@TonyTheLion Then do the same with people who smoke, people who drink more than you'd like, and people who participate in sports that have high injury rates (i.e., most of them). People whose parents have inheritable diseases probably need to chip in quite a bit extra too.
@TonyTheLion The problem with taxing or penalizing fat people is that some elements are biologically-engrained and beyond control. Not everyone is a mesomorph who can drop weight just by eating chicken for two weeks
@Drise You know, it got less and less funny for me, too. The thing is, I tend to react sarcastically to someone jumping out of their suit. You can complain about that, of course, but I don't see how that's worse than the room going quite because everyone turns away embarrassed.
@TonyTheLion He's proving it's absurdity, in that, we as a society know of many other things that cause people to express negative, and indeed specifically, addictive, behaviour that they cannot control.
and you present no evidence that people cannot become addicted to food, or any other of many potential physical and biological causes.
@DeadMG I think some people have enough willpower to do it, but those with the problem are those without the willpower to stop themselves, so your point is valid.
@DeadMG oh well, if willpower has nothing to do with it, then it seems there's nothing that can be done about anything in your view. I feel sorry for you.
@DeadMG Being fair, willpower does have something to do with it. I've seen a couple of overweight teenagers transform themselves when they though (for example) that they could "get the girl" by doing so. It's still not effective as a general rule though.
@DeadMG could do that, but if a person whom has an obesity problem has to wait for that to happen, he may wait for a long time. Why not try to find something that the person himself can do, to help alleviate the problem?
Well, since only a few here know this: I have a BMI above 30, and I believe I am therefore considered obese. I frequently joke about my potbelly, though. It's mine, it's my fault I have it, and I think others have the right to joke about it. Now bring them on... :)
@JerryCoffin I don't mean to say that losing weight by willpower is equivalent to unprovoked murder, of course. I'm merely saying that, the ability of a tiny fraction to do such things is not really relevant, and it's been demonstrated time and time again that huge majorities of the general population are not capable of such.
@DeadMG but by saying that its outside of his control, you're essentially saying that this person can do nothing about his situation and is doomed. I don't know, but that would make me depressed if I had to hear that if I were an obese person. So, evidence or not, I'm sure there's programs out there to help an obese person lose weight.
I think controls on advertising are primarily a way for politicians to be able to say "see, we're doing something", while actually doing little or nothing. In the US, there have been controls on advertising tobacco products for decades now, but it seems largely ineffective -- it's mostly changed how the money changes hands, and (unsurprisingly) increased the amount spent on lobbying, so more goes directly to the politicians.
so if you drop a bullet and you fire it out of a gun, they will hit the ground due to gravity at exactly the same time (compensating for earth curvature and such).
@JerryCoffin Actually, this is one of the things the Merkin government got right long before the European ones. If you think your government was ineffective in making smoking unattractive, you should have visited Europe in the 90s. Really, when I returned to Germany from a 6 months stay, I first noticed how bad a problem smoking was back then in Germany.
@DeadMG I was merely trying to make the point that telling someone nothing can be done about a situation isn't going to help them. If you're trying to find a solution for someone, at least give them something in their control.
@DeadMG Well, my point is that I think most people probably are capable of such things -- but most people lack the motivation, and finding the motivation that will work for any particular person is non-trivial (and if they're depressed enough, for one example, you'll probably have to cure a lot of other things before any such motivation will even exist for them).
the problem is that the question of whether or not food product XYZ is actually good for you really depends on what your exact nutritional needs are and what the rest of your diet is like.
and it's easy for marketers to sprinkle in a little fruit, or a few vitamins, and pretend that it's healthy when actually it's even worse, for example.
@sbi Oh, don't get me wrong: there's no question it's done some good. If they'd honestly wanted to do something useful, however, smoking would be almost a historical footnote by now. Instead of saying "you must be 18 to buy tobacco", change the law so next 1 Jan (or whatever) the date when you have to have been born stays the same. By now, the youngest smokers would be ~60, and within another 40 years (or so) it would be gone.
@TonyTheLion The point is that sometimes there is not much under control. That is no excuse not to live a healthy lifestyle, but it does not help to fine people who have no control over their genetics
@TonyTheLion Yes -- immense amounts. At least in the US, many of the states where it's biggest would almost certainly have extreme economic problems without it too.
