Officers Lose 243 Homeland Security Guns 125
In a screw up so big it could only be brought to you by the government or a famous athlete, 243 guns were lost by Homeland Security agencies between 2006 and 2008. 179 guns, were lost "because officers did not properly secure them," an inspector general report said. One of the worst examples of carelessness cites a customs officer who left a firearm in an idling vehicle in the parking lot of a convenience store. The vehicle was stolen while the officer was inside. "A local law enforcement officer later recovered the firearm from a suspected gang member and drug smuggler," the report said.
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It is hard to say if it makes them look stupid or hypocritical, without knowing the punishment for losing your gun. Apparently, since one officer at least recovered his from a gang member, it is not termination of employment.
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It is hard to say if it makes them look stupid or hypocritical, without knowing the punishment for losing your gun. Apparently, since one officer at least recovered his from a gang member, it is not termination of employment.
If people in that agency were fired for incompetence, there wouldn't be anybody left by now. So presumably the punishment is having to figure out a new way to annoy the general public.
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Uh.. what? (Score:3, Insightful)
by the government of a famous athlete
I'm sure you had a joke in there that you were dying to get out, but this makes less than no sense.
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A famous athlete who screwed up and had an embarrassing press conference just a few hours ago.
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A famous athlete who screwed up and had an embarrassing press conference just a few hours ago.
Dunno about this press conference but if you're talking about a famous athlete with a gun problem, my go-to choice would have been Arenas [cbs2chicago.com].
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He's talking about Tiger Woods. Reading the news doesn't hurt
Ok, I guess I must have missed the headline where Tiger Woods had formed his own government.
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Odd. The story reads "government or a famous athlete" here.
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It's quite simple (Score:3, Funny)
Only America has famous athletes (Look at David Beckham--came to the US to become famous). Only the US Goverment can make mistakes this hillariously collosal. Thus, only famous athletes' government (the US) can do this.
QED
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It's still a bad joke that he was dying to get out, but at least it makes slightly more sense.
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Sure, it does _now_.
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Sleeping? (Score:5, Funny)
The vehicle was stolen while the officer was inside.
Sleeping in the back seat again?
Hopefully that number also represents ... (Score:1)
the number of DHS officers who were fired as well.
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Re:More Proof of Government Incompetence (Score:5, Insightful)
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but based on my experience private companies hire lazy and incompnent employees as well.
This is true, but there is one key difference between private businesses and the government. If a private business hires bad employees and operates inefficiently it goes out of business (or at least it should, provided that the government doesn't bail them out). The government, on the other hand, cannot go out of business or disappear; it usually takes a very protracted period of bad performance for governments to be finally shown the door. Also, we can choose not to patronize bad businesses, but taxes are
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"If a private business hires bad employees and operates inefficiently it goes out of business...it usually takes a very protracted period of bad performance for governments to be finally shown the door."
So exactly what is the key difference? You just stated that both can go out of business, eventually. And don't forget that all of the crappy employees in business also happen to run the government. They are called citizens and we can't fire them.
"Also, we can choose not to patronize bad businesses, but ta
Re:More Proof of Government Incompetence (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:More Proof of Government Incompetence (Score:4, Interesting)
The DHS has a total of around 200,000 employees. The number of those who are actually armed (as opposed to sitting on their butts in an air conditioned office in D.C.) is significantly less. In a cursory search, I couldn't turn up any concrete numbers, but I imagine it's safe to say that probably 10% of DHS employees are actually "agents" of some type (Border Patrol, ATF, Air Marshals, etc). So that's 20,000 armed employees.
I don't see a 1% loss rate as "statistically insignificant" when you're talking about firearms lost through negligence.
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The DHS has a total of around 200,000 employees. The number of those who are actually armed (as opposed to sitting on their butts in an air conditioned office in D.C.) is significantly less. In a cursory search, I couldn't turn up any concrete numbers, but I imagine it's safe to say that probably 10% of DHS employees are actually "agents" of some type (Border Patrol, ATF, Air Marshals, etc). So that's 20,000 armed employees.
I don't see a 1% loss rate as "statistically insignificant" when you're talking about firearms lost through negligence.
Really? How about one of those 1% guns was used in a crime that killed you, or your wife/husband/kid/mom?
Its not about statistics, it's about reality.
Homeland Security is supposed to be protecting us, yet they can NOT even secure their own guns. don't care if it's just 1% of the guns that went missing. I'm sure there was a 1% chance that the World Tradecenter would get ran into by an airplane.
lets look at it this way, way less then 1% of america died on 9/11. Guess we should just chalk it up to life a
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The DHS has a total of around 200,000 employees. The number of those who are actually armed (as opposed to sitting on their butts in an air conditioned office in D.C.) is significantly less. In a cursory search, I couldn't turn up any concrete numbers, but I imagine it's safe to say that probably 10% of DHS employees are actually "agents" of some type (Border Patrol, ATF, Air Marshals, etc). So that's 20,000 armed employees.
