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Topics - More Than Mortal

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1411
The Flood / Some bastard pushed me at work today
« on: November 30, 2014, 01:24:08 PM »
I was walking down one of the aisle's in order to replace one of the full basket cradles with an empty one. Some big fat motherfucker was behind me and as he walked by he shoved me aside. I called him a cunt and we stared off for a couple of seconds.

Discuss cunts.

1412
The Flood / Reasons why the Empire actually isn't that bad
« on: November 30, 2014, 12:45:29 PM »
Rebel Scrubs.

I. It drove technological development.

II. They don't needlessly kill aliens, despite their humano-centrism.

III. The Empire's government stimulated the economy.

IV. It's actually fairer than the Old Republic.

V. It's more effective than the Old Republic.

VI. The Rebellion is actually quite unpopular.

VII. They gave the Galaxy order.

VIII. Their worst crimes are against terrorists.

IX. Getting rid of the Jedi was positive for the rest of the Galaxy.

X. They were the only reason the Yuuzhan Vong didn't take over the Galaxy.

1413
The Flood / No, describe ME in ten words or fewer
« on: November 29, 2014, 04:01:44 PM »
Because I'm obviously more important than Rocketman.

1414
Serious / Is authoritarianism inevitable? Is it justifiable?
« on: November 29, 2014, 03:48:51 PM »
We're dealing with two questions here, of course. The first is to ask whether or not authoritarianism is inevitable. It seems, at least to me, that political incentives are aligned in such a way as to promote the government to violate established civil liberties gradually and, at first, quite agreeable. Examples include measures against extremism ranging from strict immigration controls, minor curbs on free speech and extrajudicial murder.

I've no doubt that the conservative nature of bureaucracy, which is positive in its own right, is a contributory factor to the executive and the administration wanting to "cut corners" and perform actions which might not be legal in the pursuit of their aims. For instance, the GCHQ of Britain and the NSA of America collaborated when it came to data-collection and mass surveillance to bypass national laws which would otherwise prohibit such actions. The thing, of course, is that these incremental moves towards authoritarianism aren't malicious. The NSA and the GCHQ are, largely, just trying to fulfill their role as intelligence agencies.

So, in this way, is authoritarianism inevitable?

Secondly, are these curbs of civil liberties and the violations of our rights justifiable? I find myself reading books like Brave New World and, emotionally, wondering what's wrong with it. It seems that most arguments against authoritarian/totalitarian governments stem largely from emotion/intuition, so maybe it's just me when that doesn't seem to click. But on an intellectual level, could a government like that of Brave New World, or the Hunger Games, or even 1984 ever be justifiable?

1415
From the Guardian
Quote
An advanced, malicious software application has been uncovered that has spied on private companies, governments, research institutes and individuals in 10 countries since 2008, antivirus software maker Symantec Corp said in a report on Sunday.

The California-based maker of Norton antivirus products said its research showed that a “nation state” was likely the developer of the malware, Regin, but Symantec did not identify any countries or victims. Symantec said Regin’s design “makes it highly suited for persistent, long-term surveillance operations against targets”. The program was apparently withdrawn in 2011, but resurfaced in 2013.

The malware uses several stealth features and “even when its presence is detected, it is very difficult to ascertain what it is doing”, according to Symantec. “Many components of Regin remain undiscovered, and additional functionality and versions may exist.”

Almost half of all the infections occurred at the addresses of internet service providers, the report said. The targets were the customers of companies rather than the companies themselves. About 28% of targets were in telecoms, while other victims were in the energy, airline, hospitality and research sectors.

Symantec described the malware as having five layers, each “hidden and encrypted, with the exception of the first stage”. It said: “Each individual stage provides little information on the complete package. Only by acquiring all five stages is it possible to analyse and understand the threat.“

Regin uses what is called a modular approach that allows it to load custom features tailored to targets, the same method applied in other malware, such as Flamer and Weevil (the Mask). Some of its features were similar to Duqu malware, uncovered in September 2011 and related to a computer worm called Stuxnet, discovered the previous year.