@JerryCoffin In order to do that, a government must be elected to do so. So people need to want them to do that. If that's the case, however, why don't the people simply do themselves what they want to be done?
The fact that government X doesn't do Y usually correlates with the people who selected them not wanting Y.
@JerryCoffin It's different in Europe, though, where public health insurance is more common. I bet that smoking costs Germany much more than the tax on tobacco gains.
all that disposable income that goes on smoking right now would still be spent, or put into the banking system or some other worthwhile cause- that money would not disappear.
@sbi It's not always the people in general -- a fairly small minority that's making enough money can exert a lot of influence. Yes, if the people in general really wanted to eliminate smoking, that influence wouldn't mean much -- but without a strong feeling in the opposite direction, it can maintain the status quo pretty easily.
call me crazy, but I think we should introduce a parallelism-influenced political structure.
@TonyTheLion Nah, they keep going because of fear.
our army is completely redundant and we could lose every single soldier and we'd all be better off for it, but we won't because the people would be too afraid.
@JerryCoffin The problem, IMO, isn't that people don't want it strongly enough, it's that most people are simply too dumb to make up their own mind. (See Sunny Delight, mentioned above.)
@sbi Very likely. I'm pretty sure it costs the US as a whole -- but the cost is spread over the whole country, and the benefit concentrated in a couple of states, so those states work very hard to protect their market.
@DeadMG No. They had their mind made up by the tabloids. Had those not picked up the story, they woudn't have changed their minds. I mean, it's not exactly hard to look at a bottle's label and see what's in there. FFS, if this was mostly water & corn syrup, with 5% of juice, it must have been fucking hard not to simply taste that it's just iced shit.
@sbi The other thing to keep in mind is that in terms of percentages, most vitamins (for example) make up only a minute percentage, even of foods that really are quite healthy. A liter bottle of a drink that really is healthy probably still doesn't have more than a gram or so of vitamins...
@DeadMG "...they didn't really think about it." Which is exactly my point.
@JerryCoffin I guess they would have to add a lot of water and very little syrup that it wouldn't taste unhealthy in my book.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, you said so. I disagreed. Now you saying that again, I feel obliged to again express my disagreement. I won't take the trouble to back it up this time, again, though. :)
@sbi My point was, the amount of vitamins it contained would always be so small that it could taste about the same, regardless of how good or bad it was (at least in terms of vitamin content -- but being aimed at kids, would have a lot of sugar either way).
I think it's the same with that "Nimm 2" ("take 2") candy, they sell in Germany. It's just glucose with very little juice, and it's advertised as "nibbling healthy vitamins". They get constantly criticized for cheating on their audience, and I just don't get it. How could you ever think giving drops to your kids could be considered healthy? Yet, there are many who do...
Well, it's past 2:30am here, I have little kids who will want me to be awake way too early (for vacation) in the morning, plus there's a few things I'll have to do tomorrow (while having said kids in tow) before I get visitors in the evening. So I should really do this laundry now I keep putting off for hours, and then call it a day.
@TonyTheLion I think it's less about stupidity that self delusion -- most probably know better, but convince themselves that the kids like it, and the ads say it's good, so why not...
It will effectively return your registry and other important bits back to the way they where before you installed all the software. After the restore you'll want to reinstall SP1 etc.
Well, obviously the system doesn't give a shit! :Đ Jokes aside, just a naked form. Sexy, but naked. Preparing to offload it all soon, dump the db, load the db and shit.
You can dump the database, but it's pretty secure. Unless you make it publicly available with a hefty amount of work, nobody can have it besides you. If I'd decoded your question correctly, that is.
@DomagojPandža my parents got a dog recently, looks just like a wookie
@DeadMG don't be a dick, sure it's not the smartest of questions, but at least he is not accusing us of being idiots because we can't decipher what he is asking, yet...
So, I was bored yesterday and I fleshed out a little web app which craps out dynamic slideshows which animate when they move from one to another. Also, there's syntax highlighting. So you guys will be able to make slides presenting your tremendous work to the Kyromasses. Part of the wiki system.
Really, a retard could use it.
And syntax highlighting was only defined for C++ (with C++11 keyword additions). If anybody desires anything else, do it yourself, you cunts.
well, I've done a fair bit of work on the old windowing system... do you mind having a look over the code in my repo to see what you make of the general architecture I have got sort of sorted