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Topics - BrenMan 94

Pages: 12 3
31
Serious / The Four Words at the Center of the ACA Supreme Court Fight
« on: February 23, 2015, 04:42:20 PM »
Article is from the Blaze, but just quotes the AP story
Quote
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court next week hears a challenge to President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul that hinges on just four words in the massive law that seeks to dramatically reduce the ranks of the uninsured. The argument threatens subsidies that help make insurance affordable to consumers in about three dozen states.

The lawsuit focuses on the health insurance marketplaces, or exchanges, that have been set up to allow people to find coverage if they don’t get insurance through their jobs or the government. The challengers argue that the health law provides subsidies only to people who get their insurance through an exchange “established by the state.” But most states have not established their own marketplaces and instead rely on the federal healthcare.gov.

The administration says that consumers in all 50 states are eligible for subsidies and that Congress would not have passed a law that omits help for so much of the nation.



Administration Q&A
Q. Why is the eligibility for subsidies such an important part of the law?

A. Aware of failed efforts on the state level to reduce the number of uninsured, the architects of the health law included three related requirements: Insurers can’t deny coverage because of “pre-existing” health conditions; almost everyone must be insured, in order to get enough healthy people into the system; and consumers who otherwise would spend too much of their paycheck on their premiums get financial help in the form of tax credits. That last piece, the subsidies, is designed to keep enough people in the pool of insured to avoid triggering a so-called death spiral of declining enrollment, a growing proportion of less healthy people and premium increases by insurers.

Q. Would Congress have distinguished between consumers based on whether they get insurance through the federal government or the states?

A. The opponents say Congress could have made such a distinction, and did. Congress wanted two things – nationwide subsidies and state-run insurance exchanges. So in the challengers’ view, the availability of subsidies was conditioned on states setting up their own exchanges. They say the case is “extraordinarily straightforward” because the phrase “established by the state” cannot refer to exchanges established by the Health and Human Services Department, which oversees healthcare.gov. There is no other way to read the law, they argue. One piece of outside evidence in their favor is a talk in 2012 by former administration health care adviser Jonathan Gruber in which he said states risked losing billions of dollars if they did not create their own exchanges.

Q. That seems pretty convincing. Has the administration given up?

A. No. The administration says the law’s own “text, structure, design and history” refute the other side’s arguments. Attempting to divine the meaning of four words in isolation from the rest of massive law is foolhardy, the Justice Department says. Several portions of the law indicate that consumers can claim tax credits no matter where they live, and that a central purpose of the law was to make health care affordable to all Americans. No member of Congress indicated that subsidies would be limited, and several states argue in a separate brief to the court that they had no inkling they had to set up their own exchange for their residents to get tax credits. The administration also says it is nonsensical to think Congress would have set such a “self-defeating scheme.” The only possible reading of the law allows subsidies nationwide, the administration says.

Q. What if the court concludes the language isn’t as clear as each side says?

A. That should produce a win for the administration because Supreme Court precedent holds that federal agencies get the benefit of the doubt when the meaning of a law, or part of it, can’t be definitively determined from the text. The administration would rather not win in that fashion, however, because it leaves open the prospect of a future administration changing its view. That’s much harder to do when a law has been interpreted as having a clear meaning. Then, only Congress can make changes.

Q. How many people would be affected and in how many states?

A. Independent studies by the Urban Institute and the Rand Corporation estimate that 8 million people would lose insurance if the court rules for the challengers. Subsidies appear to be safe for people living in the 13 states and the District of Columbia with their own markets – California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Idaho, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington – and perhaps in three others – Nevada, New Mexico and Oregon – that set up their own exchanges, but rely on the federal government for eligibility determinations.

Q. How have courts ruled so far?

A. A three-judge panel in the federal appeals court in Richmond, Virginia, unanimously sided with the administration. That is the case on appeal to the Supreme Court. A second appeals court, in Washington, D.C., initially ruled 2-1 in favor of challenges. The full court, however, threw out that opinion and agreed to rehear the case. The Supreme Court’s intervention put that rehearing on hold. The Supreme Court rarely takes cases without differing opinions in the lower courts. But as Justice Antonin Scalia told a Swiss interviewer in December, the case poses “a very, very significant question” that should be decided by the Supreme Court.

