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21. Julio 2009, 19:10:05
gogul 
Temo: Re:
(V): Thanks man. You know I like these islands northwest of here :)

22. Julio 2009, 00:05:12
Bernice 
Temo: I know it isnt politics, but.......
Modifita de Bernice (22. Julio 2009, 00:06:41)
what do you think of "cyber bullying?"

A 14 yo school girl committed suicide last friday night after being bullied on the internet.....the Govt. is now investigating what can be done about "bullying" on the internet.

**I'm sorry about bringing it here but couldnt think of anywhere else it would be accepted"**

22. Julio 2009, 00:22:04
Übergeek 바둑이 
Temo: Re: I know it isnt politics, but.......
Bernice:
Do you have a link that might give more details? I am wondering if she was also being bullied in school or in her neighborhood.

We know that in the Internet there is as much if not worse predatory behaviour than there is outside the Internet. Anonimity can provide bullies with a way to shield their actions.

I am curious because if she was being bullied, would just stop using the Internet be easier than suicide? Obviously there were other factors involved besides bullying. I imagine that maybe she was suffering from depression, or she felt that there was no adult she could turn to for help.

As with many cases of bullying, it probably was done by one of her peers. It is probably why she felt it was so devastating. It is quite likely that the problem spread outside just the Internet. Kids who commit suicide because of bullying are often being victimized by several people and in a way that humiliates them physically and emotionally before their peers.

I think that the government would have a hard time regulating this. In a school or neighborhood a bully can potentially be charged with assault, but in the Internet a defense lawyer would simply argue that the girl should just have stopped logging in. As with other forms of bullying, educating children on not doing it and on defending themselves from bullies is probably the only thing the government could do.

22. Julio 2009, 00:30:07
Bernice 
Temo: Re: I know it isnt politics, but.......
Übergeek 바둑이: she was bullied via the internet and also her school from what I can see.....I will try and find a link.

22. Julio 2009, 00:32:05
Bwild 
Temo: Re: I know it isnt politics, but.......
Übergeek 바둑이: so much for parental guidance.

22. Julio 2009, 00:32:25
Bernice 
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,25817632-2862,00.html

here is the link ....I didnt realise that 4 teenagers from the same school had committed hari-kari.....so sad.

22. Julio 2009, 00:47:10
Übergeek 바둑이 
In case the link below does not work for some of you:
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,25817632-2862,00.html

Apparently the problem of cyberbullying has been on the increase in some Australian high schools. I think that in cases where victims are driven to suicide the bullying has been going on for long periods of time and outside of the Internet. The Internet seems to become an aggravating factor and ity is used as a further avenue to victimize those already being bullied in schools.

It seems that the government in Australia is studying the problem and trying to help parents and teachers identify the problem. In one of the stories in that same newspaper it said that teens were using Facebook as a way to bully other children and as a way to spread malicious gossip against their teachers.

I think the only way to deal with this is for parents to pay close attention to what their kids do online. I see no other way to prevent this because once kids are out of school their actions are beyond the control of their teachers.

22. Julio 2009, 00:49:45
Bernice 
Temo: Re:
Modifita de Bernice (22. Julio 2009, 00:50:39)
Übergeek 바둑이: It must be a "sign of the times", but what we have read about teenagers in other parts of the world for so long now seems to be happening in Australia....perhaps it is worse when it happens "in our own backyard"


***and thanks for editing the link***

22. Julio 2009, 07:59:35
Ferris Bueller 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
Artful Dodger:  Well, I'm glad u can recognize Cronkite's ability to report the news w/out bias.

The author of the AIM commentary was obviously hostile towards WC for expressing his opinion on the Vietnam War during his reporting days, one of the few times WC expressed an opinion on the air.  The commentary was thus laced with distortions & quotes taken out of context.  No one questions that WC's personal views were liberal leaning, and I'm perfectly fine w/ that.  But to claim he was in league w/ the old Soviet Union, for example, is quite a distortion IMHO.

