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Comment Re:Oh you sweet summer child (Score 1) 31

It's important to note that Weird Al seeks the approval of the artists he is parodying. Technically it's not likely in many cases he has to, since US copyright law generally protects parody, but he's a good faith actor who understands not everyone is going to want to be parodied. Still, the fact that he does seek permission gives him an extra layer of protection.

Comment Re:This is a good thing (Score 1) 64

If you wanted to smuggle in chips, would you import huge washing machines into the country to take out just a couple minute chips out of them, or just buy the tiny chips outright in the gray market and smuggle them in? If people can smuggle drugs or tobacco, it is even easier to do it with tiny chips. It beggars belief how some people are retarded enough even here on Slashdot to believe this bullshit about importing washing machines and taking the chips out. It is bad enough we have leaders who believe in such nonsense.

Comment Re:This is a good thing (Score 2) 64

Baikal does not make chips used by the Russian military. They sell to the civilian sector. Including civilian government and industry.

How some people still believe this bullshit about washing machines is just plain ridiculous. The reason for the imports is pretty simple. The Western appliance factories in Russia closed down after the sanctions made it impossible for them to operate. They couldn't make financial transactions to repatriate profits anymore, and they couldn't import chips and others parts either. Others were bullied into leaving the country by their own governments. So Russia had to increase imports of consumer appliances. Mostly from China and Turkey. This will continue to be the case until the factories of the companies which left get taken over by new companies and start operating again. Which might happen this year or next year. The Turks already bought at least one consumer appliances factory and are restarting it. I wouldn't be surprised if the Chinese were doing the same.

As for there being no 28nm factories in Russia. The Russians are building one. The building was topped off late last year. I wouldn't be surprised if it was operating starting either this year or the next.

Comment Re:Reddit is a toxic cesspit (Score 2) 140

Apart from anything else, what happens if it turns out they're innocent? At least if someone is in prison, there's release and reparations from wrongful prosecution, conviction and imprisonment. If you kill someone and then find out later you got the wrong guy, not much you can do.

Beyond that there's a rather ancient legal principle that the punishment should fit the crime. While I want every child rapist severely punished, the fact is the child is still alive, and thus the principle is broken. If we can execute child rapists, are there are other non-lethal crimes that we should consider executing people for? How about rape of adults? How about defrauding old age pensioners? How about theft over a million dollars? How about theft of any kind?

You may say that's reductionist, but once you breach the principle, even for a notorious type of crime, you open the door for redefinition all the way down the line. And we've had legal systems where non-lethal acts, heck even non-violent acts were punishable by death. The Mosaic Code requires men who practice homosexual intercourse are to be killed, adulterers are to be killed, blasphemers, witches, rude children, death death death.

So while I can't say why you got permabanned on Reddit (or was it just a sub), which usually takes one helluva over the top post, your basic idea is incredibly problematic, and shifts punishment back across a legal principle that Cicero had established over a century before the birth of Christ. It means that a new principle (or an old one) involves the notoriety of a crime as the metric for punishment, and not the consequence. Consequence is at least to some degree objectively measurable; dump toxic goo into a stream, we can take a stab at what the damage over the short, medium and long term will be. Rape a child, and we can make some pretty good educated guesses as to what the short, medium and long term consequences for the child and their family will be. Execute people because you clutched your pearls exra-hard, and there is no line other than how upset you get by it.

Comment Re:China is known to hide the truth, change histor (Score 3, Informative) 104

Maybe a few million. The Great Leap Forward, a decade earlier, killed tens of millions. The conclusion we can draw from this is that Mao really didn't give a damn about human life. The Great Leap Forward had been about showing the Chinese populace and the world how incredibly great Mao's version of Marxism was, and ending up in mass famine. So discredited was Mao by this that people Deng Xiaoping managed to sideline him and bring some sanity back to the government. Mao didn't like being sidelined by his underlings, so sparked the Cultural Revolution to destabilize Chinese society and wrest power from Deng and Co., which he did, and Deng and the other reformers were sent off to be "re-educated". In the end Deng won; after Mao's death and the attempted coup by the Gang of Four, Deng was "rehabilitated" and handed power, and it is Deng Xiaoping who actually turned China around.

Sadly the lessons of that period seem to have been forgotten.

Comment Re:Thankfully (Score 1) 104

I found the book fairly dull and stylistically confused. Some of that perhaps comes from translation, but the awkward plot and stylistic issues almost certainly are built into the story itself. I finished it only be sheer effort alone, because of its reputation, but honestly I found its reputation to be ill-deserved. It just isn't a very good book. I can't imagine subjecting myself to watching a miniseries version of it.

Comment Re:Too funny (Score 1) 113

If there's no explicit or implicit threat, then not really. I mean, I suppose a President or their representative could say "Industry X, clean up your act, or I'll use my executive powers and/or petition Congress to pass new laws to force you to clean up your act." The latter is more strident, certainly is a threat, but not one that implies any unconstitutional threat (unless, of course, specific remedies are not available via Executive Powers or Congress refuses to play ball). In the case of the bully pulpit, it's the equivalent of a parent of an adult child telling them stop eating so much junk food, in the latter it's the adult parent saying "You won't be allowed to eat from our fridge and I'll ask the Johnsons not to let you scarf back their food either."

Comment Re:Too funny (Score 2) 113

Well, that's kind of where concepts like conspiracy come into play. Clearly wagging your finger at Facebook and X and telling them to stop spreading naughty stuff doesn't even represent much of an implicit threat. Strongly implying to your supporters that they can prevent Congress from certifying the electoral votes seems a fundamentally different activity.

Presidents lecture and cajole all the time. The notion of the "bully pulpit" pretty much goes back to the beginning of the United States. That's not to say that all statements made by a President or member of the Administration is merely finger wagging. But telling people to eat less sugar or telling social media to stop assisting in the spread of misinformation are both more examples of a President using their moral authority (such as the office of the Presidency or individual Presidents may have moral authority). If Mark Zuckerburg or Elon Musk feel coerced by a US Administration lecturing them, perhaps it isn't SCOTUS they should be consulting, but the mirrors one presumes they have in their houses.

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