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#131
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On Fri, 18 Aug 2006 14:09:50 -0600, Newps wrote:
Or to say that the war on poverty is/was unsuccessful. I'm with newps. All the "wars on x" are slogans. Arguing about them is futile. All I'm really sure of about the 40-odd years since I got the vote is that we achieved unisex bathrooms without the ERA. Don |
#132
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In article om,
"Andrew Sarangan" wrote: True, not everyone has thought this through, that's why I said "ones who actively choose not to immunize". But the ones who made a conscious and educated choice should not be criminalized as negligent. ah - a subtlety that was lost on me at 1am... serves me right for reading and posting at that hour. -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
#133
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In article ,
Don Tuite wrote: All I'm really sure of about the 40-odd years since I got the vote is that we achieved unisex bathrooms without the ERA. some achievement :-/ -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
#134
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Jose wrote:
Nobody forces anybody to shop at Wal-Mart. If people are worried about their privacy, they can simply shop elsewhere. That will correct the problem quickly. That works, so long as there is an "elsewhere". As the larger companies gobble up the smaller ones, the number of "elsewheres" diminishes, and the power of the individual to affect WalMart by shopping elsewhere diminishes. It is an unstable slope with a stable end point - Walmart or nothing. That was said about IBM before DEC and Microsoft came along. And DEC before Dell came along. And GM before Toyota came along. And Toyota before Hyundai came along... As for privacy, you missed the point entirely. The scenario is: Walmart requires RFID tags. Companies respond by putting them in all their products (because it's cheaper to put it in everywhere than it is to selectively leave them out). So, even if you buy from the corner drug store, you walk around with an RFID tag on everything. No, I didn't miss the point at all. The point is you have choices and can use the free market system to fight back. Will it cause you some inconvenience? Most likely. The point is that capitalism provides a solution to the privacy problem, it just isn't as easy as whinning about the problem. It's not here yet, but it's very close. As someone who is working with RFID technology, it isn't as capable as many in the media have made it out to be. Matt |
#135
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ktbr wrote:
Jose wrote: Social engineering is never fair because it (by definition) treats some people (or the activities they engage in) unequally (which isn't 'fair'). If it does so in a successful effort to mitigate a different source of "unfairness", then the overall situation is "more fair". I agree with you in principle, but I don't think that applying it as an absolute is warranted. The war on poverty has been going on for 40 years in the country. Today there are roughly the same percentage of people living below the 'poverty' line as there were back then. Has it been a successful effort? And for a lot longer than that in other parts of the world. I think this sums it up pretty well - "For ye have the poor always with you...", Matthew 26:11 Matt (not the same one!) |
#136
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Bob Moore wrote:
Michelle Settle wrote Correct me if I'm wrong, but I notice that there's virtually ZERO self-employed people below the poverty line. Have you talked to any flight instructors lately? Good response and on-topic also. Give that man a cigar. Matt |
#137
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On Fri, 18 Aug 2006 21:39:07 GMT, Matt Whiting
wrote: As someone who is working with RFID technology, it isn't as capable as many in the media have made it out to be. True, vis-a-vis VHF/UHF, but the UHF tags may facilitate the universal ID that folks on the right have been justifiably warning us about since the inception of Social Security. Don |
#138
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Don Tuite wrote:
On Fri, 18 Aug 2006 21:39:07 GMT, Matt Whiting wrote: As someone who is working with RFID technology, it isn't as capable as many in the media have made it out to be. True, vis-a-vis VHF/UHF, but the UHF tags may facilitate the universal ID that folks on the right have been justifiably warning us about since the inception of Social Security. It is certainly possible. This is OT, but we just studied Revelation again in church and when you look at implantable tags and think what is possible already, it is chilling. As soon as they suggest implants in the right hand or forehead... :-) Matt |
#139
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john smith wrote:
In article .com, "Jay Honeck" wrote: Childhood immunizations. There are no children turned away without immunization anywhere in America. There *are*, however, millions of criminally stupid parents who don't GET their children immunized. Wasn't the recent measles outbreak carried into the United States/Iowa by an unvaccinated child who became infected in England? Mumps, actually. I'm convinced I had a mild case back this spring - and I was vaccinated as a child. Remember, immunizations don't 100% protect you. |
#140
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Grumman-581 wrote:
On Fri, 18 Aug 2006 16:15:43 GMT, john smith wrote: Educated populations tend to stop or slow down procreating. an article in the Wall Street Journal stated that some countries with low birth rates which already have a childbirth incentive are contemplating increasing it. To follow this logic to its full conclusion, we end up with the world being overpopulated by the idiots... Just like when I see a woman with 4 kids in the grocery store... "FOUR kids? Couldn't figure out what causes it or are you just CATHOLIC?" What's wrong with having four kids as long as you can pay for all of them? (And keep them away from me) |
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