As far as defeating people in the so-called "war of ideas", I cite Rush Limbaugh, Bill O'Reilly, Glenn Beck & other darlings of the far right as targets for defeat.

22. Julio 2009, 08:10:40
Ferris Bueller 
Temo: Re:
Übergeek 바둑이:  Bullying is a big problem in the US.  Some states have passed laws against it.  Emails & online behavior can be included in the evidence.  I don't know who much it is being enforced & how effective they are.  But, u are correct, it's important for parents to be in touch w/ their kids behavior - both online or off.

22. Julio 2009, 09:08:16
Mort 
Temo: Re:
Ferris Bueller: Some states! Here at school there is a country wide ban. It is not acceptable. Also the rules (due to incidents) do extend into the realm of the internet, yet such rules were already there in some respects re the ban on internet stalking and other cyber crimes. Such as spreading hate and 'isms to which several people have found themselves before the beak.

22. Julio 2009, 09:34:05
Snoopy 
Temo: Re:
(V): it may be not acceptable but it still goes on

children can be very cruel to each other esp now we live in the must be better than the Jones age

22. Julio 2009, 10:42:02
Mort 
Temo: Re:
Imsoaddicted: Some may live in the "better than the Jones age" but not all. And quite frankly, I feel much (from what I've seen/heard) does not extend from that but from pure frustration of the bullies. Getting attention can give rise to some strange and unfortunate disturbances.

22. Julio 2009, 11:57:01
gogul 
Most countries have offices where problems of this kind can be reported. Once reported these offices should move social workers or this kind, but they don't do nothing and let this happen. Send emails to these offices if you see bulling happening in your country. I know a lot of offices which only serve to place lazy boys and girls from the upper class.

22. Julio 2009, 16:16:30
gogul 
Modifita de gogul (22. Julio 2009, 16:19:54)
It is 'old tabacco' saying that intel' co-work didn't work during the Bush-Administration. Now, who did let the Bushies walk into the trap? The thesis that the 9/11-terrorists were hosted by sombody able to 'shroud' them to the disabled US-intel, it's possible.

Model: - The CIA is knocked out allready. -Saudis talk out (intellike), look, our black sheep is puting things togheter, looks like a massive thing. -Agents confirm at place. -Computerspecialists get gained for the shield. -The Bushadministration is indeed surprised. -Now, after 9/11, it's up to the character of Bush and co.

22. Julio 2009, 20:10:08
Papa Zoom 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
Ferris Bueller:  Glen Beck is one of few that is making sense of the mess that the democrats are shoving down the throats of people in the US.  Rush is far more radical than either Beck or O'Reilly.  O'Reilly shouts a bit but for the most part his views are sensible.

22. Julio 2009, 21:22:53
Mort 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
Artful Dodger: But didn't the people of the USA know before hand what your Pres's plans were, and as such "shoving" is not true as they elected him knowing his ideas?

22. Julio 2009, 21:42:01
Czuch 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
(V): Heres the thing.... to get elected, he got a majority, but to get his initiatives passed, he needs to convince more people, many who did not vote for him, not to mention, those who voted for him based on one or two issues... IE, many black voters voted for him simply for the sake of electing the first black man.... now he has to convince them to support certain actions, and some of the tactics used for this include "shoving them down our throat". For example, telling us there is an crisis or emergency, and that any inaction will only make things worse. Most people were signing legislation without even reading it, the same with global warming, some big tipping point where it will be too late if we dont support drastic measures straight away.


If food is appetizing, and tasty, it doesnt need to be crammed down ones throat to get them to eat it... same with good policy, if it is good legislation, then a few days or weeks to actually read it couldnt hurt then?


You make it sound like just having been voted in with a simple low majority gives him a blank check to do whatever he pleases, and we should know what to expect based on promises, no questions asked?