Q. Is there a partisan or ideological slant apparent?

A. As with everything else involving Obama’s health overhaul, the answer is a resounding yes. This latest lawsuit is part of a long-running political and legal campaign to try to kill the overhaul that passed Congress without a single Republican vote and President Barack Obama signed into law in 2010. Of the six appellate judges who have ruled, four who were appointed by Democrats upheld the provision at issue and two Republican appointees voted to strike it down. The Supreme Court does not reveal how justices vote when they decide to hear a case. But in the two earlier cases involving Obama’s health care law, the pattern held, with one important exception – Chief Justice John Roberts’ vote in 2012 to uphold the law against a challenge to its constitutionality. The other four Republican appointees would have struck it down in its entirety. Last year, the court by a different 5-4 majority said businesses with religious objections don’t have to pay for contraceptives for women covered under their health plans.

32
Serious / Why do people fetishize democracy?
« on: February 22, 2015, 10:20:58 PM »
Watching the Oscars and all everyone talks about is "a victory for democracy" or some other bullshit.  People talk about democracy like it is the pinnacle of political systems.  Why?

I chalk it up to the masses being incredibly uninformed about political systems in general, and parroting what they hear from public schooling and politicians (who benefit the most from the ignorant masses).

35
The Flood / Go home phone you're drunk
« on: February 08, 2015, 10:59:39 PM »

wtf

36
The Flood / What's another way to say Minecon?
« on: February 08, 2015, 01:29:56 PM »
Autism Speaks

37
The Flood / Hey fgts
« on: February 06, 2015, 08:13:12 PM »
Find the derivative:

f(x)=5^x + 4x³ − 20x² − 3x + 10

Edit: This is so fucking easy goddamn y'all are stupid.

38
Serious / There was a shooting at my university...
« on: February 05, 2015, 01:59:53 PM »
Link to local news article.  (This happened about 90 minutes ago so the article is being updated constantly.)

Luckily I didn't have classes today, and my dad had come back from his lunch break before the shooting started (he works at the Attorney General's office just a block away from the ASPH).  Right now all I know is that two people were shot and killed (including the shooter), and it appears to be a murder-suicide.

The University of South Carolina's campus ensconces half of the city of Columbia, which means that during the day you have students meandering throughout downtown Columbia going from their dorms to classrooms to restaurants, etc.  The buildings are open to the public during daytime hours (I believe 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.), so anyone can walk in or out without hindrance.

I'm curious to know if the victim/shooter was a student, staff member or professor.  I imagine details will be released sometime tonight or tomorrow.

This is kind of scary because my university hasn't had any daytime shootings in recent history.  Sure, there have been robberies outside some of the dorms on the outskirts of campus at two or three in the morning, but nothing like this.

39
Gaming / How are you guys liking Dying Light?
« on: February 04, 2015, 09:04:29 AM »
I'm enjoying it.  Night time gets a little 2spooky4me, but overall I'm having a lot of fun.  The parkour mechanics don't feel as streamlined as Mirror's Edge, but I hear that that changes as you level up your agility skill (you have to have an agility of 33 to cross a plank into the main tower).

As far as performance goes, I'm getting a solid 60 fps on my rig.  Wasn't expecting it to perform so well.

Pro tip:  Turn view distance all the way down if you're on PC.  You get a much better framerate and the visual hit is minimal.

40
The Flood / RC is a pillar of the community
« on: January 25, 2015, 10:34:50 AM »
His interjections of the word "nigger" and his directed, to-the-point ad hominems manage to extract humor from even the most serious of threads.

If you disagree with this objective fact you are wrong.

41
The Flood / >Chemistry 111
« on: January 21, 2015, 01:20:09 PM »
>Having to sit in front of the most talkative gay couple I've ever come across
>Having to pay $77 to have access to homework problems
>Having to pay $42 to be able to take quizzes
>Professor is Slavic, so having to understand what he's saying during lectures

Discuss classroom travesties.

42
Gaming / Xbone/PC crossplay confirmed
« on: January 21, 2015, 01:16:46 PM »
Sauce

Crossing my fingers that MCC for Windows 10 will be announced at some point in the future.

