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Messages - Risay117

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2701
Serious / Re: Bohemian Rhapsody
« on: October 05, 2014, 11:15:12 AM »
Not everything has made with a meaning to it.
Couldn't agree more. People overthink things too much.
But it just seems to fit, considering being Gay would in his society, not the british community but the Druze or South Asian community are very anti-gay, and his very upbringing shows that he would have decent understanding of the judgement Gays would be given if in a muslim or south asian community. He was a Zoroatist but honestly i listened to his other album and there are songs where islamic or middle eastern terms are heavily used again and again.

It just seems to obvious to ignore, and that the idea that he is just making this up does not seem right. Also the usage of his mother makes total sense because the moment you openly say you are gay, you are admonished from the family and this is one of the gravest actions south asian families commit. Because in South Asia, (India, Pakistan etc.) family is above everything else, even country, you are not expected to move out by 18 but to get married and then move out or live with parents to take care of them into their retirements. While they watch over your kids. His history and background just screams that he is apologizing and accepting what is to come.

2702
The Flood / Re: Do You Prefer Hot Or Cold Showers?
« on: October 05, 2014, 11:03:30 AM »
30-45 minute hot shower every day
Are you trying to dry up the oceans?

2703
The Flood / Re: Do You Prefer Hot Or Cold Showers?
« on: October 05, 2014, 11:03:12 AM »
Hot Showers usually but if there was a workout or something then a cold shower. Hot shower in winter though.

2704
The Flood / Re: An apology
« on: October 05, 2014, 11:02:32 AM »
This thread reminds me how remaining neutral is the hardest position to maintain.
Its quite easy.
Funny considering i always end up neutral however hard i try to stand out.

Forgotten in time.

2705
The Flood / Re: An apology
« on: October 05, 2014, 11:01:58 AM »
Ummm...Sorry if i angered you in anyway. It is all my fault.

2706
The Flood / Re: Finished.
« on: October 05, 2014, 11:00:47 AM »
We are here with you all the way. If you need our help physically or emotionally i bet many of us will be willing to help.

2707
The Flood / Re: Anyone here play an instrument?
« on: October 05, 2014, 10:57:46 AM »
Learning the guitar, to level up my finger skills. Cause you know why.
 ;) ;)

2708
The Flood / Re: Anyone who doesn't love Starbucks is living in denial
« on: October 04, 2014, 07:57:33 PM »
Sorry man.
Tim Horton's all the way :P
Spoiler
My man, Timmy's all the way. Though i only go foe the hot chocolate.

2709
The Flood / Re: Close your eyes
« on: October 04, 2014, 06:33:50 PM »
I think Yutaka is oblivious to his sexual preferences.

I know how to touch type Yutaka. So i do not need to see the keyboard.

2710
The Flood / Re: So, here I am
« on: October 04, 2014, 06:26:58 PM »
Time to talk to her parents if her parents are people you can talk to if not someone else.

2711
The Flood / Re: Guys, we're going to need lots of butter.
« on: October 04, 2014, 11:35:51 AM »
So i am all buttered up for some fun time.

2712
The Flood / Re: Stupidest things you were told as a child
« on: October 04, 2014, 11:35:04 AM »
That santa is Russian, bullshit, the blood that runs through his veins are as patriotic of Canada as the blood that flows through my vein. I mean look at all the red he dons on. Red and White, a true Canadian.
frack your face. Santa is finnish. He LIVES in Finland.
I am sorry but your father lied to you. You remember how he held back those tears while telling you that Santa is Fin. It was because he was afraid to tell you the truth.

2713
The Flood / Re: Stupidest things you were told as a child
« on: October 04, 2014, 08:59:15 AM »
That santa is Russian, bullshit, the blood that runs through his veins are as patriotic of Canada as the blood that flows through my vein. I mean look at all the red he dons on. Red and White, a true Canadian.

2714
The Flood / Re: How many threads is a good amount?
« on: October 04, 2014, 08:57:09 AM »
3.14159265359.....

2715
The Flood / Re: Search your Username on Google
« on: October 03, 2014, 10:31:59 PM »

What i get.

