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Comment Re:Excellent (Score 1) 1576

yes, because nothing proves your sincerity by knowing what's written in a fantasy book.

The question of whether the Bible is a fantasy isn't at issue here. The issue is whether the President honestly believes it, studies it, and tries to live according to its teachings, or whether he's just pandering to the masses by telling them what they want to hear. His choice of words here suggests an intimate familiarity with the text that wouldn't be there if he were merely pandering.

A large number of people have been mislead into believing that President Obama is either an atheist or a Muslim. Many of the people who voted against him did so primarily because of these lies. Lies and deception are unhealthy in a democracy.

If you're an American who believes Christians are stupid and dangerous, I hope you were not similarly mislead, and exercised your right to vote for someone else.

Comment Re:Ugh. So glad I live in Canada (Score 1) 1576

I have no doubt that our PM is likely more religious than many of our previous PM's, however likely they most that would be said about it might be "yes I believe in god, and that is a private affair for myself and my family".

The quote wasn't from a speech, but from an interview that both Barack Obama and Mitt Romney gave for the midsummer 2012 issue of Cathedral Age, the magazine of the Washington National Cathedral. It did not receive much press coverage. The President doesn't speak publicly about his religious beliefs very much, although he doesn't dodge such questions when asked.

Comment Re:Excellent (Score 5, Interesting) 1576

Perhaps you can point some of your Christian friends to this quote:

First and foremost, my Christian faith gives me a perspective and security that I don’t think I would have otherwise: That I am loved. That, at the end of the day, God is in control—and my main responsibility is to love God with all of my heart, soul, and mind, and to love my neighbor as myself. Now, I don’t always live up to that standard, but it is a standard I am always pursuing.

My faith is also a great source of comfort to me. I’ve said before that my faith has grown as president. This office tends to make a person pray more; and as President Lincoln once said, "I have been driven to my knees many times by the overwhelming conviction that I had no place else to go."

Finally, I try to make sure that my faith informs how I live my life. As a husband, as a father, and as president, my faith helps me to keep my eyes on the prize and focus on what is good and truly important.

-- President Barack Obama

The allusions to Matthew 22:37-39 and Philippians 3:14 are what makes me believe his sincerity.

Comment Re:How is it even difficult? (Score 1) 594

You don't even have to have him click a link. Send an email with a web bug (1 pixel img), hosted on a server you have log access to, and when he reads it you have his IP.

This doesn't work with modern email clients. Spammers can set the URL of the image to a unique ID code that's linked to your email address, so as soon as you load the image they've just confirmed that your email address is valid. We don't want that, so external images are blocked by default.

However, a decade ago this would have been more likely to work.

Comment Re:Every bit adds up. (Score 1) 589

It is easier to charge the public more or ban something wasteful like children's balloons than it is to get the military or industry to do anything. Remember, the military and industry have a history of KILLING PEOPLE rather than change their ways - and you want them to change over a small resource supply problem? The military complex can't even stop wasting money when we run out of money.

But banning party balloons won't help us to not run out of helium so soon. It's such a small percentage, the difference would be imperceptible, and yet you're asking millions of people to sacrifice a fun tradition just so you can feel like you're "doing something" without any real benefit to the public.

My suggestion: tax it, just like cigarettes and gasoline. Artificially driving up the price will encourage people to waste less and recapture more, and the additional revenue can contribute to deficit reduction.

Comment Re:Huh? (Score 1) 460

Furthermore, the silly codenames Ubuntu has are just that: codenames. They are for developers and testers, not end users, and certainly not "pundits".

That's precisely how Apple's cat names started, until rumor sites caught wind and end users started using them. Then starting with Mac OS X 10.4 "Tiger", Apple's marketing team decided to just run with it.

Personally I'm really disappointed that Ubuntu didn't go with Hungry Hippo.

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