Cybersecurity is a sensitive topic for businesses in the United States, where there have been several breaches of major companies and customer information. The US government and private cyber-intelligence firms have said they suspect that state-backed hackers in China or Russia may be responsible.

Symantec said Russia and Saudi Arabia accounted for about half of the confirmed infections of the Regin malware. The other countries affected were Mexico, Ireland, India, Iran, Afghanistan, Belgium, Austria and Pakistan.

1416
Serious / Private Military Corporations
« on: November 29, 2014, 10:12:42 AM »
I really am split on them; I'm not entirely sure what to think. What's your impression of them?

1417
Serious / The Official Serious Reading List
« on: November 28, 2014, 03:32:16 PM »
A lot of the books have overlapping themes, so I just tried to group them according to their central ideology. I'm just going off my own books, so feel free to suggest additions.

Libertarianism:
- 1984 and Animal Farm by George Orwell
- The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert A. Heinlein
- Liberty Defined by Ron Paul
- Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
- Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand
- Free to Choose by Milton Friedman
- The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World by Alan Greenspan

Capitalism:
- Capitalism and Freedom by Milton Friedman
- The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith
- Austrian Economics: A Primer by Dr. Eamonn Butler
- The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money by John Maynard Keynes
- The Failure of New Economics: An Analysis of the Keynesian Fallacies by Henry Hazlitt
- End the Fed by Ron Paul
- The Federal Reserve and the Financial Crisis by Ben S. Bernanke
- Boom and Bust Banking: the Causes and Cures of the Great Recession by David Beckworth

Authoritarianism:
- Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler

Conservatism:
- The Quest for Cosmic Justice by Thomas Sowell
- Liberal Fascism by Jonah Goldberg
- American Conservatism: An Encyclopedia by Bruce Fohnen

Liberalism:
- FDR by Jean Edward Smith

Socialism:
- Profit Over People: Neoliberalism and the Global Order by Noam Chomsky
- Occupy by Noam Chomsky
- The Conquest of Bread by Pyotr Kropotkin
- The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx

Philosophy:
- Thus Spake Zarathustra by Friedrich Nietzsche
- Beyond Good and Evil by Friedrich Nietzsche
- Anarchism by Ruth Kinna
- Enquiries Concerning Human Understanding and Concerning the Principles of Morals by David Hume
- The World as Will and Representation by Arthur Schopenhauer
- Republic by Plato
- The Moral Landscape by Sam Harris
- Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert M. Pirsig
- The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli
- Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes
- Common Sense by Thomas Paine

Religion:
- God is Not Great by Christopher Hitchens
- The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins

1418
From the BBC.
Quote
Seven mental health patients have killed themselves in England since 2012 after being told there were no hospital beds for them, the BBC has learned.

An investigation of coroners' reports and NHS trust papers with the journal Community Care found another patient denied a bed later killed his mother.

It comes as mental health beds are being cut in England - figures show more than 2100 have gone since 2011.

The NHS England said spending on mental health was increasing in real terms.

The investigation by BBC News and Community Care has also revealed an email that a chief executive of a mental health trust wrote to NHS England in frustration this summer after one of her senior officials came to tell her that: "Yet again there were no mental health beds in London in either the NHS or private sector."

Wendy Wallace, head of Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust, bemoaned NHS England's lack of interest in the problem. She wrote: "I could not envisage a situation where all the acute beds in London were full and there was not even an investigation into the situation nor a plan of action."

The investigation established that since 2012 seven people across England have taken their own lives having been told no beds were available. They were:

Pauline Binch, 64, from Nottingham
Stephanie Daniels, 32, from Manchester
Michael Knight, 20, from Norfolk
Mandy Peck, 39, from Essex
Anthony Quigley, 53, London
Terence Mullin, 53, from Liverpool
An unnamed man from Sheffield
In addition, Peter Holboll from London admitted the manslaughter of his mother, Tamara, having been told no beds were available.