2716
The Flood / Search your Username on Google
« on: October 03, 2014, 10:24:39 PM »
What do you get?

Personally i am scared as anyone can trace my internet history from a google search of my username.

2717
Septagon / Alts
« on: October 03, 2014, 08:56:11 PM »
How many members are alts?

2718
The Flood / Re: A very dirty picture of a brother and sister
« on: October 03, 2014, 03:03:39 PM »
Time to bring out my testing kit.

2719
Serious / Re: TPP-Should i send a letter
« on: October 03, 2014, 02:23:30 PM »
Do you expect me to read that Shit?
Yep, cause if you are american it will affect you too.

2720
Serious / TPP-Should i send a letter
« on: October 03, 2014, 12:44:06 PM »
So Canada is right now talking about the Trans-Pacific Partnership which is being marketed as a free trade agreement though there has been protest and anger against it.

TPP=A Bad Deal

Quote
A submission by Dr. Mark Akrigg


THE TPP — A BAD DEAL FOR THE U.S. AND A BAD DEAL FOR CANADA


The TPP is fatally flawed by its "intellectual property" provisions, which attack democratic government in all of the TPP countries (including the U.S.) and cause massive economic harm by entrenching monopolies.

First, I would like to thank the USTR for inviting comment on Canada's participation in the TPP negotiations. It is a hallmark of open democracies that all political and economic policies affecting the public are open to comment, and it is a pleasure to take part in this process.

The "Trans Pacific Partnership" is not a free trade agreement. It is a managed trade agreement that is contrary to the interests of the citizens of the United States and of every other TPP country.

The citizens of the United States and of every other TPP country have been kept in the dark over what the secret TPP negotiations are in aid of. However, some information has come out, and it is clear that the TPP involves such repressive measures as:

copyright term extensions, raising the price and decreasing the availability of works
extensions in the duration of patents, raising the prices and decreasing the availability of medicines, and reducing the level of competition in technology industries
extensions in the scope of patents, raising prices, reducing availability, and deflecting investment from research and development to litigation
expanded definitions of trademarks, increasing the risk of litigation
a ban on the import of legally purchased copyright works from other countries where these works are cheaper than in the domestic market, thereby protecting monopoly profits from a captive domestic market
In 1890, the United States passed the historic Sherman Act, the basis of all subsequent antitrust legislation. In the words of its sponsor, Senator John Sherman, the Act was intended "to protect the consumers by preventing arrangements designed, or which tend, to advance the cost of goods to the consumer." The Trans Pacific Partnership appears to be just the sort of "arrangement" which Senator Sherman sought to suppress. He would be horrified to find his own country imposing such an "arrangement" on its own citizens and those of other countries.

CONCLUSION:

The TPP appears to be a secret but powerful attack on the free function of the open market. It will
reduce competition, and
raise prices
in every TPP country. Tinkering with the TPP will not solve this: the agreement in its current form must be scrapped altogether.

THE TPP IS AN ATTACK ON THE PUBLIC DOMAIN, WHICH IS THE PROPERTY OF THE CITIZENS

I have had the privilege of living and working in the United States, and of pursuing graduate studies at the University of California, Berkeley. In writing this submission, I am promoting the interests of the citizens of the United States. These interests would be severely and permanently damaged if the TPP were to survive in its present form.

But I am a citizen of Canada, and live in that country. I am the founder of a popular website, widely used by schools as well as by individual Canadians, which offers free digital editions of works which are out of copyright in my country. Copyright in Canada generally lasts for 50 years after the death of the author. The same is true of New Zealand, another TPP country, and this is no coincidence: it is the term of copyright mandated by the Berne Convention. It has been the basic rule of copyright in Canada for almost a century.

But a secret provision of the TPP "intellectual property" chapter proposes forcing a TWENTY YEAR extension in copyright duration. This is a direct attack on the property rights of the citizens of Canada and New Zealand, and any other country following the Life+50 rule. The public domain is OUR property, and it is not the place of the United States or any other foreign government to attack our personal property.


