Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Soxtalk.com

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

StrangeSox

Members
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by StrangeSox

  1. QUOTE (Soxbadger @ May 8, 2012 -> 04:52 PM) That article is misleading and a year old. I wouldn't say it's misleading. It is based on last year's data. Yeah, aside from rare exceptions, that's true. A lot of schools have student fees that go to athletic departments. My link's numbers don't include student fees and government support, so maybe that's the difference. I can't imagine that we went from 14 self-sustaining programs in 2009 to 22 in 2010 to all of the Big 10 plus most of the ACC and Big 12 and more to come in 2011. There has to some difference in the data.
  2. I don't need a punishment/reward system to be a decent human being.
  3. QUOTE (Quinarvy @ May 8, 2012 -> 04:28 PM) I think this, then I remember that I had class with a SG, was his lab partner, and the teacher told me he shouldn't have passed (mainly because he didn't show up once a week, which was half the grade) and that I pay out the ass. Give them the option of playing in the D-League for a year, or college for two. Seems fair to me. Right, so why bother with him taking up those classroom resources? For the superstar athletes most likely to make the jump straight to the NBA, college isn't about an education. Very few athletic departments are self-sustaining and cost the school (read: students) money. But it generates a ton of money for the AD's and coaches!
  4. QUOTE (Soxbadger @ May 8, 2012 -> 04:38 PM) And hilariously there is a conflict of interest when it comes to the current players representing future players. So I can bar entry into my profession for a few years and protect my job, sign me up! Lawyers do this too, if there are to many lawyers, increase the rate applicants who fail the bar, that way we make sure we keep our jobs. Any group like that, ABA, AMA, Professional Engineer licensing, has guild-like protectionist aspects.
  5. Libertarians are generally much more in line with Republicans in US politics.
  6. QUOTE (SleepyWhiteSox @ May 8, 2012 -> 04:26 PM) Because those would be the rules and requirements set by the employer (NBA). The rules and requirements are collectively bargained with the NBAPA.
  7. Meat consumption per capita around the world. The US is, perhaps surprisingly, not #1.
  8. QUOTE (SleepyWhiteSox @ May 8, 2012 -> 04:06 PM) Adding an additional year requirement seems like an easy compromise to this debate... Why should a young athlete have to wait another year earning a ton of money for a college but little for himself?
  9. StrangeSox replied to iamshack's topic in SLaM
    QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ May 8, 2012 -> 03:43 PM) One of our cats lived in the wild for the first couple of months she was alive. She learned to click like a squirrel and do a rough imitation of a bird tweet. 13 years later she will still sit in our window and try to draw them over to kill them. The same cat that jumped into the window makes the clicking too, but she never lived in the wild. My wife's old cat started as a stray they took in, so it was in the wild for a year or two. It still made these awful-sounding hunting noises when it would walk around with a toy. The first time I heard it, I thought she was dying.
  10. StrangeSox replied to iamshack's topic in SLaM
    QUOTE (illinilaw08 @ May 8, 2012 -> 03:06 PM) Our cats love to sit perched on the back of a loveseat and watch outside. Well, our 5 month old puppy has absolutely picked up on this habit, literally perching like a cat on the back of the loveseat. You see three heads moving in unison as they watch birds, squirrels, etc. The dog, however, isn't quite as passive about it. The animals outside end up winding him up and he jumps off the chair and runs around. The cats, in turn, just seem to give us looks that say, "that dude has NO idea how to watch outside." Love the cats. Ours have tons of personality. Our cat just about knocked herself out jumping at some birds perched just outside our (closed) window once. Had it been open, she probably would have gone right through the screen.
  11. QUOTE (Tex @ May 8, 2012 -> 03:19 PM) I have five or six days coming up without really clear plans and was thinking about some of the really great lessons from school. Or useful stuff that doesn't really fit anywhere else. For example I learned in a college journalism class that US currency is exactly 6" in length. With the tolerances that it is manufactured under, it is more accurate at 6" than any cheap ruler you may buy at the store. Of course it isn't really practicle for measuing say 2 5/8ths but for whole numbers, it works very well. Anyone else remember something they learned in school that was like that? That's a really handy engineer/technician's trick in the field.