A ninth person, Amanda Vickers, 47, from Cumbria, died after being denied a bed in a crisis house, a facility used to treat patients outside hospitals.

1419
Serious / Double standards among Muslims
« on: November 28, 2014, 01:32:48 PM »
There's a Muslim girl in my school with a sticker on the back of her laptop with the statement: "Free Palestine".

Now, I've dealt with my distaste for Islam and preference of Israel over Hamas before, but those are auxiliary issues in this discussion. What I find interesting is that I find Hamas to be, quite seriously, morally offensive. And yet, had I worn something like a lapel pin or put a sticker on my laptop of the Israeli flag, I know quite seriously that this would've provoked some sort of outrage from her.

No, the issue here is not one of the state of Palestine, but the fact that it's okay to hate Israel. If she had displayed her outrage to me for my hypothetical actions, she wouldn't have been punished by my college and yet, had I done the same for her support of Hamas I most definitely would've been punished.

Now, the girl, being a Muslim, might be "allowed" a higher degree of emotionally connectivity to the issue, but why? Even had she not been a Muslim, it's still more socially favourable to not side with Israel on the matter, and yet why is this?

There are perfectly good reasons to think of both Israel and Hamas as morally reprehensible and yet only one side is emotionally and socially acceptable. It's a similar situations for Nazis and Stalinists - it's merely decorum to hate the Nazis more, and it's surely more frowned upon to be a Nazi over a Stalinist.

I'm not going to say it's explicitly to do with religion, but it's certainly dogma. I'm not entirely sure why, though, rational thinking Muslims think they can express higher degrees of emotional outrage at other people's (potentially) morally offensive opinions, and yet expect none of the same in return. And I'm not sure why a majority of them insist on using the freedom of speech afforded to them to curtail other's freedoms, and yet cry bloody murder whenever they smell a whiff of non-existent persecution.

1420
Serious / Quote about immigration - do you agree?
« on: November 28, 2014, 11:42:57 AM »
Quote
Most high-income people in our country do not realize that their incomes are being subsidized by their protection from competition from highly skilled people who are prevented from immigrating to the United States. But we need such skills in order to staff our productive economy, so that the standard of living for Americans as a whole can grow.
From the Maestro.

1421
Serious / Lol, turns out China's "miracle growth" is bullshit.
« on: November 28, 2014, 10:57:18 AM »
China has wasted $6.8 trillion in investment
Chinese "ghost cities" are the result of government stimulus methods and "hyperactive construction", as the Financial Times puts it. According to a report by government researchers, since 2009, $6.8tn worth of investment has been utterly wasted. A State planning agency from China claims that in 2009 and 2013 separately "ineffective" or wasted investment accounted for half the total investment in the Chinese economy.

This year is looking to be China's lowest growth since 1990, and the Chinese government is concerned about bad loans circulating through the financial system which could well cause a debt crisis. Wasted investment, supposedly, went mainly to industries like steel and the construction of cars.

According to two officials from one of the State's research teams, this is due to ultra-loose monetary policy and lack of oversight in government investment. The second explanation is certainly viable, but I'm not sure about the first. Chinese inflation currently stands at 2.3pc, which isn't at all "ultra-loose" and is, in fact, pretty good. However, the PCB's bank rate stands at 6pc, which certainly points away from tightness but doesn't indicate any excessive loose-ness. I can't find any data on ngdp growth, so I can't say for sure.

So, basically, a lot of China's gdp growth has just been wasted.

1422
Serious / Yemen's main oil pipeline blown up
« on: November 28, 2014, 02:02:26 AM »
Reuters.
Quote
Nov 26 (Reuters) - Saboteurs blew up Yemen's main oil export pipeline on Wednesday, halting crude flows, the country's defence ministry and an industry source said, in the latest attack on a key source of foreign currency.