43
Serious / Official State of the [only] Union [that matters] thread
« on: January 20, 2015, 07:50:15 PM »
SotU starts in ten minutes.  Discuss it here.

YouTube

44
The Flood / Girl advice (sad stori)
« on: January 18, 2015, 10:02:00 PM »
So there's this girl that I grew up with when I was younger.  She was the first friend I made when I moved to [redacted] from [redacted], SC.  We stayed friends until middle school, when hormones and shit started kicking in.  She thought that we were bf/gf, but I just wanted to be friends.

>>WARNING: IMMINENT AUTISM<<

I told her that I didn't love her and that I hated her.  Her friends beat me up with their pocketbooks and I hid in the boy's bathroom until it was time to go home.

She sent me a friend request on Facebook on her birthday so I posted a message saying "Happy birthday, hope all is well" with a picture of my cat (the one that is currently my profile pic on here).  She said "Thanks, you too".  So I'm guessing there's no bad blood after ten years.

Should I just leave it or try to pursue a relationship?  She goes to school at [redacted] which is only ten minutes away from where I'm going to school.  She likes cats, isn't a Republican, and her dad is a serious motorhead (petrolhead for you bongs).

45

Fucking 1,000,000 views fgts.

46
The Flood / TBlocks is from Sealand, not Canada
« on: January 18, 2015, 09:26:31 PM »
Look at one of his profile pictures:


Now look at the flag of the Principality of Sealand:


Coincidence?  I think not.

#Exposed

47
The Flood / I'm the coolest kid in my U.S. history class
« on: January 18, 2015, 10:58:05 AM »
>Be me
>Go to history class
>Fucking 9:00 a.m. Saturday morning
>Last one to get there
>Sit next to a gay guy
>zerofucksgiven.png
>Professor asks us general history questions
>Everyone in the class is a dumbass
>Get to question about who invented the internet
>This is my chance
>Raise my hand
>Get called on
>"Al Gore."
>Room errupts into laughter
>One kid starts crying from laughing so hard
>Chinese and Korean kids don't know wtf is going on
>mfw I stand out now
>mfw everyone wants to talk to me after class
>mfw no face

48
The Flood / Why the fuck can't we all have custom title bars?
« on: January 18, 2015, 10:29:11 AM »
I don't have enough time to post all day on here like you other low-life fgts.

49
Gaming / GTA V PC release date, specs announced
« on: January 13, 2015, 02:10:54 PM »
Release date: March 24, 2015

Minimum specs:
OS: Windows 8.1 64 Bit, Windows 8 64 Bit, Windows 7 64 Bit Service Pack 1, Windows Vista 64 Bit Service Pack 2* (*NVIDIA video card recommended if running Vista OS)

Processor: Intel Core 2 Quad CPU Q6600 @ 2.40GHz (4 CPUs) / AMD Phenom 9850 Quad-Core Processor (4 CPUs) @ 2.5GHz

Memory: 4GB

Video Card: NVIDIA 9800 GT 1GB / AMD HD 4870 1GB (DX 10, 10.1, 11)

Sound Card: 100% DirectX 10 compatible

HDD Space: 65GB

Recommended specs:

OS: Windows 8.1 64 Bit, Windows 8 64 Bit, Windows 7 64 Bit Service Pack 1

Processor: Intel Core i5 3470 @ 3.2GHZ (4 CPUs) / AMD X8 FX-8350 @ 4GHZ (8 CPUs)

Memory: 8GB

Video Card: NVIDIA GTX 660 2GB / AMD HD7870 2GB

Sound Card: 100% DirectX 10 compatible

HDD Space: 65GB
———————
RIP 32-bit OS

50
The Flood / "My booty stinks"
« on: January 11, 2015, 08:32:00 PM »
2:26 or press 6
YouTube

lol

51
Serious / Private companies owning nukes.
« on: January 03, 2015, 04:14:22 AM »
I recently had an argument with a fellow online who said that if nukes were in the hands of private companies and not government, that the world would've been destroyed by now.

Obviously I disagree, as there is no profit incentive to nuking anyone when the energy put into a nuclear device could be put to more profitable uses (i.e. electricity), not to mention that people wouldn't willingly do business with a company that nuked someone without damn good reason.

I'd like to hear your thoughts.

