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Everything posted by StrangeSox
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Woooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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You guys might like checking out Tyler Cowan's the average is over
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Universal Basic Income for every citizen.
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Fantasy football advice thread
StrangeSox replied to DrunkBomber's topic in Alex’s Olde Tyme Sports Pub
QUOTE (Steve9347 @ Oct 17, 2013 -> 12:14 PM) Hmmm. Tough call. You're right, though. I think we've discovered why you've struggled to get your first win. -
Oh I was just throwing that data out there because I was curious myself and googled it.
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Over 50% of their stores are in the US Page 17 of this report breaks down revenues by region, but the US is one region and all of Europe is another. http://www.aboutmcdonalds.com/content/dam/...ort%20Final.pdf
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I only caught the beginning of that story and meant to go back and listen to it, thanks for the reminder.
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Charles C. Pierce: I HATE CENTRISM
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QUOTE (Balta1701 @ Oct 17, 2013 -> 09:23 AM) I think the author of that post is crossing his or her numbers up. The $24 billion cost estimate is not the cost to the government, it's the cost to the entire economy of the shutdown according to an S&P estimate. The government definitely lost billions, maybe more than $10 billion (I haven't seen a reliable, complete accounting of that yet) but I know where the $24 billion # comes from. It says "estimated economic losses" right in the first sentence. It wasn't an argument about the direct cost to government, but to point out that we're going to hear a lot about how this crappy website cost hundreds of millions of dollars, but not so much about the tens or hundreds of billions of dollars that the sequester, shutdown and debt ceiling brinksmanship has cost our economy as a whole.
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Farhad Manhoo also has a piece in the WSJ covering what went wrong with healthcare.gov and why this same sort of thing goes wrong in most large-scale public/government tech projects. http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB1000...139461596987366
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The shutdown could have bought healthcare.gov 40 times over'
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This is what it's like to be in a Stop And Frisk http://gawker.com/this-is-what-its-like-to...dium=socialflow
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Pto!
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So when do federal workers go back to work? Tomorrow, if it's signed tonight?
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~both sides~
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It will actually decrease because government destroys jobs!
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Felix Salmon on why we're already feeling the affects of the debt ceiling limit (on top of the sequester and the shutdown): http://blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2013...-already-begun/ The vaseline, in other words, already has sand in it. The global faith in US institutions has already been undermined. The mechanism by which catastrophe would arise has already been set into motion. And as a result, economic growth in both the US and the rest of the world will be lower than it should be. Unemployment will be higher. Social unrest will be more destructive. These things aren’t as bad now as they would be if we actually got to a point of payment default. But even a payment default wouldn’t cause mass overnight failures: the catastrophe would be slower and nastier than that, less visible, less spectacular. We’re not talking the final scene of Fight Club, we’re talking more about another global credit crisis — where “credit” means “trust”, and “trust” means “trust in the US government as the one institution which cannot fail”.
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Well, I think the original drafters were smart enough to understand that there would be debates over the language of a particular law or amendment (as they themselves had these arguments) and that they knew the language of the 14th amendment was broad and would likely be understood to protect different things in the future. But based on past statements, Scalia doesn't believe that. He believes that the 14th was specifically about the racial oppression faced by black people from white people. edit: I guess it's important to read that Scalia is saying "we," meaning the SC both past and present, have held that it says one thing, not that he necessarily agrees or accepts with all past decisions on the EPC.
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There's a reason that the US is the notably rare exception to the typical outcome of presidential democracies. Majorities can't govern, accountability is lowered, and with our particular setup, there are a ton of veto points.
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If we ever have a Reign of Terror, I hope the DC cocktail circuit is the first to be dragged in front of the Revolutionary Tribunal. Specifically Politico.
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Seems like she was trying to make an originalist plea to Scalia?
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My grandparents are going through a pretty steady decline right now, and it's really hard to watch. My grandma is a shell of her former self.
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but it doesn't protect women and the homosexuals.
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QUOTE (Alpha Dog @ Oct 15, 2013 -> 11:32 PM) Perhaps it is time that the Senate go on record as not passing these bills that the House sends them, instead of Harry sitting on them. Why is it that the House has to bend to the Senate's wishes? It is time for the Senate to get in line with the house. At least vote on something. Let's see the Senate say no, they won't vote to keep parts of the government open. The concern at this point isn't the shutdown our the house's dumb attempt to open a handful of government agencies. Perhaps it's time for the lunatics in the house gop to let the hostages go. Edit: house republicans couldn't even get together enough votes for whatever their latest "guaranteed to fail in the Senate and be vetoed" plan yesterday. They are in complete disarray.
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The really horrible thing is that the big "deal" that's being considered is just a few more weeks until we go through this same dumb nonsense again. Something is fundamentally broken right now.
