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Messages - The_Professor

Pages: 1 ... 114 115 [116]
1726
3DHS / Re: Study: Religion is good for kids
« on: April 29, 2007, 04:59:21 PM »
Well, I can only speak about this issue personally. I home-schooled my daughter and she was thoroughly immersed in a church culture the entire time. She is an A student at college, alongside Plane's son, involved in several Christian ministries, active in her local church there and so on. Obviously I am biased, but I believe you have to establish a solid Christan foundation or the World will tear 'em down. I hear this same philosophy from a LDS friend of mine. He says that is why they keep them immersed in LDS church activities until they are old enough to successfully withstand the evils of the World.

1727
3DHS / Would this work in the U.S.? Is it effective THERE?
« on: April 29, 2007, 04:53:02 PM »
Britain becoming a Big Brother society, says data watchdog
By Sophie Goodchild
Published: 29 April 2007
Britain is in danger of "committing slow social suicide" as such Big Brother techniques as surveillance cameras and recording equipment spread into every aspect of our lives, the nation's information watchdog will warn this week.

A new report from Richard Thomas, the information commissioner, will say that the public needs to be made more aware of the "creeping encroachment" on civil liberties created by email monitoring, CCTV and computer tracking of our buying habits.

It is understood that one of the concerns in Mr Thomas's report is the use of special listening devices which can be placed in lamp posts, street furniture and offices. These are already widely used in the Netherlands to combat crime and anti-social behaviour.

More than 300 of the cameras with built-in microphones have been fitted in benefit offices and city centres. The equipment can pick up aggressive tones on the basis of decibel level, pitch and speed at which words are spoken.

Westminster council has already started piloting the listening devices, but experts say the use of these microphones raises questions about how surveillance can be used to intrude into the private lives of citizens.

He will also call for greater regulation of companies that supply surveillance technology which provides "convenience or safety for the more affluent majority", but not for the vulnerable such as children, immigrants and the elderly.

His warning comes as MPs launch their first inquiry into the impact of surveillance in Britain. The Home Affairs Select Committee will investigate the use of video cameras to monitor high streets and residential areas as well as the holding of personal information on both government and commercial databases.

On Tuesday, Mr Thomas, who last year warned that Britain was "sleepwalking into a surveillance society", will tell the committee at its first hearing that new safeguards must be introduced to protect the public from the increasing intrusion of surveillance into their daily lives.

Civil liberty campaigners have already warned that Britain is becoming a Big Brother society where its citizens are increasingly being watched. There are more than four million CCTV cameras in this country, one for every 14 people, and the national DNA database which was set up by police to combat crime now holds 3.5 million profiles.

1728
3DHS / Re: Where Kurdistan Meets the Red Zone Part II
« on: April 27, 2007, 05:47:52 PM »
We started this. We brought Saddam down. We disbanded the Iraqi Army, so that there was no central authority other than our own. This was done deliberately. Now we are pulling out, blaming the Iraqis for their problems. If this were part of a new policy of minding our own business, restoring the Republic and allowing the world to take care of itself, it might be comprehensible, but it is not: the very people who wanted to intervene in Bosnia, who put our troops into Somalia and then did not support them and eventually ran (telling Bin Laden what he had suspected all along) will be in charge of this withdrawal and of the army they bring home. They are still interventionists albeit rather stingy and politically sensitive interventionists. They are still the people who ask, seriously, what is the good of this splendid army if you can't use it to go Do Good all over the world.

Bush meant well, but history will never forgive him for starting a war with no idea of what to do next. This was compounded by sending in an incompetent proconsul (who subsequently got the Medal of Freedom).

And Republicans and Democrats are now playing political games. Both seem to consider the soldiers as pawns.

It is enough to make you want to throw up!


1729
3DHS / BS Jobs: anyone have any of these?
« on: April 27, 2007, 03:09:18 PM »

1730
3DHS / Re: In the spirit of Private Eye
« on: April 27, 2007, 03:05:28 PM »
LOL...you ARE correct. That is where I grew up! Now, was that my sword or something else LARGE sticking out?  ;D

1731
3DHS / Re: As they stand up....
« on: April 27, 2007, 09:53:51 AM »
Good point, BT, but at least there would have been an authority structure present.

1732
3DHS / Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
« on: April 27, 2007, 09:31:24 AM »
Quote
To think otherwise is sheer folly. The French, by 1941, were a shell of a force, the Brits were literally backed up against a wall, the Aussies were few in number and on and on. Js, your statements are inaccurate Are the Gators still paying their players?

You must mean Florida STATE. Peter Warrick is still shopping in Dilliards, last I heard. The Vols gonna go to the Basement Bowl again? Or, maybe the Citrus Bowl? Ya'll know THAT ONE really well, The Old Ball Coach says...

1733
3DHS / Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
« on: April 27, 2007, 09:23:10 AM »
I can't favor legislation to tell people how to think.

Precisely

Amen!

George Orwell anyone?

Someimtes, JS gets too Euro-centric in his thought processes.

1734
3DHS / Re: As they stand up....
« on: April 27, 2007, 09:17:53 AM »
"Military planners have abandoned the idea that standing up Iraqi troops will enable American soldiers to start coming home soon and now believe that U.S. troops will have to defeat the insurgents and secure control of troubled provinces."

This doesn't surprise me at all. We should never have disbanded the Iraqi military. I know we were concerned that another Saddam would arise from within it, but he had pretty well eliminated any serious leaders there anyway.

1735
3DHS / Re: Hey Prof!
« on: April 26, 2007, 09:45:04 AM »
I know. I keep track of ANYTHING related to Bablyon 5. I have already ordered several as Amazon is offering a "deal" right now.


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