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npts2020

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Everything posted by npts2020

  1. This is all well and good but the devil will be in the details, especially giving all of the terms precise enough definitions to have meaning. The part in #3 that I emboldened, for instance, is exactly how a great number of people in the financial sector have gotten rich, by making things too difficult for the average person to understand easily (need I mention an unregulated derivative market or Ponzi scams?).
  2. CaptainPanic; That is basically how every flywheel assisted drive train i have ever seen works. The biggest problem with a flywheel is, that the heavier they are the better they are for the task, unfortunately you then have to carry all that weight around. As to the original question, any spring that could provide enough power to run an automobile would have to be fairly massive to enable even short trips before rewinding (think how big a watch spring is compared to the watch). Even if you could work out safety and durability issues it seems to me that doing this would never be any more than an interesting academic exercise.
  3. Um, I didn't know Charles Darwin needed any vindication, his ideas have only been refined and made stronger over time. Exactly on what is it that you are basing the notion that blood cells and any single-celled organisms are related?
  4. Well, the flourescent lights at your school blink on and off 60 times every second, do they appear to be on or off?
  5. I voted yes. It is probably easier to get away with a crime in America than anywhere else that has an effective (somewhat) government. On the other hand more things are illegal to make more citizens criminals......maybe i shoulda voted no:doh:
  6. IMO most of those 71% want to see an investigation about the same as I want to see flowers on my kitchen table, it would be nice but I am not going to bother going to the florist to see that some get there.
  7. I guess it depends on what is "good". If expansion is considered to be the chief good then it would not be. If stability is considered to be the chief good then it may be very good for the economy in the long term. IMO if there has to be an extreme I would prefer the latter, but none of the solutions I have seen much publicized is a radical departure from what is already being done.
  8. If you are going to oppose nuclear power, you should learn a little about the subject. Fission (particularly thermal neutron, the most common type) reactors and fusion reactors are very different machines in both operation and radiation hazards produced. The point at which they become similar is after water is heated to produce steam for turning a turbine to produce electricity.
  9. SkepticLance; I would like to point out to you that when Europe and America were becoming industrialized, the populations were a few millions at most and caused enough environmental damage to be noticable. What do you suppose the effects will be if billions of people are permitted to undergo change in the same fashion and at today's rate of resource use? From what I can interpolate from all the writings and data I have seen, we are very near (or even past) the point of no return for melting both polar regions and most (if not all) of the glaciers on Earth. I find it hard to believe that will be a net win for humanity and so far we have "industrialized" only a fraction of the world's population.
  10. As many as it takes. For me that is about one Samuel Smith's taddy porter if I drink it in less than ten minutes.
  11. Anyone with normal body chemistry can survive many days without food and not pass out. Try googling hunger strike/Bobby Sands or fasting/Dick Gregory. I know both those individuals have gone without food for over a month (Sands died after 66 days but was not in the best of health to begin with).
  12. I agree with The Bear's Key that the investigation should be with an aim more toward exposing the process for undertaking a war in Iraq, warrentless wiretapping, etc. than prosecuting people for it. IMO the main reason people don't want any light shed on this matter, is that it would show repeated criminal activity at the highest levels of our government in a breadth of activities spanning many years. Just being able to follow the money trail, I think, would be revealing but who has the authority to do something like that?
  13. Isn't that what makes great art (not to say this cartoon is great)? IMO the concept probably came about from the story of the chimp being shot and hearing something along the lines of "a monkey could have written that stimulus bill" and putting the two together. The realization that it could be interpreted in different (especially negative) ways probably came very shortly afterward and surely would have occurred to the artist. If Mokele's estimation of the artist is correct, their motivation seems pretty obvious and expected. What may be harder to discern is the motives of those who published it, unless they thought there was little likelihood of much backlash (which seems stupid in light of how anything that might be considered racial is verboten these days).
  14. Mr Skeptic; I disagree that you need political parties to figure out who to vote for unless are you looking at the candidates for the first time on the ballot while in the voting booth. One can always go to an organization they like that rates political candidates (there are many that do this) and get their information there, not to mention that newspapers, magazines and organizations frequently endorse candidates outright.
  15. I will be the first to stick my neck out and propose a first plank for a platform. All policies, programs, and initiatives will be designed according to the best science available at the time.
  16. Would any advanced AI even regard us as life? They may view us in the same way many (dare I say most?) biologists view viruses or prions, something that has signs of life but is not quite life.
  17. Also, since Venus (and Mercury) is closer to the sun than Earth it will never appear directly overhead and be near the horizon whenever rising or setting, closely following or being chased by the sun.
  18. I am not sure but I would think one reason would be weight. I can't think of any magnets that would be strong enough but light enough to not significantly increase the payload. Then you have the extra weight for all those solar panels........ Finally, I am not sure we have built a magnet strong enough to significantly affect a high energy photon (the main ionizing radiation not stopped by the hull of the ship) over the distance of passing through the ship.
  19. 2 cents time. Bush was only the figurehead and IMO arresting and putting on trial everyone who had anything to do with his, shall we say less than kosher, behavior would be like trying to do the same for every person involved in the marijuana industry in America. There are millions of people profiting from the war on terror and related ventures. If people want to have GWB's head on a spike, I would have little sympathy but I think a complete exposure of his activities and castigation for them would probably be enough for most.
  20. Pangloss; This is what we need an economics forum for. Basically I agree with what you are saying but I think that economists have not been brought to task for their lack of precision at explaining what happens in the real world. IMO economists are generally far better at justification than they are at explanation. There is an interesting debate going on between utilitarians and prioritarians about how to valuate the future well-being of humanity vs present well-being of humanity. Utilitarians say that a person is of the same value/status regardless of their place in our timeline. Prioritarians say that present life is of more value than future lives, since the economy grows and future generations will be wealthier and better off than we are today. I believe where someone is in this debate will pretty fairly give their view of whether or not creating debt for future generations is appropriate.
  21. IMO no political party will ever have the "appeal" of the Republican or Democratic party. Once you open the door to viable third (IMO second) parties there is likely to be diluting of electorate support, many voters would likely not remain in the R-D camp. If parties were banned altogether, it would force voters to learn something about the candidates in order to know who to vote for. Suggestion for platform building, start with how contentious issues are to be decided.
  22. No, I would have voted Nader (yes I am one of those who always "wastes" their vote) since he is one of the most able politicians never to be elected but wanted the Greens (who most represent my views) to be able to get election funds (they didn't) even though I think Ms. McKinney is a bit of a dingbat and disagreed with her selection.
  23. One of the problems IMO is that people work pretty hard for their money (in general) but don't realize they have to work almost as hard to do anything worthwhile with it (i.e. take the time to understand exactly what you are investing in instead of giving it to a surrogate).
  24. it is interesting that a blastocyst has "all of the rights of any person" but a child does not. What happens when the day comes when a human can be cloned from other cells without an egg or sperm? Does that mean every cell or organ in the human body will have to be given rights? I wonder how that would affect transplant technology?
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