52
The Flood / Christmas Present Thread
« on: December 24, 2014, 07:12:41 PM »
wut u get?

53
Serious / Drones spotted near Belgian power plants
« on: December 21, 2014, 10:42:29 AM »
Article
Quote
An unexplained drone has been spotted flying over a Belgium nuclear facility, a day after one of the plant's reactors came back on line after a four-month closure caused by sabotage.

The mystery appearance by an unmanned aircraft on Saturday, on which Belgian authorities refused to provide much detail, resembles a spate of similar drone sightings over nuclear plants in neighbouring France this autumn.

Around 20 unidentified drones have been spotted over nuclear plants since October throughout France.

"We can confirm that the East Flanders prosecutor's office has opened an investigation into a drone flight over the Doel nuclear plant," a spokesman for the investigation told Belga news agency.

"We will not provide further information for the time being," the spokesman added, hours after the plant's operator, GDF-Suez unit Electrabel, first disclosed the incident, which took place early on Saturday.

The imposing Doel nuclear site sits on a riverbank near the North Sea about 25 kilometres north of Antwerp. It holds four of Belgium's seven reactors.

One of those reactors, Doel 4, was shut urgently in August after a leak, caused by tampering, resulted in a leak of 65,000 litres of oil lubricant.

A steam turbine weighing 1700 tonnes was severely damaged by the loss of lubricant, requiring a €30 million ($45 million) repair job that was carried out in Germany.

Belgian prosecutors have refused to confirm the sabotage as an act of terrorism, without excluding it either.
From this story and reading on the starts off the Belgian power grid it sounds to me like one more incident could lead to rolling brownouts/blackouts.  Belgium's green party refuses to build more nuclear power plants, but they haven't developed any other alternatives, so what you have is an entire country being run on aging nuclear plants that can barely support the entire grid (at peak limits power is transferred from France).

Apparently guns are taboo in Belgium, so having guards shoot down the drones is likely to cause a shitstorm in the media, and EMP technology isn't at the level required to disable the drones mid-flight.

54
The Flood / Saw this driving home last night
« on: December 21, 2014, 08:39:37 AM »
As a bonus, it's an "In God We Trust" SC plate.

55
The Flood / Anyone can suck penis...
« on: December 15, 2014, 03:19:10 PM »
But nobody can pee suckness.

56
The Flood / Users you respect the most
« on: December 08, 2014, 11:39:45 AM »
ITT post which users you hold in high regard (or just higher than everyone else).

- Meta
- Mad Max
- Cheat
- challengerX
- Flee
- Iberian Husky
- Sandtrap
- Psy

57
Serious / Chlorine Gas Attack at Furry Convention
« on: December 07, 2014, 10:23:54 AM »
19 hospitalized, thousands evacuated.

Someone is going to get water boarded.

58
Serious / Oath Keepers shut down in Ferguson, MO
« on: November 30, 2014, 05:56:16 PM »
Link to article
Spoiler
Following a night of arson fires and bashed storefronts that hit close to home, Greg Hildebrand stood naked Tuesday, drying off from a needed shower, when he noticed somebody on the rooftop.

“I opened the window and said, ‘Hey, can I help you?’” said Hildebrand, 35, a website developer.

The man said he was security and would be up there at night with others to protect the pocket of second-story apartments and lower-level storefronts near the Ferguson Police Department. A day earlier, rioters had broken out windows below Hildebrand’s apartment in the 100 block of South Florissant Road and torched a nearby beauty supply store.

“I am in the middle of a difficult spot,” Hildebrand said. “I feel a lot better having those guys up on the roof.”

But he wasn’t clear exactly who “those guys” were or where they came from.

Puzzled and alarmed protesters have wondered, too — some accusing the mysterious guards in military fatigues of being in the Ku Klux Klan.

In fact, they are volunteers affiliated with a 35,000-member national organization called Oath Keepers. Yale Law School graduate and libertarian Stewart Rhodes said by telephone from Montana that he founded the group in 2009 to protect constitutional rights, including those of protesters confronted by what he described as overly militarized police.

Police questioned group members early in the week and allowed them to stay. But Saturday, after media inquiries, St. Louis County police officers ordered the Oath Keepers to leave the rooftops.

Threatened with arrest for operating without a license, the volunteers argued but eventually left their positions early Saturday, Rhodes said.

