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Comment Administrative Costs (Score 1) 827

The top 50 salaries at my alma mater (a public state school) are all administrators and athletic coaches, and not one of them makes less than $200K (and some of the athletic coaches are over $500K from the State, plus whatever perks advertisers give them).

The highest paid tenured professor makes about $145K, and most professors make less than a first year MSEE graduate from the same school.

Yes, the demand-push inflation caused by massive government subsidies is the bigger problem, but administrative waste and focus on non-educational activities are significant as well.

Comment Just a few circumstances (Score 1) 892

1) You discover your employer is willfully engaged in criminal activity
2) Your employer asks you to break the law or violate ethics rules that may apply to your job, or to perjure yourself during a court proceeding or other investigation

I can't really think of any other reason it would be okay to just walk out the door. But, in these two cases it would be perfectly okay.

Comment Re:Terri Schiavo, what? (Score 4, Insightful) 151

There was no ethical quandary in the Schiavo case. She was not conscious, and more or less had no brain to be conscious with. It was a clear cut case of a lost cause where the body was only being kept alive to fuel the aforementioned family feud (her parents were not a big fan of her husband, IIRC, and did not want him inheriting her estate, so they fought the issue until her estate was gone and her husband bankrupt, then finally let it go).

Comment Pretext to Gov't Takeover (Score 1) 259

These are interesting times, for sure. They claim this is just âoeso we can understand how Bitcoin works,â but I think the reality is that this is an intelligence gathering expedition to figure out how to enforce regulations through forcible means, such as taking over control of the Bitcoin network or enforcing licensing for miners.

I hope they realize that they can't simply "take control" of a decentralized, peer to peer network like Bitcoin, but I am sure they are going to learn as much as they can so they can try.

This does not bode well for Bitcoin or any other alternative currency.

Censorship

Aussie Public Servant Criticises Gov't On Twitter, Gets Sacked 151

An anonymous reader writes "An Australian public servant who criticised the government on Twitter has been sacked even though she did not reveal her name or her job to her readers. Federal Judge Warwick Neville told her Australians had no 'unfettered implied right (or freedom) of political expression.' Unlike Americans, Australians have only limited rights to Free Speech. The new ruling makes means public servants cannot criticize the government on social media, even privately and in their own time."

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