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Comment Re:Doubt it will go anywhere (Score 2) 243

True. And they will, because it actually simplifies things, like removing obligatory reporting to state-level data protection authority. And in most states personal data protection is already strong, so business won't have change much.

The change will be dramatic to overseas companies. That is a reason for, not against.

Comment Re:Doling out power (Score 1) 349

The short answer is: I don't know, I live in Europe.

The long one is: don't ever think that changing the system is cure for all the evil on earth. Some people in Europe made that mistake several times. The one and only thing to improve is people. The best system will always fail when filled with bad people.

That said, maybe two-house parliament is complicated enough to understand for some of the MPs, spare ordinary citizens. The legislative process will have too many loopholes vulnerable to all kinds of shadowy lobbing etc. Think "bloat". There is some reason (other than historical connected with Westminster) that most democratic systems consist of two houses, more or less democratically elected, and some kind of one-person fuse (like president or king) with comparatively few powers but enough to block or severely delay some bad legislature. (In US it's different because the president is also head of the cabinet). Elections to parliament are by design desynchronized with presidential elections (4 and 5 years, respectively) just to avoid situations like "one party takes all" by the fluctuation of social feelings (and thus eliminate the blocking capability, because president will certainly agree with ideas of his own party). Maybe you could do something like that. Get some democratically elected body (few members at most) that will be devoted to protecting citizens rights, with legislative-blocking capabilities. There are some ancient patterns.

Comment Re:Doling out power (Score 2) 349

Random government won't have democratic legitimation, even if it will be chosen with uniform distribution among entire population (possibly with some age restrictions like 18-75 or so). That situation will backfire when it does something unpopular (and that seems to be the frequent case), so you will get some bonus social unrest (that is, more than normal). That unrest will probably be well enough to overthrow such power, so that is not really an option.

My sig seems to be correct also this time.

Comment Re:Well why not? (Score 1) 203

in Europe for example, where fundamentalism is almost non-existent.

Actually, no. France != Europe. But in Europe you can find christian fundamentalists inside the most numbering church in a particular state, probably Roman Catholic in Spain, Poland, Italy, Orthodox in Greece, Ukraine and Russia and so on. You just cannot generalise and say "Church/denomination/community X is fundamentalist", because there are great differences inside the Church.

Depending on state, its history and general financial wellbeing they represent different political options, from extreme left to extreme right. And center-left is rarely "fundamentalist", they typically represent the open wing of that community.

Comment Re:one step closer to drive thru degrees (Score 1) 371

Of course you're right, but 1) who said there's only one who's got to check all projects 2) you can arrange for sequential checking with 15-20min per project team (in case you'd allow doing project in pairs) 3) it's not hard to do that in parallel (one team is coding while you choose which subroutine to wipe in another project).

All of above is fairly standard procedure on my university in Poland. (I am a student of Warsaw University of Technology). Lecturers are required to announce if there will be formal exam, project ar whatever he/she choses as a way to measure our knowledge at the end of course. Moreover, we know if there is exam or something else when we choose courses for next semester, long before actual lectures begin. Nobody sees anything wrong with that.

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