“We are going to go back as protesters,” Rhodes said Saturday afternoon.

Rhodes, who said he is Mexican-American, stressed that Oath Keepers is not anti-government. He said the volunteers handling rooftop security in Ferguson were current or former government employees and first responders, many who have intense military, police and EMS training.

“We thought they were going to do it right this time,” Rhodes said of government response to the grand jury decision released Monday in the Michael Brown case. “But when Monday rolled around and they didn’t park the National Guard at these businesses, that’s when we said we have got to do something.

“Historically, the government almost always fails to protect people,” he added.

Justine Sharrock, reporting for Mother Jones magazine in 2010, wrote in an in-depth story about how the group is hard to pin down: “In the months I’ve spent getting to know the Oath Keepers, I’ve toggled between viewing them either as potentially dangerous conspiracy theorists or as crafty intellectuals with the savvy to rally politicians to their side. The answer, I came to realize, is that they cover the whole spectrum.”

In the wake of Monday’s grand jury announcement, Oath Keepers put out a national request to members to help in Ferguson. Volunteers showed up from Nebraska, Texas and Indiana. On Thursday, one volunteer had an “infidel” patch on his Kevlar vest and would say only that he came from “the north.”

They wouldn’t say how many people were part of the effort or exactly where they were placed. But they seemed to be mainly focused on a strip of South Florissant Road two blocks north of the police station that includes a Chinese restaurant, dentist office, bakery and the apartments.

“We were sick in our gut we couldn’t be here sooner,” said John Karriman of Joplin, Mo., a state leader of Oath Keepers who teaches police tactics. “We are here to volunteer our time and make sure everybody stays safe.”

Another leader, who would give only his first name, Sam, described himself as a weapons engineer from the St. Louis area who has done security contracting for the U.S. government. He said he was motivated to help after seeing a CNN story featuring extensive damage to Natalie’s Cake’s & More, which also helped generate thousands of dollars in donations for the small business.

Sam said he contacted owner Natalie Dubose and told her he was going to secure her store and others.

“She started crying,” Sam said.

Oath Keepers boarded up a bunch of the storefronts and started night rotations on several rooftops. Sam said he vetted volunteers to ensure there weren’t any “racists” or “people with an ax to grind.” He said he picked volunteers who “have seen the elephant and are calm under fire.”

Fearing more arsonists, Oath Keeper volunteers kept buckets of water, fire extinguishers and other nonlethal weapons on the rooftops. Some are also armed with rifles that aren’t available at Walmart and Cabela’s.

The volunteers said they were well aware of the risk to life that arson can play and the legal right to stop it from happening.

Group volunteers say they are confident they have helped protect property and lives since they arrived.

Victor Clark, a dentist at Ferguson Dental on South Florissant Road, said he was happy to have the Oath Keepers’ free assistance. He wants to reopen his business soon. On Monday, rioters shattered the front door and window, and stole dental needles and anesthetic.

Then Oath Keepers showed up out of the blue. “We gave them our keys,” he said. “We didn’t know that much about them, but we got a feeling of trust. You have to do something to protect our building.”

Sucks for the shop owners and residents who were being protected by the OK.

inb4muhaccountability
inb4muhanarchists
inb4muhstatepoliceforce

59
Serious / Libertarians are insufferable
« on: November 29, 2014, 04:07:18 PM »
Holy shit I'm sick of dealing with libertarians.

"The government doesn't need to be meddling in our lives.

But muh roads
muh military
muh borders
"

I can sympathize with socialists and communists in that they believe the state is immoral and wish to abolish it in favor of communes or local representative bodies.  I can understand classical liberals in that they believe the government has a responsibility to the well-being of its citizens but shouldn't meddle in the voluntary exchanges of a free market.  Libertarians just make no fucking sense to me anymore, though.  They say that the government is incompetent, but still want that same government managing an army, a country's borders, and public infrastructure.  If you believe the government is so incompetent, why the hell would you want them managing some of the most complex and difficult-to-manage aspects of a society?

/nonsensical rant

60
The Flood / Americlaps get shit for our accents
« on: November 29, 2014, 07:48:09 AM »
Meanwhile Britbongs are over there pronouncing "nothing" like "muffin".

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