Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Good model?!? (Score 1, Redundant) 102

I think people stray from their partners for immediate, temporary gratification because of hormones and the excitement. If this option was on the table, folks would learn quickly the value of having one person

That's your experience.

Thousands of polyamorous people have a quite different experience.

Comment Re:I dont see the difference (Score 1) 643

I don't see the difference between this and finger printing.

The state has no right to force me to subject my body to any medical procedure, however trivial, and no right to any part of my living flesh. None. At all. Not a microgram.

If they have actual probable cause to believe I may be involved in the commission of a specific crime for which they have DNA evidence, they can (with a warrant) search my home for hair and skin flakes. Or if they have enough evidence for an arrest they can lock me up in a clean room for the night and take my sheddings. So it's not even the case that this gives them critical evidence they can't get any other way -- it's all about the convenience of the police and the assertion of state authority over the bodies of citizens.

I'm not a Christian, but I always liked Jesus's line "Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's." My living flesh -- that matter whose dance is *I* -- is not Caesar's. It is the most divine thing I know, and I will not surrender it to the state willingly. Should the matter ever arise, they will have to take it from me by violence. I reserve the right to defend myself against such an assault, though I also reserve the right to decide that resistance is tactically unwise.

Comment Re:Hmmm ... (Score 1) 558

No... we call that a semi-automatic rifle.

An "assault weapon" is nothing but a semi-automatic rifle that cosmetically resembles an assault rifle. (q.v.) too much for the comfort of some legislator or bureaucrat. It's a meaningless term introduced by gun control advocates to muddy the waters.

An "assault rifle" is a rifle capable of select-fire operation (i.e., can be set to semi- or fully-automatic mode) and that fires an intermediate power cartridge. An example is the M-16. Such rifles are not generally available to the average civilian, you need special licenses.

If this company is making "assault rifles", they will have few civilian customers.

Tis a horrifying world where a Ruger 10/22 is an assault rifle!

"This Ruger 10/22 rifle with a pistol grip and a folding stock was classified as an assault weapon under the Federal Assault Weapons Ban." --- the wik

Comment Re:Compassion (Score 1) 446

My job as a doctor is not to lecture that patient or make fun of them, but to try to help them as much as I can with the tools I have at my disposal.

One of the tools a doctor has at their disposal is the lecture -- often dubbed "patient education". It has far fewer side effects than drugs or surgery.

OTOH, to give a good lecture, one must understand the subject. Most doctors know fsck-all about nutrition, or healthy lifestyles in general. An astounding 44 percent of male physicians are overweight. Maybe this bias is frustration at their own failures.

Comment Re:not so simple... Re:I should hope so (Score 2) 279

There was no due process because it was a psych eval not a criminal hearing.

An involuntary psychiatric evaluation, like any other form of arrest (the deprivation of a person of their liberty)still has to follow a legal process -- i.e., due process of law. As I stated, it seems that this was followed. If they have evidence that it wasn't, by all means they should pursue a lawsuit, but having read the FB posts in question I put their odds at slim to none.

How you get "sensationalism" out of what I said is beyond me.

Comment Re:not so simple... Re:I should hope so (Score 0) 279

He apparently was denied this due process and that is what is is suing for.

He was apparently treated exactly as the appropriate law says people making threats and displaying signs of possibly violent mental illness should be treated. There was probable cause to believe that he had violated the law; arresting him was thus in accord with due process.

Comment Re:Let us watch Africa and former soviet republics (Score 2) 521

The fundamental tenet of the gun rights advocates is that, armed citizenry will take down tyrannical governments.

No, the fundamental tenet of gun rights advocates is that self-defense, which includes the right to own the tools of self-defense, is a basic human right. That fact remains true whether tyrants can survive armed populations or not.

Now it is true as a matter of history that one point the "Founding Fathers" considered was that a nation that relied on a militia (armed and trained body of citizens) for its defense, rather than a standing army, had a built-in defense again its government going tyrannical.

These 3D printed cheap plastic guns are going to flood Africa and other such places with very cheap guns.

Guns are already cheap and easy to make. That's the whole design philosophy of the AK-47 -- you can already get them for around $50 in some parts of Africa.

Comment Re:What is it I am supposed to learn? (Score 2) 141

Now anyone and everyone can get access to training and education, to better themselves in their spare time.

Just like anyone could previously by reading a gorram book at the public library.

Calling a set of taped lectures a "massive open on-line course" is just another silly bit of overhyping "X, but on the Interwebz!" Yes, it is nice that the net makes more content available more efficiently, but this is an evolutionary step, not any sort of revolution.

Comment Re:Personal Responsibility? (Score 1) 578

There are not an insignificant number of cases where a normally responsible person becomes an irresponsible person,

When we're talking about irresponsible enough to commit homicide, yes, that is an insignificant number. (In terms of frequency; of course in personal terms any murder is highly significant to those, to friends and family of both the victim and, in a different sense, the murderer.)

Murder is something people work their way up to. 90% of murder suspects in Milwaukee in 2001 had a criminal record; the same proportion was found in NYC in 2003 through 2005. Keep in mind this is just guys (mostly, some women too) who got caught at previous crimes, more would have committed crimes and not been caught, and more would have displayed irresponsible but non-criminal behavior (the sort of stuff a good mental health system would catch).

The good citizen who suddenly snaps and kills is a favorite fictional trope, but bears little relationship to criminological reality.

Comment Re:Well, he's not afraid his company might fire hi (Score 1) 486

the State has no power to overturn economic realities

Right. And one of those economic realities is that health care is not an area where a "free market" can efficiently allocate resources. Buyers and sellers do not meet in the marketplace with equal power and full knowledge.

If you think corporate profits are the only reason, or even the major factor in the exorbitant expense of health care, you are naive. It's expensive because it takes vast resources to do the job.

It takes no more resources to provide an American citizen with health care than a German or a Japanese one. Yet every other developed nation has better outcome at less cost. The difference is the obscene profits realized by companies like United Health.

Comment Re:Well, he's not afraid his company might fire hi (Score 1) 486

there should be no worries about medical records being leaked and/or used against individuals or organizations since the IRS will keep those safe for all of us.

No, the ACA does not allow the IRS to access your medical records.

They're so eager to begin, they simply walked in and seized without explanation approximately *sixty million* medical records in California

The allegation is that they exceeded the authority of a warrant and demanded copies of servers containing records for ten million people from an unnamed company. Is it true? Neither you nor I know. But the suit is unrelated to the ACA.

Comment Re: Fine by me (Score 4, Informative) 153

duckduckgo returns whatever bing returns :) It's just an anonymizing front end to bing.

No. It's not.: "DuckDuckGo gets its results from over 50 sources, including DuckDuckBot (our own crawler), crowd-sourced sites (in our own index), Yahoo! (through BOSS), embed.ly, WolframAlpha, EntireWeb, Bing, Yandex, and Blekko." Please don't FUD on the Duck.

Slashdot Top Deals

So you think that money is the root of all evil. Have you ever asked what is the root of money? -- Ayn Rand

Working...