Comment Re: Imaginary assets like hallucinations? (Score 1) 63
I do recognize his name and would like to find a book he's written, but pretty sure I've searched a number of times.
I do recognize his name and would like to find a book he's written, but pretty sure I've searched a number of times.
I think I was about as explicit as I could be about going for funny. How about this attempted joke:
You couldn't pay me to fly when the ATCs aren't being paid to keep my plane in the air. (But I haven't flown since around 2005...)
I would say the timeline matches, but I don't care nearly that much about the presentation to spend time on such aspects as forcing things to look differently. I prefer tools that are easy to use. Again from the funding perspective, why would I want to buy an annoying tool?
"I take it you don't get a salary? That you get paid by the second?"
I'm an "exempt" employee in California. Salary for over 2 decades.
I also turned down a company car to use my own. I get paid for "miles". $0.70 per. I do not get paid miles going to my office-- but from my office to any given site. At least during M-F. Sometimes I need to hit a site on the weekend, and miles start the moment I leave the driveway of my home.
There is zero expectation that my 8 hours start when I start my drive in to the office. It starts when I arrive. And yes, it's not uncommon (particularly during projects) that I work well over 8 hours. When that happens, we get comp-time at some point in the future.
I prefer simplicity. In my present work, I'm paid by the task - the day after the task. I told them the amount I wanted on the Check. They take care of the details to make certain the all the other items deductions, SS, and taxes.
I like things simple. I really don't deal with milage, or all the other things I consider minutiae. I deal with simple numbers. What this means is not filling out milage reports and the other stuff that clutters up to work. Perhaps I'm eccentric. But I like simple because my actual work is quite complex.
The error with your math is that it only works on spherical minorities in a vacuum. The world did not begin when you started thinking about it, and in the millions of real lives that were lived before you started trying to justify your social position, out-groups were excluded from contention in the meritocracy, and in-groups were improperly promoted within it because the in-group is often blind to it's own bias
Neither education to help recognize of this bias, nor an attempt to correct for this bias' historical effect is racism. One would think the party that complains constantly that "X isn't racism" would be willing to recognize the distinction. But instead, they use government pressure to keep people ignorant of history, and government money to erect Confederate monuments in the year of our Lord 2025.
What is happening is not subtle, and if you deserve a place in the meritocracy you should be able to see the distinction without thinking any less of yourself.
(Why did you [beelsebob] propagate the vacuum?)
My reaction to any "federal" mention these days is to wonder if they are getting paid for their work. If not, and they are just doing it for love, why should we ever bother to pay them? But I think it will be funny if the shutdown lasts until the next election...
Just joking, but...
Good comment and too bad you weren't FP--and thank you for your relevant Subject.
I still approach it from the perspective of "Would I donate money for that?" And the answer is a partial yes for some of your suggestions. Some of them would take some creativity in describing the project in a way that would attract my donation. But I also have a workaround for some of the other stuff. A fraction of my donation could be reserved for the Mozilla people to assign based on their "unsexy infrastructure" needs. Or maybe the time limit on donations would be sufficient? In the context of the imaginary CSB (Charity Share Brokerage), I would have deposited my donation up front and then selected projects for the CSB to route my donation to. So if the time limit runs out before I've selected a sufficient number of projects, the CSB (as part of its project management mission) could route that money to the "unsexy but necessary" stuff.
The flush toilet is the basis of Western civilization. -- Alan Coult