Yemen's oil and gas pipelines have been targeted repeatedly, often by tribesmen feuding with the central government, causing fuel shortages and slashing export earnings for the impoverished Arabian peninsula country.

The defence ministry's news website www.26sept.net said Wednesday's attack had occurred in the area of Habab in Marib province, halting flows to export facilities on the Red Sea. An industry source confirmed the stoppage in crude flows.

Yemen has said oil flows through the Marib pipeline, its main petroleum export route, at a rate of around 70,000 barrels per day (bpd). Before the spate of attacks began three years ago, the 270-mile (435-km) pipeline carried around 110,000 barrels per day to Ras Isa, the export terminal on the Red Sea.

Most of Yemen's output is from the Marib-Jawf area in the north, with the rest coming from Masila in the southeast.

1423
Thank God for the EU.
Quote
Google is about to have its wings clipped – or at least it is if the European Parliament gets its way.

Following a vote today, the EU says it will “unbundle search engines from commercial services,” which if it stays true to its word, means that Google will be forced to break up into smaller, separate parts.

The good news for Google is that the vote is pretty much unenforceable and that things will continue exactly as they are.

The resolution was proposed by German MEP Andreas Schwab and his Spanish colleague Ramon Tremosa and was passed by 458 votes to 173 with 23 abstentions.

German MEP Evelyne Gebhardt said: 'European policymakers must directly support European innovation, and particularly new start-ups, in order to foster their potential."

Despite these stern words, the Parliament doesn't have the power to be able to dismantle Google itself and must now try to get the Competition Commissioner, Margrethe Vestager, to wade in and do its bidding.

The Commission has previously had a bit of a poke around in the search engine sector, but until now has been reluctant to take any significant action.

The previous Competition Commissioner, Joaquin Almunia, managed to avoid the taking of sanctions against Google, and it remains to be seen if the new Commissioner will go further.

Don’t bet on Google being ripped apart as a result of this vote any time in the near future.

Or ever, for that matter.

I'm so happy I have a quasi-Federal super-state watching over me. It's so nice to know that the brilliantly progressive Germans and French are looking out for my interests, and stopping Google from harming consumers; it makes so much sense to dismantle it and create more competition among search engines!

Thank God for our paternalistic Eurocrat overlords.

1424
The Flood / The faggots are going to take your freedoms
« on: November 27, 2014, 02:14:40 PM »


Just look at them.

Fucking waiting.

1425
Serious / Liberty or Security?
« on: November 26, 2014, 04:43:04 PM »
Of course, the two must be balanced, but it's patently obvious that the liberal world is going too far in its emphasis on the latter.

1426
The Flood / AMA me anything
« on: November 26, 2014, 03:13:18 PM »
I've recently been bed-ridden in Serious.

On top of doing politics homework and trying to catch up with my fucking reading. So I haven't been around these parts for some time. This was originally going to be a "Have I missed anything in the Flood?" thread, but I realised I'm better than that and much more interesting than all of you.

So AMA me anything.

1427
Serious / Most competent politician/public official in history?
« on: November 26, 2014, 02:58:54 PM »
In recent history, I'd have to say the most competent public official was neither elected and is largely reviled; the man in my picture, Alan Greenspan.

Of all time, though? I'm not entirely sure.

1428
Serious / Police added journalists to database of domestic extremists
« on: November 26, 2014, 02:49:14 PM »
It included their details, as well as the medical history of their family members.
Quote
A group of journalists has launched a legal action against Scotland Yard after discovering that the Metropolitan police has been recording their professional activities on a secret database designed to monitor so-called domestic extremists.

The six journalists have obtained official files that reveal how police logged details of their work as they reported on protests. One video journalist discovered that the Met police had more than 130 entries detailing his movements, including what he was wearing, at demonstrations he attended as a member of the press.