22. Julio 2009, 21:50:14
Mort 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
Czuch: Thing is.. many country's in the western world, etc are doing the same.

If it was such a bad idea, why are all these governments doing it?

No questions asked.... Please.. it is our right to ask questions, governments are supposed to be accountable to the people... even if they try and be above the law.

(that's a joke at a recent Parliament decision )

Now. Being in the position where your Pres is not republican and you are questioning him. How do you now stand on not questioning your Pres and that he is always right?

23. Julio 2009, 00:04:29
Papa Zoom 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
(V):  Not true.   The details were never fully known.  Like most presidents, he's already broken many promises. 

23. Julio 2009, 04:07:04
Czuch 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
(V): I get your point... I do remember saying that since our representatives voted for the war in Iraq etc.... now support it... blah blah blah.... so thats what you are trying to say, I get it.

I dont think that war was "crammed down our throats" but some would disagree....


I still believe that history will bear out the good a right of the Iraq war, and the wrong of a more socialist US


I can say this... the old "everyone else is doing it" argument, that one just doesnt sit right with me

I dont think the US got to where it got, so far and so fast, following the crowd

23. Julio 2009, 04:47:37
Papa Zoom 
Temo: Even Fox News gets zapped by AIM ;)

23. Julio 2009, 07:45:38
Übergeek 바둑이 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
Czuch:

> You make it sound like just having been voted in with a simple low majority
> gives him a blank check to do whatever he pleases, and we should know
> what to expect based on promises, no questions asked?

Every democracy suffers from the same problem. People elect a president (or prime minister or whatever) and once they assume office they do whatever they want. Election promises are often good only for a short time, and once the election is over things change. The "will of the people" counts only for as long as it is politically or economically convenient to those in power.

For this reason I see democracy as a process in which people vote to chose their dictator. There are three main differences between modern democracy and traditional dictatorship.

The first is that the dictator does not have absolute power. He must convince those that oppose him that his ideas are sound and viable. That is the point of congress, senate, parliament, etc.

Second, the dictator is not there forever but only for as long as he can be reelected. In some countries people curtail the length of the dictators stay in powere even more than in the US. For example, many Latin American countries do not allow reelection at all. Others, like Canada, allow as many reelections as possible as long as the political party in power obeys constitutional law.

Third, the dictator must at least pretend to make an effort to follow the people's will and avoid oppressing the people. The dictator does not have to follow the will of the people and more often than not external influences from wealthy and powerful individuals count more. (For example, lobbyists, special interest groups, etc.)

Modern democracy is at best a crude attempt to solve a very old problem. How do you give people power and say in the government without removing all power from the rich and powerful? Modern democracy was born in Europe after the French Revolution, as a response to the people demanding a say in the government and going into revolution if their demands were not met.

The war in Iraq was not imposed or shoved down the throat of the American people. Just before the war 64% of the American public supported the war, and George W. Bush had an approval rating of 82%, the highest in American history.

However, the war was imposed on the people of the UK. Over there over 80% of the population opposed the war. With under 20% support, Tony Blair's decision to go to war was entirely dictatorial.

In Canada 80% of the people opposed the war and Jean Chretien (the prime minister) refused to go to war. The Bush administration criticized him greatly, but he was merely following the will of the Canadian people.

As we can see, democracy is an imperfect system. A lot of people will dislike Obama now, but his actions are not different from those of many other presidents and prime ministers, both in and outside of the US. People who oppose him will feel he is imposing his will, but then many people felt the same way during the Bush administration.

23. Julio 2009, 12:15:32
Mort 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
Artful Dodger: Details are in essence never fully known till someone gets into office Art. You know that by nature of information that is at hand to a person running for office who is not in office. That's why the Pres in gets to inform the Pres coming in.

23. Julio 2009, 12:22:38
Mort 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
Czuch: The USA borrowed so much from others in terms of it's set up and constitution I would have to disagree. You still use 'governors'.. Isn't that a spin off from British Colonial rule of the Americas?? Your founders borrowed many ideas of how to govern from forms of democracy past and present... eg .. republic.

