I don't know how you handle it in England, but that second one would be blatantly unconstitutional in the US.
Maybe, but even if you don't like indeterminate prison sentences, don't just let him out. Give him a fixed sentence instead. The fact that he got an indeterminate one means the Judge would have given him a MINIMUM sentence of 10 years if he was serving a fixed sentence. So to let him out after just 3 when even his own lawyers admit he is pretty much guaranteed to re-offend? How is that justifiable?I don't know how you handle it in England, but that second one would be blatantly unconstitutional in the US.
Benefit number 26: I don't get the outrage.Posting this here because I don't want to bump the Zoey Quinn thread any more.
Female Gamers react to latest Feminist Frequency video
I've been vocal against the federal Department of Education and when I get to Congress, I'll work tirelessly to get rid of the unconstitutional department.
- Glenn
This isn't surprising in the slightest. Democrats are the ones most likely to be in power in large cities where gun violence is an issue (and to live in it and it's surrounding areas). It's not at all surprising that the people most affected by gun violence are also the ones with the harshest anti-gun legislation. Mind you, this isn't a statement of right or wrong.Over the last 2 years, every political alignment other than "liberal democrat" has increased its support for gun ownership rights.
http://www.people-press.org/2014/12/10/growing-public-support-for-gun-rights/
The media and the state's campaign of fear and the justice system emphatically stating "you can shoot anyone for any reason if you're skurred" are working perfectly.Over the last 2 years, every political alignment other than "liberal democrat" has increased its support for gun ownership rights.
http://www.people-press.org/2014/12/10/growing-public-support-for-gun-rights/
Yeah, but it's also likely most of the hostages would be dead. We don't exactly have a good track record of dealing with sieges (see: Ruby Ridge, Waco).Am I the only one to think that, if this incident in Sydney had happened in the United States, it would have been over an hour after it started?
the logic seems unsound for the reason you stated. I am all for equal hiring but you need to be physically capable of performing your job.NYFD is dropping its physical test requirements because not enough women are passing them, apparently.
http://nypost.com/2014/12/11/fdny-drops-physical-test-requirement-amid-low-female-hiring-rate/
Because I'm sure it'll be a comfort to everyone that they're being more inclusive when the 110 pound firefighter and the person he or she (they dropped it across the board, not just for women) is trying to carry down 4 flights of stairs die in the blaze.
Logic has nothing to do with the decision, unless the logic is "diversity trumps human lives."the logic seems unsound for the reason you stated. I am all for equal hiring but you need to be physically capable of performing your job.
That seems like it should be a problem too, and this is a further step in the wrong direction. I mean, even cops have fitness standards they have to meet every year, don't they?Going by a variety of news sources on that one, it seems like the only physical test being dropped as a requirement is the FST, which is a more strenuous version of the CPAT, which NY firefighters need to pass anyways. While they've had the FST for years as a grading system, it has only been a requirement for graduation for the last two years, and the passing requirements change every year because each new class gets the previous class' median time as the passing time to beat. So in effect, they're returning what was a secondary physical course back to what it was instead of a passing requirement.
I'm no firefighter, so more input on this one would be helpful, but this seems to come down to whether the CPAT is an insufficient physical test for the job. It's used across the country as a passing requirement for firefighters, so clearly there is some level of belief in its sufficiency. However, the local firefighter associations think that the CPAT is too lenient of a minimum standard, so that's the real question that needs answering.
It is also worth pointing out that NY firefighters never need to re-qualify for either the CPAT or FST once graduated. They only have to do a (relatively) minimal stair climb with a weighted vest once a year, which is much less than either one. So the whole "you're letting in people who can't physically do the job!" argument is somewhat diluted when that physical requirement (whose cut-off changes every year) goes away entirely once they're in the job.
You can generally tell by the number of 300 lb cops if the department has standards.That seems like it should be a problem too, and this is a further step in the wrong direction. I mean, even cops have fitness standards they have to meet every year, don't they?
I don't disagree at all that physical standards are necessary, I'm just saying that this isn't necessarily the "diversity run amuck!" bellwether that a bunch of the conservative blogs are touting the last couple days. Most of the stories I've seen that take this angle have no clue that the CPAT exists, let alone the differences between it and the FST.That seems like it should be a problem too, and this is a further step in the wrong direction. I mean, even cops have fitness standards they have to meet every year, don't they?
The shit has hit the fan. The Ruble is in freefall because the price of oil is plummeting, and oil's pretty much the only game in town for Russia. Gazprom's getting wiped out, have fired 25% of their workforce. Their national bank has raised the interest rate to 17%. Ouch.What the Hell is going on over there in Russia?
Suddenly I'm hearing about how the Russian Ruble is cratering so much that Apple is even closing their online store due to the volatility.
--Patrick
Why not? They have enough cash to abandon the country whenever they want... and they will. En-mass.And here I thought OPEC was just doing us a favor by trying to put all the frackers out of business.
Really, what I think is going on is that they see the writing on the wall about oil and are trying to wring all the money they can out of oil before it gets replaced with renewables over the next 10 years.
Now is probably NOT the best time to buy any property in Dubai.
--Patrick
Yes, exactly. Leaving behind all that infrastructure and real estate to rot until it is reclaimed by the Gulf since it will be too expensive to maintain for whomever comes afterwards.Why not? They have enough cash to abandon the country whenever they want... and they will. En-masse.
The chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. Bob Menendez, a Democrat and usual Obama ally, issued a scathing response to the prisoner swap that led to the release of Gross, a government contractor who has been held in a Cuban prison since 2009.
"President Obama's actions have vindicated the brutal behavior of the Cuban government," Menendez wrote Wednesday. "Trading Mr. Gross for three convicted criminals sets an extremely dangerous precedent. It invites dictatorial and rogue regimes to use Americans serving overseas as bargaining chips."