2012-03-12, 16:17 | Link #20081 |
Obey the Darkly Cute ...
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Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: On the whole, I'd rather be in Kyoto ...
Age: 67
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I'd be amused by someone explaining to these "Southern faux-christian" idiots that both Santorum (Catholic) and Romney (Mormon) believe all those voters are going to hell for not having the right beliefs. And that their choices of either a Catholic or a Mormon or (I don't know is Fornicator a religion, Newt? ) .... well, good luck with those options there, eyup. America, theocratic wasteland - one expanding waistline inch at a time.
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2012-03-12, 16:33 | Link #20082 | |
Not Enough Sleep
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: R'lyeh
Age: 48
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2012-03-12, 17:21 | Link #20083 | |
Juanita/Kiteless
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: New England
Age: 40
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Here, this is in line with that article you posted. This is before Obama was even elected. And not even from the deep south! It is from Ohio. Remember: Mindy Green thinks Obama is a terrorist! ...because...his name looks like Osama...and...I'm guessing...because he is black! Go Mindy!
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2012-03-12, 17:42 | Link #20084 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: London, England
Age: 37
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Let's not forget his middle name, Hussein! That is a very Muslim sounding name and we all know Muslims are terrorists! What's more he could even be related to Saddam Hussein! *sarcastic comment before any one bites me*
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2012-03-12, 18:19 | Link #20085 |
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Boston
Age: 35
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Every American who has posted in this thread can breath a sigh of relief:
Federal judge rules that posting excerpts from an article to an online forum is covered by "Fair Use" |
2012-03-12, 18:20 | Link #20086 |
books-eater youkai
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Betweem wisdom and insanity
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Some info about the shooter:
http://security.blogs.cnn.com/2012/0...rained-sniper/ http://abcnews.go.com/International/...ry?id=15900289 So, he isn't a SEAL but a GI, a GI trained as a sniper.
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2012-03-12, 18:57 | Link #20087 | |
Obey the Darkly Cute ...
Author
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: On the whole, I'd rather be in Kyoto ...
Age: 67
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Sniper training, pfft, execution point blank range at terrified women and children... man, I'm of the opinion that the base should stake him to a pole out at the front gate and just look away while the villagers take vengence.
edit: Actually, Heinlein had an excellent short segment on this sort of stuff in Starship Troopers... they executed the coward with the entire base present. edit: The DoD is already suggesting it may seek the death penalty Quote:
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Last edited by Vexx; 2012-03-12 at 21:46. |
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2012-03-12, 20:07 | Link #20088 |
Juanita/Kiteless
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: New England
Age: 40
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It is just so terrible what that guy did, not only for the very crimes he committed that night, but the rippling effects this will create. Now more people in Afghanistan will side with the Taliban**, there will be retaliation attacks that will result in more U.S. and ally troops dying than if he never did these crimes, and this one incident alone will recruit a good number of terrorists. As if the crimes he committed weren't bad enough (and they are atrocious), it actually will help create even more death and carnage in the end; an undetermined, but very significant, amount.
**About this, it's not like the Taliban won't just take over soon after we leave, anyway.
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2012-03-12, 21:33 | Link #20089 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
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2012-03-12, 22:16 | Link #20090 | |
NYAAAAHAAANNNNN~
Join Date: Nov 2007
Age: 35
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The serious problem about the Chinese economy is corruption - there are many officials who had "carried interests" in various sectors that made doing business a pain in the ass. SMEs with creative ideas and products are safe from false-choice/forcible acquisition, as long as a big guy with government backing doesn't discover them.
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2012-03-12, 22:32 | Link #20092 | |
Pilot in Training
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Earth
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While the Chinese economy is still growing, the era is cheap China is over. Chinese workers are demanding better pay and worker's rights(Which they should) as the middle class has grown. Factories in China are already having machinery not working because they can't get workers. Many jobs are going to India now. I know that China is seen as the future economic dynamo, but I think India is discounted too fast. |
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2012-03-12, 22:41 | Link #20093 |
NYAAAAHAAANNNNN~
Join Date: Nov 2007
Age: 35
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Actually it is useful to have low-level corruption; forces the governing body to periodically reconsider pay-rate and psychological profiles of ground-level officials (who earn the least - the Malaysian traffic police is a good example of how pay can affect work morale; you are ONLY going to give a piece of metal to the cop who busted a heroin laden car?).