RECENT COPYRIGHT EXTENSIONS IN THE UNITED STATES AND ELSEWHERE WERE FORCED THROUGH WITHOUT PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE OR CONSENT

Since the public domain, by definition, belongs to the public, copyright extensions are a tough sell. In fact, they are impossible to sell: the citizens of the world will not knowingly consent to their property being confiscated. If Banff National Park in the Canadian Rockies were put up for sale to condo developers, the citizens of Canada would of course reject any such deal. Similarly, the public domain belongs to the people of Canada: we, the people, will not allow our own property to be expropriated, particularly by foreign governments acting under the cover of what is represented as a trade agreement.

Consequently, to the maximum extent possible, these extensions are done out of the public's sight and out of the public's control. The original disastrous 20-year extension of copyright in Europe in 1994 was done by the European Union in the interests of "harmonization" with Germany's extra-long Life+70 copyright term: no consideration seems to have been given to the rights of most European citizens to what had been their public domain.

Similarly, in the United States, the 20-year extension was passed in 1998, when the furore over the possible impeachment of President Clinton was at its height, and public attention was distracted. The bill was passed by a voice vote: there is no record of who supported it or opposed it. There has always been suspicion that massive corporate lobbying rather than any regard for the public interest was responsible for the extension; and the undue role played by corporate political contributions continues to be a source of lively debate in the US. In January 2012, after the Stop Online Privacy Act (SOPA) lost support in the White House and in the US Congress following unprecedented public protests, Christopher Dodd, the CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America, said on Fox News that "Candidly, those who count on quote 'Hollywood' for support need to understand that this industry is watching very carefully who's going to stand up for them when their job is at stake...Don't ask me to write a check for you when you think your job is at risk and then don't pay any attention to me when my job is at stake":

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/01/19/exclusive-hollywood-lobbyist-threatens-to-cut-off-obama-2012-money-over-anti/
It is hard to avoid the conclusion that corporate lobby groups think they are buying something when they make political donations, particularly in the area of copyright law. Perhaps this is why the 1998 US copyright extension has been called the Mickey Mouse Protection Act.

The relevance of this is that the intellectual property draft chapter of the Trans Pacific Partnership was provided by the United States government. If this draft chapter is nothing more than a wish list from corporate lobby groups using their government as a courier service to deliver legislation that other countries must then enact, it is worse than a waste of time: it is a menace to the public of every single country in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, including the United States, since it makes a mockery of the principles of transparency, and of representative democracies upholding the interests of their own citizens.

Canada, like all representative democracies, is founded on the principle of government by the people, for the people. The United States, of all countries, should respect the democratic rights of the citizens of other nations.


HAS THE U.S. SECRETLY IMPLEMENTED A SYSTEM OF PERPETUAL COPYRIGHT?

Most American citizens are probably not aware that until recently copyright in the U.S. generally lasted only 56 years from a work's publication. This system certainly worked well: music and literature flourished, and the American film industry became the envy of the world. There was no demonstrated need for the U.S. to extend copyright durations, but this is exactly what happened in the late 1970s, when the United States joined the Berne Convention; twenty years later this was followed by the 1998 twenty-year extension described above.

It is difficult to exaggerate the damage done by these successive copyright extensions. For example, Winnie-the-Pooh, first published in 1926, should have entered the American public domain in 1983. Because there have been not one but two copyright extensions, it will remain under copyright until 2018 -- unless a third copyright extension happens between now and then. But Winnie-the-Pooh has at least remained available to the American public. What about the countless excellent works which are out of print but still under copyright, and lost to the citizens of America? The Constitution of the United States states that copyright is to be temporary. A succession of copyright extensions make a mockery of the intent of the Founding Fathers.

American citizens should certainly ask Congress the following questions:
Have these extensions in any way helped the people of the United States, as opposed to its corporations?
Is another extension planned as 2018 approaches?
We, the citizens of other countries, can ask whether this new regime will involve fresh incursions on the public domain of the United States, followed by incursions on the public domain of other countries bundled with "free trade" agreements.