  12. I can't even imagine why they'd want that information. edit: Well it's from the Washington Free Beacon, so I'll wait till something with more credibility than that verifies this.
  13. QUOTE (Y2HH @ May 8, 2012 -> 01:50 PM) Special thanks to BS for helping me get this posted without a "link". Props to deGrasse Tyson for this: The ignorant, militant atheists of the world like PZ Meyers are awful. There is an overwhelming amount of dumb and insult in that speech.
  14. 9/11 defense attorney wears hijab at hearing, wants others in court to dress more modestly Intentionally trying to throw the case?
  15. QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ May 8, 2012 -> 01:17 PM) For every Rose in the draft, there are how many guys who wash out because they aren't ready? Someone like Rose or Lebron could make the opening day roster anyway.
  16. QUOTE (Dick Allen @ May 8, 2012 -> 12:53 PM) That's true. I hate the one and dones. Let them turn pro. Its a farce having them pose as college students. Making them go for 2 is just going to create an even bigger farce and more cheating. Plus it gives the NCAA free labor for an extra year.
  17. QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ May 8, 2012 -> 11:31 AM) Anytime you want to send me $15 out of every $1000 you earn, feel free. I have a big problem with the government wasting my money. This doesn't actually mean anything. Obviously a 0% overpayment rate is ideal, but it isn't realistically achievable. Just like a 0% fraud rate in insurance, or 0% shrinkage, or 0% embezzlement rates are not achievable. Policies to reduce fraud do not come without associated costs, both in actual dollar costs such as increased staffing and in other costs like denying legitimate claims. There are inefficiencies and fraud and waste in every operation, large and small. Saying that you won't be happy until there's zero fraud tells me that you aren't actually interested in any real, meaningful discussion over problems and solutions.
  18. Well nothing discussed here has any bearing on anything. I was genuinely curious if you had any policies in mind since you believe that a 1.5% level overpayment rate is unacceptable.
  19. QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ May 8, 2012 -> 11:17 AM) Well except for all of those risks we make the system exclude, much like SSI. That's what is meant by choosing the acceptable risk level--you exclude those outside of that level when designing your security (anti-fraud) plan. For instance, nuclear power plants do not have to design a security plan capable of defending against a full-scale military attack. For SSDI, what would propose as additional anti-fraud measures?
  20. Honestly, what would you like to see done here to reduce the fraud below 1.5%? What is an acceptable level of fraud for you?
  21. QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ May 8, 2012 -> 11:13 AM) Whatever percentage of your money you are happy to give away, feel free to send it to me. I can even send you pictures of all of the things I would do to enjoy it. I'm happy to realize that every system has vulnerabilities and that some will exploit those vulnerabilities. You cannot stop every single possible avenue of fraud because you likely won't even be aware of the nearly limitless possibilities. This is the same mentality used in the physical security industry. You could do a full-body cavity search on every single person entering the airport, but you choose which levels of risk (fraud) are acceptable.
  22. QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ May 8, 2012 -> 11:10 AM) Just like I thought. Nothing compared to the fraud rate. They investigate the claims of fraud they get and only a fraction of the claims come from SSA employees themselves. They rely on citizen-reporting because they do not have access to investigative resources on the scale of the FBI to observe and document every claimant for a period of time.
  23. QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ May 8, 2012 -> 11:09 AM) They write the rules and regulations. Is the government at fault when someone embezzles from their company? Are you arguing for increased regulation? I'm not arguing against combating fraud here. I'm saying that 1.5% doesn't seem especially high to warrant combating fraud at the expense of legitimate claims. You will never have a zero-fraud system for anything. Obviously, in the health care industry, there are much higher fraud rates and fraud should be combated there.
  24. 1)yes 2)no
  25. QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ May 8, 2012 -> 11:00 AM) Again, government oversight and regulation doing a great job there. How is it the fault of the government if private insurance companies are defrauded?

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.