Completely awesome, completely random thing from Microsoft. I bought a couple.
Dude, that's fantastic. I'd love to put one on my macbook over the apple logo.
Completely awesome, completely random thing from Microsoft. I bought a couple.
Dude, that's fantastic. I'd love to put one on my macbook over the apple logo.
WTF is wrong with the pilots these days? First it was the Malaysian clusterf*ck then the GermansWing crushing in the Alps. :tdown:
You wouldn't have enough space for all you computer gears and you would have to move South because this tiny thing would certainly be hard to heat during Winter in any place where there's a Winter worth calling a Winter. I'm not sure you would appreciate the sanitary compromises regarding the toilet either and water supply in general for all common uses (shower, laundry, etc) must be a mess too.I spent a while today looking at plans for Tiny Houses. I think I'd be perfectly fine living in about 350 square feet, though I suspect my demand for electricity runs counter to a lot of the building practices for such a dwelling. I like the idea of a house I could hitch to a truck and move elsewhere.
I'd suggest Canada since there's a nearly identical Federal law that has been on the books since 1993 when it was signed into law by Bill Clinton.Indiana is not a good place to live. I'm relatively certain the current governor, in spite of signing the "Indiana is just peachy with bigotry" bill, will be re-elected.
I really do need to move someplace else.
Government may substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion only if it demonstrates that application of the burden to the person—
(1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and
(2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.
A governmental entity may substantially burden a person's exercise of religion only if the governmental entity demonstrates that application of the burden to the person: (1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and (2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.
I'd suggest Canada since there's a nearly identical Federal law that has been on the books since 1993 when it was signed into law by Bill Clinton.Indiana is not a good place to live. I'm relatively certain the current governor, in spite of signing the "Indiana is just peachy with bigotry" bill, will be re-elected.
I really do need to move someplace else.
Government may substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion only if it demonstrates that application of the burden to the person—
(1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and
(2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.
A governmental entity may substantially burden a person's exercise of religion only if the governmental entity demonstrates that application of the burden to the person: (1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and (2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.
In other news that's how state laws work.The Indiana law is explicitly different from other laws because it includes language overriding local statues.
And they can still sue and may win. The law isn't an automatic get out of trouble card. The federal version has been tested in court and the person refusing services doesn't win all the time.Communities like South Bend and Indianapolis that already included sexual preference as a protected class just had their laws invalidated. Those in smaller communities may now find that their local grocery or pharmacy will not allow them to partake of services.
In other news that's how state laws work.
And they can still sue and may win. The law isn't an automatic get out of trouble card. The federal version has been tested in court and the person refusing services doesn't win all the time.
Thinking about the best place for Merc : Las Vegas. Highest population ratio of strippers in the U.S. He would have quite a social life ;-)
Uh, what? What sort of hypothetical is that? The law is about the state taking action against individuals which isn't even close to your hypothetical.So basically if the city wants they can put up signs that Chinese cannot buy anything due to Buddhism? Maybe the Americans can introduce an Apartheid system.
In other news that's how state laws work.
Right, religious people shouldn't be bakers or photographers lest they potentially run afoul of the the militant gay community who want to use the gov't to bully those who don't approve of their personal decisions by claiming discrimination.And yes, Muslim taxi drivers should have to transport dogs if their passengers need them to do so and pharmacists should supply legal medication ordered by a physician. If your religion specifically precludes certain activities, either don't take a job that might ask you to do those things or at the very least don't complain when someone asks that you do them. Changing jobs and changing religions are both exercises of free will.
Right, religious people shouldn't be bakers or photographers lest they potentially run afoul of the the militant gay community who want to use the gov't to bully those who don't approve of their personal decisions by claiming discrimination.
Right, religious people shouldn't be bakers or photographers lest they potentially run afoul of the the militant gay community who want to use the gov't to bully those who don't approve of their personal decisions by claiming discrimination.
Right "interacting"... I think what you meant to say is attempted forced endorsement of.If your religion is so easily transgressed by interacting with the secular society, yes.
How small does the group of religious people who would object need to be to merit protection as a minority?
That's precisely what's not happening. You're living in a made up fantasy world. No one is demanding the secular world conform to their expectations (well except maybe those who want to impose Sharia law on everyone). These people want the ability to omit themselves from being forced to participate in or condone their behavior that they believe is a sin. There are some militant elements to the gay community who intentionally target people and organizations who are not accepting of their lifestyle to bully them and intimidate others rather than simply going to a baker, photographer, or whatever who will provide them the services they want. They claim discrimination and sick the state, local, or federal gov't on those people or organizations and end up putting the people out of business and possibly bankrupting them. This law and the others just like it in other states and the federal one offers the possibility (not a guarantee) of recourse against the discrimination claims.Who cares? No one is saying that religious people cannot observe their faith in their home or in their church. The issue here is that religious people are demanding that the secular world conform to their expectations, which is particularly ironic given the frequency with which religious beliefs stand at odds with one another.
That's so not what the law does. It offers the possibility of recourse against discrimination claims brought by the state or local gov't if the action was taken on religious grounds.whereas the Indiana law codifies the ability of any individual to blamelessly discriminate, so long as it is done on religious grounds.
Today was a good day. Picked up a Dell Studio 540 for free without a hard drive. Works great.
It's got a Core 2 Quad Q9400 @ 2.66GHz, 6GB DDR2-800 RAM, and a discrete Radeon HD 3650 or so. The grep output for lspci wasn't particularly specific, narrowing it down to anything from an HD 3650 to an HD 4580. I think I'm gonna call off the FX build, because this just gave me at least a stopgap measure for me to be able to save some more.
That's precisely what's not happening. You're living in a made up fantasy world. No one is demanding the secular world conform to their expectations (well except maybe those who want to impose Sharia law on everyone).
These people want the ability to omit themselves from being forced to participate in or condone their behavior that they believe is a sin.
There are some militant elements to the gay community who intentionally target people and organizations who are not accepting of their lifestyle to bully them and intimidate others rather than simply going to a baker, photographer, or whatever who will provide them the services they want.
They claim discrimination and sick the state, local, or federal gov't on those people or organizations and end up putting the people out of business and possibly bankrupting them. This law and the others just like it in other states and the federal one offers the possibility (not a guarantee) of recourse against the discrimination claims.
Your suggesting that they not be allowed to observe their faith outside their home or church. I'm sorry, but the Constitution doesn't guarantee the Citizenry freedom from religion (as in religious influence).