THE TPP PROCESS OFFENDS AMERICAN DEMOCRACY

The secrecy of the negotiations is itself deeply offensive. This is particularly the case since the TPP agreement, if enacted in the US, will remove remove important parts of American law from Congressional oversight and control: they will be considered "international obligations". In other words, the TPP will be a method of bypassing the will of the American people and of Congress.

But the conduct of the TPP negotiations is already blatantly unconstitutional.

The United States Constitution (Article 1, Section 8) states that "The Congress shall have Power ... to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations". But U.S. Senator Ron Wyden, chairman of the U.S. Senate Finance Subcommittee on International Trade Customs and Global Competitiveness, has stated that "the majority of Congress is being kept in the dark as to the substance of the TPP negotiations, while representatives of U.S. corporations — like Halliburton, Chevron, PHRMA, Comcast, and the Motion Picture Association of America — are being consulted and made privy to details of the agreement"

http://www.wyden.senate.gov/news/blog/post/iycmi-wyden-statement-introducing-congressional-oversight-over-trade-negotiations-act
Even as a mere onlooker, a citizen of a foreign country, I am outraged by this disregard for Congress.


THE TPP PROCESS OFFENDS CANADIAN DEMOCRACY

As a Canadian citizen, I have no access to or insight into a process that may affect me deeply. But my situation is even worse than that. When Canada was invited to join the TPP negotiations, some extraordinary conditions were attached:

there was a waiting period that will last until the end of 2012. During this period, Canada will not be present at the negotiations even as an observer.
Canada will have to accept any decisions already made.
Going forward, Canada and Mexico will have second-tier status, and unlike other nations will not be able to intervene on matters which affect them. Only first-tier participants will be able to do this.
Our government has had no access to TPP documents. This will have to wait until the end of the year.
Similar conditions were laid on the government of Mexico.

This "my way or the highway" approach is entirely inappropriate, and shows a complete lack of respect for the neighbours and close allies of the United States.


THE CITIZENS OF THE TPP COUNTRIES ARE ALREADY REJECTING THE SECRET TPP NEGOTIATIONS

There have already been demonstrations and protests in the TPP countries against the secret negotiations. There is always a temptation to dismiss protesters as a mere activist fringe, not representative of the public. This temptation should be avoided. The July rejection of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) by the European Parliament was the final step in a process which started with individual protest groups. The secrecy of the ACTA process is in every respect parallel to the TPP negotiations: the public was excluded, civil society groups were excluded, but corporate lobbyists were most definitely included. Yet this process led to the agreement collapsing because, in democracies, in the end public support is required, and it was not there.


PROTESTS THROUGHOUT THE TPP COUNTRIES

Is the American Library Association, the oldest and largest library association in the world, a mere fringe group? On July 4th, the ALA joined with eight other national library associations and the International Federation of Library Associations in stating that "The draft text proposed by the United States for the IP chapter of the TPPA, leaked in February 2011, does not reflect the balance necessary to protect the public domain and the ways in which society may access and use content. Exceptions to copyright protection are noticeably absent from this 'gold standard' IP agreement for the 21st century."

The full text of this very important statement is well worth reading, and can be found at:

http://www.ifla.org/en/publications/library-statement-on-trans-pacific-partnership-agreement-negotiations
Its signatories include:

International Federation of Library Associations & Institutions (IFLA)
American Library Association (ALA)
Association of College & Research Libraries (ACRL)
Association of Research Libraries (ARL)
Australian Libraries Copyright Committee (ALCC)
Canadian Library Association/Association Canadienne des Bibliothèques (CLA)
Library & Information Association of New Zealand Aotearoa (LIANZA)
Library Association of Chile (CBC)
Peruvian College of Librarians (CBP)
Vietnam Library Association (VLA)
The countries represented include

United States of America
Australia
Canada
New Zealand
Chile
Peru
Vietnam

RECOMMENDATION

The current Trans Pacific Partnership process is fatally flawed, and is too far advanced for patchwork repair to make it acceptable. The agreement should be abandoned as being fatally flawed because of

a degree of secrecy unacceptable in an open society
provisions, in particular "intellectual property" provisions, which would permanently damage the economies and the culture of the TPP countries
After a pause, a new process could be started, one that is more respectful of the citizens of the TPP countries. In the meantime, nothing is better than something, if that something is the TPP.