I cannot agree unless you show that as such in it's forming the USA is unique.

Even your science... look back at when the hydrogen fuel cell was invented!!

23. Julio 2009, 12:26:53
Mort 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
Übergeek 바둑이: Tony Blair made Saddam's threat capability out to be worse than it was to parliament. That's the only way the war was passed.

And yes... Millions marched in peaceful protest regarding the war. We didn't want our troops fighting in a war that just didn't make sense as to the reasons being forwarded by our government.

23. Julio 2009, 14:51:53
gogul 
Modifita de gogul (23. Julio 2009, 14:53:18)
The biggest problem with every goverment is that they are not decent and full of thieves. Funny that governments ask for respect where none is deserved. What makes a Nicolas Sarcozy think that he deserves respect for example? Is it because he was strong in hiding french money in switzerland? Remember when this joke (Sarcozy) got angry because a reasonable person from the people refused to shake his hand? Well, Sarcozy is criminal enough to be put to jail till the end of his days.

23. Julio 2009, 14:55:16
gogul 
Now that banks are paying back their credits, is Obama thinking about homeless people now?

23. Julio 2009, 14:58:52
gogul 
Temo: Re:
gogul: Well I don't care. I loved my times as homeless.

23. Julio 2009, 15:05:01
gogul 
Governments care about their elites. Fine. I govern the homeless. Laugh at the elite.

23. Julio 2009, 15:23:22
gogul 
Temo: Re: Even Fox News gets zapped by AIM ;)
Artful Dodger: Arni is not welcome in Austria anymore. Keep this opportunist where he is.

23. Julio 2009, 15:28:04
gogul 
AliforniaCalifornia with the reputation of everything is fine.


For 2.5 % of the residents.

23. Julio 2009, 15:38:28
gogul 
Nevadas goldrush. What a mess. They even dare to argue tha new techniologies for a better environmet need gold. You allow suck a joke? Gold is recyclable. Take a look at the fingerring of your lady.

23. Julio 2009, 15:46:17
gogul 
Obama is just a representative of the US, more or less powerless, exept if it's his choice to stress the world.

23. Julio 2009, 16:13:06
gogul 
Republicanism is a social movement. The Republicans, a party of traitors.

23. Julio 2009, 16:51:27
Papa Zoom 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
(V): The point is that now that his ideas are coming to light, they are falling out of favor with the American people. People that mattered in the election of Obama are now having second thoughts. If the trend keeps up, there will be a shake up in Washington in 2010. And in 2012 the Republicans will regain the White House. These ideas are too radical for the American people. Except those on the far left who love his ideas.

23. Julio 2009, 16:58:52
Übergeek 바둑이 
Temo: Re:
Modifita de Übergeek 바둑이 (23. Julio 2009, 17:15:26)
gogul:

> Republicanism is a social movement. The Republicans, a party of traitors.

I think that passing a simple condemnation of right wing republicanism is rather unfair. While I disagree with many of the things that Republicans (or Conservatives here in Canada and England) stand for, their place in history is different from what many people think. While the "neoconservatives" under George W. Bush are seen in a very negative light outside of the US, the history of the Republican Party is very interesting.

Back in the mid-19th century the Unites States had 3 political parties, and those were divided into factions:

The Whigs were a political party that followed the ideas of John Quincy Admas and they favored the modernization of industry and the banking system. Abraham Lincoln joined this party in 1832 and in 1837 he started campaigning against slavery.

The Republicans were divided into two camps. The "radical REpublicans" believed in agressive modernization of industry and in punishing the souther states harshly in accounts of slavery and the civil war. The "moderate Republicans" believed in a more lenient approach with the south and work to end slavery by reconstruction after the civil war.

The Democrats were divided into the "northern democrats" who favored an end of slavery but who refused to support war against the Confederacy. The "southern democrats" were the dominant political party in the south and they campaigned and fought to keep slavery alive.