I don't see a 1% loss rate as "statistically insignificant" when you're talking about firearms lost through negligence.
Really? How about one of those 1% guns was used in a crime that killed you, or your wife/husband/kid/mom?
Its not about statistics, it's about reality.
Homeland Security is supposed to be protecting us, yet they can NOT even secure their own guns. don't care if it's just 1% of the guns that went missing. I'm sure there was a 1% chance that the World Tradecenter would get ran into by an airplane.
lets look at it this way, way less then 1% of america died on 9/11. Guess we should just chalk it up to life and move on, huh?
Certainly any loss is bad, but the reality is humans won't be
perfect and there will be loss/theft issues with anything, weapons
included. It should also be noted that ~3/4 (179) of the loss was
due to 'weapons not being properly secured' (i.e. the officer's
fault). It would be nice if law enforcement didn't need firearms,
but that isn't realistic in the U.S. either. I did want to add some
more numbers to the discussion. The only numbers I could find in a
quick search are from CBS in 2008,
http://www.etsy.com/c [etsy.com]
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You'll have to explain to me how losing a statistically insiginficant number of weapons constitutes proof of government incompetence. Not that I necessarily assume the government is competent, mind you, but losing 250 out of a total number of guns that must be in the hundreds of thousands doesn't constitute 'proof' of anything.
OK, bounce the DHS ratio of lost weapons vs. issued against any other major police agency and see if it's even close. An average of one gun "lost" every 4 days is pretty damn bad if you ask me, especially when talking about "trained" personnel.
Still think they're not THAT bad? Try and think about the number of manpack-sized nuclear devices that are "misplaced" out there. Yeah, seems we have a few of those we can't really put our hands on...
Incompetence is incompetence, and I cannot help but to hold the f
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You'll have to explain to me how losing a statistically insiginficant number of weapons constitutes proof of government incompetence.
It might not be that. I have the same handgun as the first batch that DHS got. The trigger is pretty bad, I don't really enjoy shooting it. Maybe they were microwaving their iPhones, so to speak.
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They're fucking GUNS!
Losing 250 toobelts or phones or pants or metal detector wands, fine whatever. But they're losing guns here! You know, those metal things you point at people and they die? Like, forever?
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You'll have to explain to me how losing a statistically insiginficant number of weapons constitutes proof of government incompetence. Not that I necessarily assume the government is competent, mind you, but losing 250 out of a total number of guns that must be in the hundreds of thousands doesn't constitute 'proof' of anything.
Actually, it does.
The fact that they lost guns at all shows incompetence. I don't care if they had 32 million guns and only lost 250. They are here to protect us, supposedly, and yet they can't even keep their firearms secure.
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Validity of your rant aside, please be consistent; too often I hear both this rant ("government is incompetent") coupled with conspiratorial, big-brother, black-helicopter rants that assume the government actually is capable of doing something, sometimes, as long as it's something nefarious. I'm not saying they're not capable of such, nor doing such -- I'm just saying ... please, to all of you, be consistent. Either the government can, or it cannot, get its act together.
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Colbert already blew the lid off of this one. There's normal Obama, who presides over the incompetent government that can't do anything. Then there's evil Obama, who rules the evil government that is an unstoppable menace bent on destroying the country.
Thus the government can *and* cannot get its act together.
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Except that ...
The Obama administration has failed and we are paying for their failure. The Dems don't understand business and the private sector; they don't understand what actually generates wealth in this country
Yet somehow...
the fact that Wall Street went to Washington for their bailouts demonstrates that the government is still master of the money supply; the source from which all credit flows.
Yep, same person [slashdot.org]. Maybe it's me just getting older and noticing it more but what I've been seeing more and more is politics becoming a person's religion.
Re:More Proof of Government Incompetence (Score:5, Insightful)
The Dems don't understand business and the private sector; they don't understand what actually generates wealth in this country because they themselves are destroyers, not creators, of wealth
Interesting idea when you consider the largest destroyers of wealth are in New York City on Wall Street, rather than in Washington DC. But those of us in the know, know that the Dems and Reps all have their campaigns paid by Goldman Sachs anyway.
To understand power in the United States, don't follow government. Follow the money.
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To understand power in the United States, don't follow government. Follow the money.
and where does all of that money lead? It says "federal reserve note" right on each bill. The government ultimately controls the money supply and the fact that Wall Street went to Washington for their bailouts demonstrates that the government is still master of the money supply; the source from which all credit flows.
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and where does all of that money lead? It says "federal reserve note" right on each bill.
And the Federal Reserve is a private bank- sold to Wall Street back in the 1930s.
The government ultimately controls the money supply and the fact that Wall Street went to Washington for their bailouts demonstrates that the government is still master of the money supply; the source from which all credit flows.
