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Comment Re:Potential abuse of research? (Score 1) 586

I'm going to have to disagree with you here and saw that laws are at least in part based upon morality. You give the example of smoking pot as not being immorral. One of the arguments against it is that it could cause mental health problems in later life and of course smoking it will cause damage to your lungs. There are also the claims/arguments that smoking pot leads to harder drugs which leads to crime (note that I'm not arguing whether these claims are suppoted by any reliable evidence or not just what is claimed). Considering the potential for these harmful effects would it not be immoral to smoke it because it firstly increases medical care costs to you AND others in society as well as costs incurred fighting any associated crime and is therefore immoral because it harms others in society (once again I'm not arguing for the evidence just linking the moral and legal arguments). The other example you gave was adultery which, while not illegal in your state is still illegal in several countries around the world, mostly Islamic and according to wikipedia still technically illegal in Michigan, Wisconsin and Maryland. So I'd say that things that are considered immoral are often then made illegal which means that morality does have an effect on legality.

Comment Re:Gah (Score 1) 577

That's probably because we think it would have been a good thing for someone to blow up the houses of parliament and take down a corrupt government. At least that's what I thought until I was about 20. It never occurred to me that the government wasn't corrupt and that Fawkes wasn't a 'freedom fighter'. I suppose that just goes to show the quality of our historical education at school and the faith in the current government (the one I've grown up with) from a average lowly commoner.
Businesses

Retired Mainframe Pros Lured Back Into Workforce 223

itwbennett writes "Businesses that cut experienced mainframe administrators in an effort to cut costs inadvertently created a skills shortage that is coming back to bite them. Chris O'Malley, CA's mainframe business executive VP, says that mainframe workers were let go because 'it had no immediate effect and the organizations didn't expect to keep mainframes around.' But businesses have kept mainframes around and now they are struggling to find engineers. Prycroft Six managing director Greg Price, a mainframe veteran of some 45 years, put it this way: 'Mainframes are expensive, ergo businesses want to go to cheaper platforms, but [those platforms] have a lot of packaged overheads. If you do a total cost of ownership, the mainframe comes out cheaper, but since the costs of a mainframe are immediately obvious, it is hard to get it past the bean-counters of an organization.'"

Comment Re:Shouting "FIRE!!!": reality check (Score 1) 230

I hope I've read you correctly, are you saying that child porn, terrorism and copyright violations don't exist? (or at least don't exist in the majority of times someone says they does). If there is damage caused, either to society or to an individual, by falsely accusing someone of child porn, terrorism or copyright violation without reasonable grounds then yes they should be prosecuted for that. Sorry if I misunderstood you though.

Comment Re:Thanks, washington (Score 1) 433

I'd say it is probably better to vote for the third party. Following your logic, IF enough people started voting for more left wing third parties because they are unhappy with Obama/McCain this time, then in four years time the Democrats would be more likely to field a left leaning candidate next time around to get those votes, possibly bringing the Republicans to the left quicker than if you voted for Obama this time. Of course it might mean McCain winning this time and I don't know if the little democracy left in the US would survive another 4 years but it might be worth it in the long run.

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