They have started the legal action to expose what they say is a persistent pattern of journalists being assaulted, monitored and stopped and searched by police during their work, which often includes documenting police misconduct.

In legal paperwork, the journalists who have worked for national newspapers describe how they have regularly exposed malpractice by the state and big corporations and have campaigned for press freedom.

The group includes a journalist on the Times. Jules Mattsson, who, police noted, was “always looking for a story”. Mattsson said that when he had been a victim of crime, police had transferred on to the domestic extremism database details of his appearance, childhood and a family member’s medical history.

Adrian Arbib, a press photographer for three decades, found that police had recorded him taking photographs of Heathrow airport for a Guardian story about the decline of English orchards.

Freelance photographer Jess Hurd discovered that her file dated back to 2000.

Five of the journalists have successfully sued the police in the past, winning damages or apologies over wrongdoing such as being assaulted or unjustifiably searched by officers while they worked.

The legal action, backed by the National Union of Journalists (NUJ), has been initiated at a time when the media are protesting that police are misusing surveillance powers to access reporters’ telephone records to unmask confidential sources.

The journalists are seeking to force the Met to destroy the files held on them as they say the surveillance violates the liberty of the press and their privacy.

They have used the Data Protection Act to obtain copies of the files. Many of the 130-plus entries in the file of freelance video journalist Jason Parkinson since 2005 note that he is a photographer working for the media and log how he is using a camera or video to record events.

Several entries note that he is a member of the NUJ and had a visible card around his neck declaring this fact. Another entry records that on a 2009 demonstration, he was “present throughout the protest, undertaking his photographic duties”. Often his dress, body piercings, and facial hair are described.

The file on David Hoffman, a freelance photographer who has been chronicling demonstrations for the media since 1976, appears to label him twice as “an Anti-Nazi League photographer”. He said he had never been a member or worked for the Anti-Nazi League, a campaign that was wound up more than a decade ago.

He questioned why there was a file on him on the database compiled by the Met’s domestic extremism unit. “I have never contemplated any sort of extreme action of a political or criminal nature”, he said.

The covert unit has been tracking thousands of campaigners and storing files on them. It says it is seeking to pinpoint the minority who have, or are about to, commit crime to promote their political aims.

The Met says the domestic extremism unit deleted many files recently after a watchdog found there was no justification for retaining them.

There has been criticism that many on the database, including Jenny Jones, the Green party’s sole peer, have no criminal record. One campaigner discovered that police had recorded how he had sold anti-capitalist publications from a stall at the Glastonbury festival.

Police are going to the supreme court in December to overturn a landmark ruling that they unlawfully kept the political activities of 89-year-old peace campaigner, John Catt, on the database.

A freedom of information request last month found that the unit has more than 2,000 references in its files to journalists and press photographers.

Bernard Hogan-Howe, the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, told MPs
last week that this did not mean that there were that number of files on
individuals, as terms such as “journalists” were used to describe events,
indicating for instance that there were a group of them at a demonstration.

The commissioner said police did not “routinely collect” information on journalists and their sources, adding that the police only took an interest in people if they were either victims or suspects.

The file on journalist and comedian Mark Thomas, who is part of the legal action, contained more than 60 pieces of intelligence in what he has described as “being wonderfully odd in an Ealing Comedy-meets-the-Stasi sort of way”.

Michelle Stanistreet, the NUJ general secretary, said: “There is no justification for treating journalists as criminals or enemies of the state”.

The Met confirmed it had received a legal letter from Bhatt Murphy, the law firm working for the journalists, and would respond in due course.

Fuck me.

1429
Serious / What are your "hot-button" issues?
« on: November 26, 2014, 11:49:42 AM »


Ever since Theresa May announced the U.K.'s new anti-terrorism bill, I've been in a running debate with one of my friends regarding liberty vs. security.

