In Canada, for instance, the War Measures Act allows the government to basically do anything it sees fit "for the security, defence, peace, order and welfare of Canada" "by reason of the existence of real or apprehended war, invasion or insurrection"
thing is, war doesn't really look like it used to. theoretically one guy with a bomb in the right (wrong) place and a claim of attribution could cause a government to completely take over its subjects' lives
you don't need a nation declaring against another, any more
I really think the next 10 years or so are going to be extremely interesting when it comes to eroding rights in the name of public safety
and by "interesting" I mean "terrifying"
this is one thing the US theoretically does do quite well (via the alleged immutability of the constitution), although since they arguably caused this whole mess in the first place I'm not in the mood to heap on a ton of praise right now
Last time that law was used in Canada was during the 1970 October Crisis, during which an elected politician was murdered and a British diplomat was kidnapped.
The Canadian government sent the army to protect the houses of rich English-speaking West island Montrealers because bombs were being sent to their mailboxes.
So The Guardian (I know, I know) went and interviewed some people around the attacker, and they're all "oh but he was so quiet and calm and shy how could he do that".
@EtiennedeMartel well I think a key factor in becoming an Islamic terrorist is having your country and friends bombed to shit by Western nations for oil, but that's probably a topic for another day
this is going to get so much worse before it gets better
Yeah but is that the real reason or is that a pretext? Plenty of people sympathise with the victims in those regions and still don't go and bomb their countrymen.
I really think in order to become a terrorist you have to first be an alienated mess, which makes you vulnerable to groups who want to rebuild you into a weapon.
@EtiennedeMartel lol, if BF1 was historically accurate it would be a terribly shitty game, because who the fuck wants to play trench warfare.
Verdun, the Game
What a piece of crap. You'd have two modes. One is firing artillery from afar at immobile targets for hours on end. The other is getting blown to pieces by artillery for hours on end.
@BoundaryImposition Islamic terrorism predates interest in oil by several centuries, but I guess you're as unlikely to let facts get in the way of your beliefs as I am to let them get in the way of humor.
@EtiennedeMartel I think it's important to note that these people don't think of "their countrymen" as their countrymen. Their countrymen are the ones they probably never met and never had any impact in their lifes, but happen to be biologically and ethnically related.
@EtiennedeMartel Islam, however, is nearly unique in one respect: it combines polygamy (polygyny, to be specific) with a strong emphasis on girls being virgins when they get married. For most average teenagers, getting laid is the single most important point in life--put all those together, and your average Islamic teenage boy knows his only chance to ever get laid is to die as a martyr. Makes it a lot easier to sell the notion of becoming a suicide bomber.
@R.MartinhoFernandes As far as I know, there's essentially universal agreement that anal sex is prohibited by Islam as well (so, at best, it's a matter of being more difficult to detect/enforce).
> "We were not out to win over the Lisp programmers; we were after the C++ programmers. We managed to drag a lot of them about halfway to Lisp." > — Guy Steele, Java spec co-author
Yeah, but a lot of the time you end up building objects to support other objects because you just can't do procedural code. Java generics are okay but don't work as well as they could.
@VermillionAzure If you think it's fine, you apparently don't know it very well (or maybe, just don't know anything else well enough to evaluate it meaningfully).
I suppose, in fairness, I should add that there are a lot of tools for Java that do a fair job of covering up many of its worst deficiencies as a language. The language is awful nonetheless.
It just seemed to be a lot easier to do stuff with Java
Like, I didn't know any Java but I could do multithreading and image processing with a library hook-in and the hooking-up of things went relatively smoothly
If I had to do the same thing with C++ I'd end up dying several times
@Aaron3468 At least for any practical purpose, C++ has never had a modern linking system. The linking that implicitly guides the standard was basically obsolete long before C++ came along. That's part of what has helped make C++ successful though--you can meet its requirements on a system that doesn't have sophisticated linking. At the same time, I can certainly empathize with the fact that it does little (nothing?) to take advantage of better linking, even though it's usually available.
@JerryCoffin I mean... So we have systems that can handle exceptions and regex string searching and multithreaded models but not sophisticated linking?
@VermillionAzure Sure. exceptions and regexes are handled by the compiler and library. Dynamic linking (for one obvious example) is at least normally handled by the OS. So, if you take libc++ and compile it for VxWorks (for one concrete example) you get regexes, multithreading, and pretty limited linking. In Linux terms, its dynamic linking is more like loading a kernel module than it is like using dlload/dlsym/etc.
@VermillionAzure Stronger? <sniffs arm pit> Starting to get late in the day, but my still seems to be holding up fairly well....
@VermillionAzure At least offhand, I don't think I know any Kelly Clarkson songs (but the name sounds familiar, so there are probably a few songs I'd at least sort-of recognize, even if I don't know who sings them).
@VermillionAzure The line: "From life's school of war: what does not kill me makes me stronger [...]", is from Friedrich Nietzsche's Twilight of the Idols. Unless Kelly Clarkson is a lot older than I expect, it predates her by at least several decades.
@VermillionAzure The paraphrasing: "That which does not kill us makes us stronger" was apparently by none other than Richard Nixon, so that's at least 20th century. :-)
It is a (mildly) interesting progression, from concern for "me" to "us" to "you". Maybe we really are becoming somewhat less selfish as as society (or maybe it's an irrelevant matter of phrasing).