit, I think.

Yeah, sure. I mean, I am not immediately agreeing with you so I must be gaslighting and also a horrible human being. Good catch there.

Of course I am. How many times did you have to read it to realize that?

I clearly realized that from my very first post on this thread. I would quote it, but why make it longer, just look up in the thread.

I'd think the part where I said: "No question about it." would probably have been enough.
The question is about magnitude, because this discussion stems from a claim of absurd fucking magnitude which you have attached yourself to.

The argument from you that I have "attached" myself to the argument seems to be a bit of a cop out. I assume you actually looked back in the thread and saw that I never actually made a specific claim myself, and just pointed out that A. you were being irrationally abusive, and B. that you were doing it on the flimsy premise that the previous poster had not mentioned that some portion of the suppressed votes were Republican. I will also note that, while that poster gave numbers that may be unfounded, you did not provide any more factual basis for your rebuttal. All you really did was playground name-calling, so I called you out on it. Not surprising that you're back around to playground name calling.

I should note also that I have not "attached" myself to any argument any more than you have "attached" yourself to other absurd partisan arguments. Perhaps you should worry less about "attached" arguments and more about what people are actually saying. Sure, context does matter, but so does the actual scope of my comments within that context. In othrer words, if it is an argument about the role of the metaphor of the shepherd in 19th century idylls and one of the commenters states that ewes can not have horns and the other states that they can, I might chime in to point out that ewes can indeed have horns. It does not mean that I am "attaching" myself to the rest of the argument by the commenter who says that ewes can have horns. I am not actually making a claim that their theory that the shepherd represents an innate human desire to return to the womb.

For my part, I was referring to modern soft voter suppression- not the hard voter suppresion of the post-Reconstruction South. But since I didn't explicitly state that, I accept your criticism.

Certainly it gets softer as time goes on, but it becomes hard to tell where to draw the line. All sorts of voter suppression laws with origins going back to reconstruction and post-reconstruction are still on the books and in use. Plenty of states have massive numbers of disenfranchised voters. In the 2022 mid-term election in Tennessee, for example, there were about 1.7 million votes across 9 districts and about half a million disenfranchised voters, disproportionately black. While, certainly not all of those disenfranchised voters would have voted the same way. It seems likely there would have been some different results if they were not disenfranchised.

  Of course, for a more concrete example, we can look at the soft voter suppression of gerrymandering. Gerrymandering works, period. The US President has recently very publicly demanded that Republicans need to gerrymander to deny Democrats seats. This sort of thing is not normally said out loud so readily, but saying the quiet part out loud is in vogue these days, apparently. Anyway, there's a very clear reason why all the politicians and strategists, etc. are so certain that gerrymandering gets them seats. That's because it does. I would say that gerrymandering is unarguably a form of voter suppression since the whole idea is make people's votes count for less. Perhaps you will argue differently, but otherwise, that is a clear example of modern soft voter suppression working to change federal elections.

 

Fake electors is a media term, intended to vilify.

Were they real electors then?

This has happened, historically. The correct term is an alternate slate of electors.

I mean, that's nonsense. Previous alternate slates of electors were legitimate because the states elections were not yet certified. None of them tried to present themselves as electors after certification. The 2020 "electors" did not have any bona fides unlike previous alternate slates of electors. The 2020 fake electors were an actual conspiracy spread across multiple states.

While I consider the alternate slate downright dirty pool, it's not this evil fucking scheme you're trying to make it out to be.

It was an incompetent, crazy scheme to be sure. As for evil, well I think a lot of people taking part were a bit too clueless to be called evil. I clearly was not characterizing it as an evil scheme though. Just providing it as an example of the kind of activities the Republican side took part in during that election in contrast to a lack of any such activities on the Democrat side.

Also, why is "stealing the election with fake electors" in quotes? I never wrote that and it's not even accurate as a paraphrasing of what I wrote.

I made no such comparison. I said Republicans, not "The President".

Oh, right. Huge difference between Republicans and Trump. I mean, he clearly has no influence whatsoever over the party. Not like the RNC was run by his handpicked candidate... except that it was. Not like 147 Republican members of Congress voted to overturn the election results or anything like that. Oh wait, I'm mistaken again. 139 representatives and 8 senators actually did. How about that? Seriously, this stuff is common knowledge and I am quite sure you know it. Why do I even have to point it out? Instead you just want to play silly games about how you said "Republicans", rather than the (Republican) President as if he doesn't fall under the same category.

What a load of bullshit.
I did not claim equality- I claimed that those who throw stones should be careful not to do so from glass houses.

What you did, as I have pointed out, is twofold. One is that you created a false equivalence between the magnitude of issues with Republicans and Democrats. Two is that, despite that equivalence that you posited, you suggested that Democrats should lose due to their failing whereas the supposedly equal failings of the Republicans should be ignored.

Never once did I claim everyone should favor X and shun Y, particularly because in this case, I vote reliably Democrat, and given the current dangers to the Republic, I think that's the only rational option.

You certainly appear to have made that claim when you wrote:

That's how you lose the last of the middle- people like me.