He commented today on how much more "conservative" and "patriotic" I'd become in response to May's bill, and I'll admit I've certainly been pushed into a more libertarian and hawkish attitude. So, essentially, are there any hot button issues that turn you into an ideologue? If so, what are they?

1430
Serious / Is capitalism exploitative?
« on: November 25, 2014, 03:07:22 PM »
There are always numerous arguments in favour of this, and yet so few against for some reason.

I despise state socialism for its blatant and unapologetic paternalism, and yet left-libertarianism has lost none of this arrogant paternalism in its insistence on telling people they're being exploited and used. I think, so long as the potential employee isn't bargaining for the means of his survival, capitalism isn't exploitative.

1431
Serious / Russia has been financing right-wing parties in the EU
« on: November 25, 2014, 12:44:29 PM »
They're also all Eurosceptic.

Quote
Marine Le Pen has admitted that her far-right Front National accepted money from a Russian bank, amid growing evidence that the Kremlin is backing anti-European parties across the continent.

Le Pen said that her party had received a loan of €9 million (£7 million) in September from the Russian-owned First Czech-Russian Bank, but insisted that the money would have no impact on her policies.

“We signed with the First [bank] who agreed and we’re very happy about it,” she said. But it is “ridiculous to suggest that gaining a loan would determine our international position,” she insisted. “These insinuations are outrageous and offensive.”

According to recent opinion polls, the National Front is now France’s most popular party.

Russian loans have also been extended to Greece’s neofascist Golden Dawn party, Belgium’s Vlaams Belang, Italy’s Northern League, Hungary’s Jobbik and the Freedom Party of Austria, The Times reports. All of these parties except Golden Dawn were invited to observe Crimea's vote on joining Russia and all offered their support for the annexation of the south-eastern Ukrainian region.

The loans to the National Front from the Russian-owned bank occurred amid "growing evidence of a secret Kremlin campaign to buy influence in European politics," The Times says.

French politician Bruno Le Maire, a former cabinet minister who is running for the leadership of the centre-right Union for a Popular Movement, said that it was inconceivable that the loans would have no impact on Le Pen's attitude to Russia: “You are always under obligation to your creditor,” he said.

France’s National Front has "long struggled to raise the cash needed to match its political ambitions," France 24 reports. The party's treasurer Wallerand de Saint-Just said that the loans would be used to finance campaigning expenses in the lead up to the French national elections in 2017, for which the party would need approximately "30 to 40 million euros".

Last month, Vincent Jauvert claimed in the French weekly magazine Le Nouvel Observateur that National Front leaders had been in regular communication with the Russian ambassador in Paris, Alexander Orlov.

"The Kremlin has been betting on the National Front," Jauvert said. "It considers the party able to take power in France and potentially reverse the course of European history in favour of Moscow".

Jesus fucking Christ.

1432
Serious / I'm shamelessly advertising another (political) forum I use
« on: November 25, 2014, 12:32:06 PM »
It's a U.K.-based forum for young(ish) people to debate politics, philosophy, economics and the like.

It has a fairly decent American population, with dedicated boards for different countries/regions. The discussion there is somewhat more challenging than the discussion here, and more thought-provoking. Basically, Kinder would definitely benefit from a visit.

It'd be nice to grow the community there, too. It really is very diverse, ranging from Communists to Conservatives and Muslims to some guy with Richard Dawkins as his avatar.

Just in case you need any more convincing, I've been PM'ing one of the mods and mentioned we're an offsite from B.net. His response? "I'm aware of how bad Bungie's site is."

Bang on the money. Get your fucking sorry asses over here.

1433
Serious / You know what's worse than a police state? A fucking nanny state
« on: November 25, 2014, 11:41:16 AM »
BBC presenter Jeremy Vine was stopping for going three times the speed limit. . .

At 16mph.

On a bicycle.

In a park.

Fuck me. Meanwhile we have police commissioners telling us council tax needs to be hiked 25pc in order to properly fund the police force.

