GasBandit
Staff member
NBC has announced it will pull the plug on BreakingNews tomorrow. I've been subscribed to their RSS feed almost since the beginning. This will be an irritation to me.
Why are their competitors allowed to use these horribly unsafe standards?So, after killing people with contaminated ice cream, Blue Bell creameries are asking to be allowed to go back to cheaper, less stringent product standards. Like the ones they were supposedly following when they killed people with listeria.
I guess the invisible hand of the market doesn't want to have to wash off listeria bacteria.
Because they haven't killed people with contaminated ice cream within the last year?Why are their competitors allowed to use these horribly unsafe standards?
So we should let all the other manufacturers roll the dice, and progressively move them to the more stringent regulations permanently as they screw up? Unless all new manufacturers fall directly to the more stringent standards, this seems like it would encourage shell games.Because they haven't killed people with contaminated ice cream within the last year?
Yeah, well, when you kill people with contaminated ice cream, you deserve to get a little bit more than a temporary time out. They fucked up hard and they should be under increased scrutiny because of it.Context:
http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2016/...return-testing-to-industry-norm/#.WGgnEX1JdMs
Blue Bell is requesting that it be allowed to return to normal levels of testing - testing levels used industry-wide. The fatal listeria outbreak that killed 3 in Kansas was in 2015, more than a year ago. There was a second listeria scare this year, but it turned out to not originate from the blue bell plant, but rather their cookie dough supplier, and Blue Bell caught it and recalled the product before there were any illnesses.
2 points I came away with reading that link Gas,Context:
http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2016/...return-testing-to-industry-norm/#.WGgnEX1JdMs
Blue Bell is requesting that it be allowed to return to normal levels of testing - testing levels used industry-wide. The fatal listeria outbreak that killed 3 in Kansas was in 2015, more than a year ago. There was a second listeria scare this year, but it turned out to not originate from the blue bell plant, but rather their cookie dough supplier, and Blue Bell caught it and recalled the product before there were any illnesses.
Thank you for expressing it better than drunk and angry me could.2 points I came away with reading that link Gas,
1) Blue Bell were given a $850,000 fine in July 2016 by the Texas State Dept of Health Services, $175,000 payed within 30 days the rest held in abeyance to be paid if Blue Bell fail to meet food safety requirements within the next 18 months. I'd want Blue Bell to be held to at minimum the same level of requirements throughout that 18 months, not get less stringent standards after 6 months. If Blue Bell wants to go back to the normal standards let them wait until this Texas fine is dealt with.
2) Blue Bell have had to destroy hundreds of thousands of cartons of ice cream due to pathogens being discovered in the plant, whereas under normal regs they would test the cartons & only destroy the cartons that failed. I admit I don't know how common these pathogens are in food production plants, the article doesn't say if they were in the areas of the plant where food production is actually happening, or if they are in high enough quantities to be considered hazardous to human health. I do know that Blue Bell want to go back to the normal standards because they admit to being unable to meet the standards they are currently under. That worries me.
And anyone under 25, too.Banning anyone over 60 from participating in politics in any capacity would be a good idea.
That doesn't matter, if his password was "l.,ostg0056456,m.nbd" they would have still gotten the password because he answered a phishing email.John Podesta's email password.... Was "password."
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/as...d-was-um-password-2017-01-04?siteid=rss&rss=1
This is going to be good. Show support for this and the political class basically kills itself and the real power of government moves to the staffers who don't get elected. Try to kill it and the populist monster they've created eats them alive.Senator Ted Cruz and Representative Ron DeSantis (both republicans) submitted a filing for a constitutional amendment for term limits for the house and senate.
http://thehill.com/blogs/floor-action/senate/312571-cruz-desantis-push-for-congressional-term-limits
In related news, Mitch McConnell is a crusty old dogshit.
Would those be the same staffers who hold all the power in the executive branch?This is going to be good. Show support for this and the political class basically kills itself and the real power of government moves to the staffers who don't get elected. Try to kill it and the populist monster they've created eats them alive.
You mean those staffers that left Donald Trump high and dry because they didn't want to be associated with his administration, forcing him to basically hire thousands of people on zero notice, none of which have the kind of experience that Obama's staffers did? It's no secret that many staffers stick around between administrations because replacing them basically fucks up anything they were working on beyond repair. It's actually really rare to see a total walkout like we had this time.[DOUBLEPOST=1483578324,1483578290][/DOUBLEPOST]Would those be the same staffers who hold all the power in the executive branch?
I could agree with this too.I'd also be in favor of forced retirement for staffers and lobbyists, too.
I don't believe that its happened since the Bill of Rights, but the amendment has to be written before voted on so people could put forth an amendment that does more than one task. Most of the ones we have are very singular in focus, considering how difficult it is to amend it's unlikely for pork to show up.As I read elsewhere - but I'm not at all sure how this works over in the USA so I could't say if this is actually true - this would open up the possibility to throw in several other amendments and changes to the Constitution, and using a "popular" idea to convince people would give lawmakers the opportunity to mess with the Amendments on several other topics as well - that is, explicitly make marriage between man and woman, all that sort of jazz. Any basis to that sort of claim?
Ya, "omnibus" amendments don't seem to be a thing for you guys after that first burst from the "Bill of Rights" set. Quick summary from wiki.I don't believe that its happened since the Bill of Rights, but the amendment has to be written before voted on so people could put forth an amendment that does more than one task. Most of the ones we have are very singular in focus, considering how difficult it is to amend it's unlikely for pork to show up.
If this was the opposite, 4 white guys doing this to a mentally disabled black guy would there be any shred of doubt that it would be treated as a hate crime? Of course not.Chicago Police detectives are questioning four African-Americans suspected of torturing a white mentally disabled man and recording the attack, while someone yelled “F— Trump!” and “F— white people!”
...
Several videos of the incident were posted on Facebook. In one of them, on a woman’s Facebook page, a man threatens the victim with a knife. Someone tells the victim, “kiss the floor, b—-!” and “nobody can help you anymore.” At one point, someone tells the man, “say ‘I love black people.’ ”
...
The politically motivated language may have been “stupid ranting and raving,” but police are looking into if the four were sincere and, if so, that could factor into potential hate crime charges, Duffin said.
If this was the opposite, I wouldn't think of the trial, conviction, and sentencing to be foregone conclusions like I do here. Justice will be served here, but reverse the races and I would throw up my arms and say "we'll see."If this was the opposite, 4 white guys doing this to a mentally disabled black guy would there be any shred of doubt that it would be treated as a hate crime? Of course not.
Because it's conventional media wisdom that only white people can be racist or commit hate crimes, of course.From the article: (any bolding/editing/etc is mine)
If this was the opposite, 4 white guys doing this to a mentally disabled black guy would there be any shred of doubt that it would be treated as a hate crime? Of course not.
So why are they hedging here? Since when is "if [they] were sincere" a criteria? Come up with your own conclusions. This is sickening.
No, Den had it right.Because it's conventional media wisdom that only white people can be racist or commit hate crimes, of course.
While I agree with you, you are also turning the discussion around on to why that might be, rather than why this horrific thing happened, seemingly downplaying it as not a big deal.If this was the opposite, I wouldn't think of the trial, conviction, and sentencing to be foregone conclusions like I do here. Justice will be served here, but reverse the races and I would throw up my arms and say "we'll see."