It's right there, the suggestion that somehow, random people on the Internet making claims about voter suppression against Democrats provides a justifiable reason for people to not vote for Democrats even though the Republican President, huge numbers of Republican congresspersons and other Republican operatives, media organizations, etc. were screaming it to the heavens. Now you can argue perhaps that just meant not voting for Democrats, but also not for Republicans, but the US is, sadly, a de facto (and in some cases de jurum because the status quo has worked its way into court decisions, parliamentary procedure, and actual laws) two party system for a number of reasons. The primary one in my view is the absolutely broken (for any number of parties beyond two - for two parties it's a perfect system) plurality voting system used in most US elections. I would gladly support a constitutional amendment to force instant runoff voting or better in all US elections, but that's never going to happen with the Democrats and Republicans in charge. Anyway, since it is a two party system, abandoning the Democrats just means putting Republicans in power.

Your problem, is that you see any criticism of your side as endorsement of the other.
And that is a problem. A fucking dangerous one.

Look, I don't really have a side. Neither of the two parties really represents what I want in a political party, but the broken system forces a choice and one is clearly a worse choice than the other.

Comment Re:A whole bunch of questions (Score 1) 197

Fair enough. The main reason I commented (aside from a bet peeve about Ockham's Razor and other simplicity principles) is that while psychological problems can potentially stem from complexity, many more seem to stem from a lack of complexity. Individuals with profound autism (defined as needing 24/7 care for life and normally non-verbal or close to it and with an IQ below 50) typically have brains where their neurons, despite branching, tend not to extend far in their brains. So their brain is a network of mostly local connections rather than far reaching ones that extend into distant brain regions. While there may be just as many parts, that clearly seems to be a lack of complexity.

Comment Another retirement goal I can toss (Score 1) 72

When I retired (10y) I was a whiz with Perl, had learned enough Python to know I could switch over easily, and was being told by Paul Graham that if people were too dumb to see that LISP was the ultimate language that had made his fortune, that Ruby had the same deep structure allowing the ultimate trick of self-modifying code and true compactness and elegance and all that stuff the Great Programming Languages all had to have for the most-elite work.

Of course, I didn't have to work any more, and I hate writing toy programs, and didn't have a problem that really required it, so at 10y, the O'Reilly Ruby book is dusty, and when I have something too hard for a bash script, it's still perl. Which still works.

But I was feeling guilty about it, and now I can put the Ruby book away with satisfaction that the moment passed. (Giving up on FORTH was the hard one; loved that language.)

Comment Re:A whole bunch of questions (Score 1) 197

As my father (a heavy duty mechanic) told me often, "The more complicated you make something, the more likely it is to break down."

That's a simplistic principle that I'm sure your father did not actually follow in real life. Plenty of things that increase mechanical complexity actually also increase reliability. For example expansion joints or suspensions in cars. Arbitrary complexity added for no reason, sure, but I am sure that many systems your father worked on not only used lubrication, but had extra systems (adding complexity) to make sure that the other parts stayed lubricated.

Comment Re: A whole bunch of questions (Score 2) 197

Sorry Chief, I need a little extra time
a) putting out this house fire

That's actually a great example, but maybe not for the reason you think it is. Apparently, the Palisades fire was reignited from a fire that had already been put out and the firefighters on the ground wanted to keep working on it because it wasn't done smouldering, but their higher ups pulled them. So then high winds and other conditions re-ignited it and it caused massive destruction. So, that's actually a really great real world example of conditions where being good and thorough at your job trumps speed. Also of management clock-watching having disastrous consequences.

Several of your other examples present this same issue.

Comment Re:shame on you slashdot (Score 1) 197

The AC thing has run it's course. There's no point in having it anymore. All it does is allow fuckwits to unleash their most fuckwitttest version of themselves.

They will still do that without AC, they will just get extra sockpuppet accounts. Plenty already do so that they will post with higher karma and also be taken a bit more seriously.

Comment Re:This is what envy looks like (Score 1) 197

Every successful culture in human history has rewarded the extremely productive individual with extreme wealth

This may all hinge on how you're defining "extremely productive" (and also "successful"), but most civilizations have actually rewarded the majority of extremely productive individuals with less whippings.

Comment Re: ADHD does not exist (Score 1) 197

Why not make accommodations the norm for everyone?

They kind of are in many educational settings. Plenty of schools give students who are falling behind special classes, makeup tests, extra credit work, etc. that other students don't get. That is even when the student in question does not have an Individualized Education Plan.

Comment Re:Definitions [Re:ADHD does not exist] (Score 3, Insightful) 197

So people who previously said "I'm blind and need accomodation" now get put in the same category with people who say "I have visual acuity spectrum disorder" because their vision is 20-40.

Uhhh... That category already exists. It's called visually impaired, and it does receive special accommodations. Back when I was in school, one of the girls in special ed had coke bottle thick glasses. She got treated by pretty much everyone like the other kids in special ed. Not too much bullying (though some), and mostly they just got socially ignored, but basically as far as everyone was concerned she was a **Slur Deleted** along with the rest of the kids. Her only disability though was that she was legally blind. Even with the glasses, she needed large print, etc. These days, she probably would not be thrown into special education classes, she would probably be in class with everyone else and just get help with reading materials, what the teacher writes on the blackboard, etc.

Now, of course, that is a spectrum as well, and you can argue that there are people whose vision is not that bad who are getting accommodations they don't need. However, it makes more sense to err on the side of caution when making the cutoff. You may complain about it being unfair to everyone else for someone you don't think deserves an accommodation to get one, but it's a lot more unfair for someone who really needs one to not get one and essentially be cast out.

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