Abraham Lincoln joined the Republican Party in 1856 and in 1861 he assumed office as the 16th president of the United States. Abraham Lincoln was extremely influential in the early development of the Republican Party and the ideological basis that led to the end of slavery. Abraham Lincoln also opposed the Mexican-American War and he saw that war as illegal and a form to grab land from Mexico through military expansion.

Lincoln's brilliance as a politician was based on his ability to reconcile several aspects of American politics at the time. He convinced the northern Democrats to stay out of the war, while he held off the aggressive radical Republicans who wanted the south crushed mercilessly. At the same time he moved popular support towards the moderate Republicans who wanted modernization and an end to slavery without crushing the south. As a Republican, Abraham Lincoln was without question the most brilliant politician the US had in the second half of the 19th century.

After the war the Republican party led reconstruction efforts and fought off the Ku Klux Klan which at the time had broad support through the south. The Republican Party came to dominate American politics through the second half of the 19th century.

It is very interesting because in the 19th century the southern states were dominated by the Democrats, while in more recent times the Republicans attract much of the vote in that part of the US.

The change in Republican politics started at around the time of Theodore Roosevelt. He had been Secretary of the Navy during the Spanish-American War and the expansion of American power into places like Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Phillippines and Panama gave him a view of the world in which American naval superiority was the best way to ensure that American political and economic interests were protected outside the US. It is out of his ideological stance that the Republican Party changed its main ideological basis from the 19th century moderates to the more radical views that we see today in the "neoconservatives".

During Theodore Roosevelt's presidency (1901-1909) there was a change in the Democrats too. Many of the "progressives" inside the Republican party defected to the democratic party in view of the rise in more radical Republicanism. This led to the defeat of the Republicans in 1912 when Woodrow Wilson became president under the Democrat Ticket.

As you can see, the Republicans were never quite the same way we see them today. Neither were the Democrats. The Republicans were moderate and became radical. The Democrats were reactionary and became progressive.

23. Julio 2009, 18:39:04
Mort 
Temo: Re: Ok, he's been dead long enough
Artful Dodger: Which ideas in particular are too radical? Most things are not new in politics, just revamped.

And if I may say so, a problem with politics is such that it is a race to be in power rather then service of the people. I see that your gov suffers from a problem like ours. Transparency.

23. Julio 2009, 18:43:20
Mort 
Temo: Re:
Übergeek 바둑이: So basically if the Republican party were to be as it was, it'd have to drop it's radical approach. Also that the progressive movement within Democrats is of a Republican origin!!

Strange old world!

23. Julio 2009, 19:48:19
gogul 
Temo: Re:
Übergeek 바둑이: Thanks for your elaborations. I want to underline that i don't condemn republicanism, not at all. I just don't see any. Take no matter what. Trickle down, if you talk about trickling, you talk about drops, right? And the dimension of treason is all the water you can think of for the elite, and drops for the rest. This is a treason to the republican idea, I want to see them educate (well, that is definitly not what todays republicans are able to, younger people), there is enough room for everyone to swim in the ponds.

23. Julio 2009, 19:58:59
Snoopy 
Temo: great story on how to complain to big companies

23. Julio 2009, 20:07:13
gogul 
If only I could see tv from there. What is about this woman who tells in the living rooms that she almost died because of the Canadian healtcare, and that's why Obamas healthcare challenges have to get stopped. What you really need to stop is the lobbying. It's a theft the courrent system, who wants to keep that theft alive? It's a theft here, the medication is much too expensive. Look, if I see a republican saying that health insurance is not nessessary, all we need if affordable healthcare (docs, hospitals, therapies, dents), now that would be interesting. But they seem to want both, no health security and expensive healthcare.
Spots like the mentioned are forbidden here.