The problem is corruption at higher levels and higher ranks; over here in Singapore the CPIB are made up of a bunch of legal nerds who scrutinise EVERY single aspect of investment owned by government officials, I used to know an old man who griped about having to submit reports about his trading account before his retirement from the public sector. You can't eliminate corruption, but you can use it as a useful indicator to assess the loyalty of your employees, but more importantly, the work environment you created for them.
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2012-03-12, 23:36 | Link #20094 |
Shadow of Effilisi
Join Date: Oct 2011
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Every Chinese I know claims that the corruption mostly comes from the local authorities, at the municipal level. The central government at Beijing is seen as least corrupt. There are plenty of stories about people going to Beijing to present their case to the central government, and how the local officials try to stop them.
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2012-03-12, 23:56 | Link #20095 |
Juanita/Kiteless
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: New England
Age: 40
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But even the Chinese government at the grand level is pretty bad. Just lots of instances where the Chinese government shows little to no regard for human rights and the oppression of the Tibetan people and the ongoing attempt to destroy and eradicate their culture are well known things that highlight corruption from the Chinese government. And corrupt business practices (not to say the U.S. isn't a specialist at that sort of thing).
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2012-03-13, 00:00 | Link #20096 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: London, England
Age: 37
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Plus we got to see that corruption is a very slippery slope. Yes I can somewhat understand that in many countries low level jobs are not paid enough to earn a living so they must depend on bribes to live. However this is the problem I see, an official has a wife and kids to feed. He does not earn enough money in pay so he must accept the odd bribe here and there so his kids are properly fed and clothed. However that level is not really enough because he also wants his kids to go to a good school so they have a better future than him. That means more bribes. Thing is when they are in a good school they need better clothes and generally have to fit with their peers so that can lead to even more bribes. If he gets to this point he is probably doing quite well so he takes a few more bribes and treats himself (and his wife) to a new car. Now you can see where this going, before you know it you are living on bribes and the other issue is once you start it is hard to stop. Plus once you start accepting bribes you are a partner in crime to someone and the danger is you will have to repay someone for carrying out a favour which can mean doing questionable things. The other issue with China, is like the U.S.S.R. the economy still carries out a considerable amount of central planning. This amount of central planning usually means local officials have to meet certain ambitious government targets. That in itself asks for trouble as officials will do everything they can, by hook or by crock, to meet those targets (if they didn't they would be sacked). As a result of this pressure officials can be tempted into fudging numbers or making people turn a blind eye to certain shortcomings by offering bribes. Granted this situation could apply to any government as certain functions are centrally planned but my argument is China is more centrally planned than most economies. |
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2012-03-13, 01:06 | Link #20097 | ||
NYAAAAHAAANNNNN~
Join Date: Nov 2007
Age: 35
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The worst corruption comes from the senior staff, when initial corruption during their times as MS carries upwards. China has unwatched corruption for a number of years, how many of those actually got promoted and carried the disease upwards? Quote:
The government knows that they can't nationalise the companies because they don't know how to run them. \ And for the lulz : Yahoo files patent suit against Facebook Looks like a desperate attempt to cling onto their investors, aren't they?
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Last edited by SaintessHeart; 2012-03-13 at 01:34. |
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2012-03-13, 01:41 | Link #20098 | |
Shadow of Effilisi
Join Date: Oct 2011
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2012-03-13, 05:13 | Link #20099 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2008
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Gainsborough man jailed over anti-Islam images in his flat window
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2012-03-13, 05:14 | Link #20100 |
books-eater youkai
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Betweem wisdom and insanity
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How German history helps modern spies
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/...82C0CT20120313
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current affairs, discussion, international |
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