In closing, I would like to thank the USTR for allowing me this opportunity to make a submission. Genuine free trade agreements, arrived at openly and without coercion, benefit the economies of all countries involved. I am a friend of the United States: and my comments are intended to promote the interests of Americans, many of whom I count as friends, as well as those of my fellow Canadian citizens.


Sincerely yours,

Mark Akrigg, MBA PhD
Toronto, Canada

27 August 2012

So is TPP really a bad idea for Canada?

2721
Serious / Re: Piers Morgan attacks Obama
« on: October 03, 2014, 11:44:55 AM »
Sometimes you need to put people in their place and place their feet on the fire to stop the stupid spending and stupid actions that the group is doing. It is time to tell them to stop being idiots and start to clean up their mess. Otherwise we will have another 9/11.

2722
Serious / Bohemian Rhapsody
« on: October 03, 2014, 11:26:39 AM »
YouTube


So anyway I was watching this video, and funnily i feel horrible that i did not understand the meaning to the words he was saying. Although the true meaning of the songs were never revealed, after actually reading the lyrics, I must say It seems so obvious that it is him coming out about his Homosexuality and dealing with the backlash and the fear of backlash he would get from those around him, especially his mother.

He assassinated his character and killed the son that his mother had raised by coming out. Though many can talk about how the song refer to different things, it is for me obvious by certain terms that he used. Mainly those that refer to the Islamic tradition. Though Freddy was not muslim but a Zoroatist (Druze), Freddy was raised in South Africa which also had a large contingent of Muslims from India. His family having roots in India, he may have understood the culture around there and penned them in his writing.

Let me explain why his roots are important. It is mainly as he starts saying the word Bismillah(In the name of Allah) you start to understand he is now using Muslim culture whose importance comes up later when he talks about being stoned. Stoning is a punishment according to Islamic text for homosexual acts. This refers to the people of Lot who upon assaulting two angels and for their homosexual acts were punished, with their city turned upside down and stones dropped down from above.

Anyway with these two points i feel like i am sure he was discussing himself comming out. Not sure why i am discussing this anyway but this felt like somethiing i never really noticed and it has affected the way i listen to the song. Somehow it has become my favorite song again.

2723
Do not aim to become the flood, aim to become the anarchy. Hoping later on Anarchy becomes a permanent board. The flood can also grow. Honestly although activity is low we have enough and a decent amount of topics to keep a certain amount kf groups engaginf.

2724
Serious / Re: Why don't we have a one world currency by now?
« on: October 03, 2014, 10:11:14 AM »
Because we have not globolized yet. Gold or the US dollar is the defacto global currency for now. But soon maybe Bitcoin will take its place. All we know is that we will need a global institution likely under the UN for it to exist. And that means giving more powers ot the UN.

2725
Serious / Re: So North Korea's in the midst of a civil war now...
« on: October 03, 2014, 10:09:31 AM »
I wonder what is going on and what are the different factions that exist. He seems like a puppet not a powerfull person. Maybe a civil war is all that is needed to save North Korea.

2726
The Flood / Re: Koe no Kitachi
« on: October 03, 2014, 09:32:45 AM »
Lol Naruto and Bleach are a lost cause. Hoping one piece does not follow suit.

2727
The Flood / Re: What's with all the anime gifs
« on: October 03, 2014, 09:26:30 AM »
Japanese you child. Honestly they have the best reaction giffs sometimes.

2728
The Flood / Re: If you thought that Batman Forever was bad...
« on: October 02, 2014, 11:59:26 PM »
What a fucking horrible movie.

2729
The Flood / Re: Why can't I get into Anarchy?
« on: October 02, 2014, 11:46:21 PM »
You can't get in yet? Strange.
It says missing or off limits. And a back button.

2730
The Flood / Re: Why can't I get into Anarchy?
« on: October 02, 2014, 11:42:19 PM »
How can i enter anarchy board?
Make sacrifices to mighty Based Cheat.
It says there is an error and i have already sacrifice a goat to him.

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