23. Julio 2009, 20:14:53
gogul 
Temo: Re: great story on how to complain to big companies
Imsoaddicted: I can't see the videos now. When I complain, I send copies to the press and who it might concern and whom it might interest.

America has a strange paper governance culture. Forget it, its internet age.

23. Julio 2009, 20:15:57
Mort 
Temo: Re:
gogul: I cannot understand why certain Republican factions want to keep a health system that is so expensive. Those here are moaning about spending money, yet at the same time supporting a system that if changed would save the USA people so much money and deliver a more comprehensive health system in which (one of the options) everyone working pays a contribution. Also the right (if the UK style is used) to have a private medical insurance is still intact and also that the health companies would have to remember the oath of the health trade and not that of the dollar.

What is the problem with this??

23. Julio 2009, 20:29:25
gogul 
Temo: Re:
(V): Its getting very complex. What's happening in the health branch has global impact. All I care is if my housedocis happy, and he's not yet.

23. Julio 2009, 20:34:34
gogul 
Also, I support a palliative end. I think about the moment when a doc in white tells me that he can offer me 10 more years. I wish I can die then. Daily work. I move a lot every day, I hope it'll pay off.

23. Julio 2009, 20:35:44
Mort 
Temo: Re:
gogul: Of course it does.. billions wasted every year, when that money could be in the pockets of the people of America. And as such (knowing that many Americans are generous people) lost to those who have need, whether internal or external.

23. Julio 2009, 20:39:54
gogul 
Temo: Re:
(V): Yes. What I ment to say is that Obama might change more in a year with Swiss pharmaceutics as Switzerland was able to in 10 years

23. Julio 2009, 22:01:28
Übergeek 바둑이 
Temo: Healthcare cost
Modifita de Übergeek 바둑이 (23. Julio 2009, 22:06:25)
I think the first thing we have to notice is that all over the world, regardless of which country or culture, there could be free health care for everyone, and enough food for everyone, if we stopped wasting money on weapons.

I noticed that in the US (I might be wrong in this) those who oppose universal health care complain about its cost and those same people said nothing when the likes of Haliburton was overcharging the American public for the war effort. Money wasted in weapons and war is money that is not going to health care or education or more useful things. The $38,000 toilet in some army barracks points to a wasteful war economy and a general lack of concern for what happens to the poor of the world when so much of our money goes into war.

Anybody who says that somebody nearly died in Canada because of the health care system here is just using excuses to undermine the health care system. Living here in Canada I can say that we have one of the best health care systems in the world. It is universally available and everyone, rich or poor, can have excellent care. The big problem here is that when the Canadian version of Reaganomics hit Canada in the 1980s and 1990s, the government cut funding to hospitals. A lot of medical staff lost their jobs and many hospital beds closed down. Now the problem is that those beds need to be restored, and the government is trying to weasel its way out of paying for it. Of course, they have no problem wasting billions in Afghanistan!

Because there are less hospital beds, people have to wait for operations and other medical procedures. I wish those people would go developing countries where being poor means you will never be able to afford an operation at all. If those people who complain received a bill for the actual costs of the operation, they would die of a heart attack. It says something when a $20,000 operation is given to you for only $42 per month. No wonder medical insurers want to avoid the universal health care system like a plague.

24. Julio 2009, 10:10:49
gogul 
Wasting money on weapons is one obvious thing. Only a little fraction of them would be enough to destroy the whole earth, a enormous waste regardless to reality. Dilutions like these have been constructed in countless areas, and the energy invested to solve the problems within these delutions is a waste of time too, simply destroy it. People who live their normal life don't have to suffer while the world walks from oversizing to real needs. All we need, we have it, what a beautiful world.

What I don't like is that not even greedy tycoons have to suffer. For them it's like having 1000 dishes on the table, allthough a soup, main dish and dessert is all they deserve. Our justice is ineffectve if I comes to these persons, I don't accept this. I am almost inclined to go over to fist law. I swear vilely allready it's awful and I shit and vomit on the institutions.

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