1434
Serious / That's it, fuck the Conservatives, I'm done
« on: November 24, 2014, 04:28:48 PM »
In fact, I'm not going to vote at all.

Theresa May is going to introduce new measures to ban Universities from allowing extremist speakers on their campuses, and will make schools and prisons legally obligated to stop people from being "radicalised".

On top of this, internet and mobile phone companies will be required to hold more information about customers for the government to access, in order to allow the police to identify who was using a device at a given time.

The new laws will afford the authorities greater ease in seizing passports and stopping people from leaving or returning to the country.

May has admitted she wanted to impose wider restrictions on ISPs, but such efforts were thwarted by the Liberal Democrats.

This seriously damages my respect for the party, and I yet again feel betrayed. I'm sure I'll calm down by tomorrow, and will be able to look at it with a keener eye, but I doubt I'll be much less disparaging.

1435
Serious / Should we distinguish between mental and physical illnesses?
« on: November 24, 2014, 01:19:48 PM »
I don't think so, to be honest. I think it's largely the reason people have such horrendous misunderstandings of illnesses like depression and personality disorders. Also, the historical stigmatisation associated with it - mental illness is almost seen like something of an impurity.

So, can anybody see any benefit to keeping the partition?

1436
Serious / I think it's time for another "controversial opinions" thread
« on: November 24, 2014, 01:00:59 PM »
And because I'm quite obviously the most intelligent person here, if you disagree with me, you're wrong.

- Paedophilia isn't immoral.
- The Iraq War was good.
- Radical Muslims are probably some of the most dangerous people on the planet.
- The government caused the Depression and the Recession.
- Every single drug should be legalised.
- Mental illnesses don't really exist.
- It could, hypothetically, be ethical to kill people for their opinions.
- Collateral damage is more morally troubling than torture.
- Minimum wage should be abolished.
- Corporation taxes should be abolished.
- Adaptation is a better course of action for dealing with global warming.
- People shouldn't have to work for welfare.
- Immigration is almost universally good, and the process should be made much easier.
- I believe in European exceptionalism.
- Interest rates are a stupid way of looking at monetary policy.
- GM foods and nuclear energy are preferable to the status quo.
- Socialism is inevitable.

Agree? Disagree? What're yours?

1437
Serious / A very nice political/social attitudes test
« on: November 24, 2014, 12:06:05 PM »
I quite enjoyed this.

Quote
Progressivism   67.5
Socialism           0
Tenderness   37.5

Your test scores indicate that you are a tough-minded progressive; this is the political profile one might associate with a journalist. It appears that you are distrustful towards religion, and have a balanced attitude towards humanity in general.

Your attitudes towards economics appear laissez-faire capitalist, and combined with your social attitudes this creates the picture of someone who would generally be described as a libertarian.

To round out the picture you appear to be, political preference aside, a cold-hearted principled centrist with several strong convictions.

1438
Serious / Who's more powerful, the Chairman of the Fed or the President?
« on: November 24, 2014, 01:54:21 AM »
I was thinking the other day that, besides Romney's utter idiocy, Obama practically owes his second term to Ben Bernanke and even then the election only had a difference of about five million in the popular vote.

Regardless of specifics, if you agree that the state of the economy can count either for or against a president, then it'd seem the Chair of the Fed has a lot of influence on that. And, during terms, too, despite being appointed, the power of the economy is still quite substantial.

I suppose it depends how powerful you think monetary policy is.

1439
The Flood / WADS OUT FOR THE LADIES
« on: November 23, 2014, 04:17:23 PM »
YouTube

WOP IT OUT

1440
The Flood / More racist comments from grandma
« on: November 23, 2014, 03:34:02 PM »
>watching im a celebrity
>black rapper doesn't want to get in the pool
>grandma "he's a dirty devil, isn't he"
>pause
>she laughs
>"well you can't tell if he's dirty or clean, can you?"

fucking hell

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