If the government truly controlled the money supply (instead of it just being a puppet
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The U.S. government blows trillions of dollars each year, trillions that are expropriated by force (yes, the threat of jail for not paying your taxes is force--politely whitewashed, of course, but force nevertheless). Wall Street's fat cats wettest dreams don't have that kind of monetary clout.
Last I saw, the estimate for the amount of wealth Wall Street's fat cats blew in September 2008 was $650 Trillion. For comparison, the Gross World Product is only $22 Trillion, the GDP of the United States i
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You must have a personal problem with the Canadian health care. The Canadian government does not directly control the health care. What they do have is a Canadian Health Act [hc-sc.gc.ca], which stipulates the minimum required coverage per province. The individual provinces then create their own modifications to the Canadian Health Act to utilize the tax money allocated for that purpose. The p
Re:More Proof of Government Incompetence (Score:4, Informative)
The goal here is an irrational rant. Preferably in wall-of-text format. Why bother actually forming an informed opinion when we can spume and froth at the mouth and work up a good outrage?
So please, quit confusing the issue with stuff like "facts" and "details" like the following.
Infant Mortality Rate and Life Expectancy, by Sex: Canada
Year: 2010
IMR Both Sexes: 4.99
IMR Male: 5.34
IMR Female: 4.63
Life expectancy both sexes: 81.29
Life expectancy male: 78.72
Life expectancy female: 84.00
Infant Mortality Rate and Life Expectancy, by Sex: United States
Year: 2010
IMR Both Sexes: 6.14
IMR Male: 6.81
IMR Female: 5.44
Life expectancy both sexes: 78.24
Life expectancy male: 75.78
Life expectancy female: 80.81
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, International Data Base.
United States - Latest Data Used in the Estimates and Projections
Reference years: 2007
Data source: vital registration
Data collection years: 2007
Notes: Preliminary data on total registered deaths.
Citation: National Center for Health Statistics. 2008. http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr56/nvsr56_21.pdf [cdc.gov].
Canada - Latest Data Used in the Estimates and Projections
Reference years: 2004
Data source: vital registration
Data collection years: 2004
Notes: Registered deaths by age and sex.
Citation: Statistics Canada. 2006. Annual Demographic Statistics: 2005. Ottawa.
Note: Infant deaths are approximated as IMR times births in the year and may not add to totals due to rounding.
U.S. data are based on official estimates and projections. Population estimates for 1950-1999 are based on the resident population plus the armed forces overseas. Population estimates for 2000-2008 are for the resident population and are based on Census 2000. Population data in the IDB for 2009-2050 are projections of the resident population. The U.S. population components shown in the IDB for 2000-2050 may not match the official population components for the United States, due to differences in how they are displayed (calendar year versus midyear estimates). Revised official population estimates are released each year (see http://www.census.gov/popest/ [census.gov]). Therefore, the U.S. population estimates (official compared with IDB) may not match due to differences in the timing of their releases.
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You're welcome. To explain further and give those numbers better meaning.
Infant Mortality Rate - The number of deaths of infants under 1 year of age from a cohort of 1,000 live births. Denoted 1q0 or IMR, it is the probability of dying between birth and exact age 1.
Life expectancy at birth. - The average number of years a group of people born in the same year can be expected to live if mortality at each age remains constant in the future.
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I've tried. CodeBuster pretty much echoes my brother. I've backed my brother into the corner with the hard numbers as well or pointed out that his argument against one candidate applied equally to the one he supported. What happened? A smug, dismissive reply and when pressed further, a change of topic.
In a week CodeBuster, very much like my brother did, will forget this argument. It will not have happened. They will repeat the very same position again and again. Statements and "facts" will be put forth but
Report shows people are still human (Score:1, Insightful)
Oh, but when it comes to a cop, they better be more than perfect.
Just the other day a 3 year old shot themselves while attempting to get a gun from under their grandmothers couch.
So... yeah. If anything this just shows they need better weapons handling training. What? You think this was the first time someone did something stupid with a gun?
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Oh, but when it comes to a cop, they better be more than perfect.
Should they be perfect or "more than perfect"? No, but I would hope that they are better at demonstrating an adherence to the very law(s) that they strive to uphold, and better at putting practices and policies for that purpose.
The theory is that these are officers of the law. They represent The Law. Y'know, serve and protect, uphold the law ... that sort of thing. In theory they should be held to, and hold themselves to, a higher standard of practice.
I imagine that there are very defined practices for
Re:Report shows people are still human (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, we all also do illegal things, but you best be extra perfect in front of a cop. All you need to do is one illegal thing in front of a cop, and he will gladly do his job and process you into the system for punishment. Why should hey get a break when he gets caught slipping?
-Steve
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But are Homeland Security personnel actually cops? Aren't they more like glorified security guards?
It's a bit like the Australian Protective Service after they were absorbed into the Australian Federal Police. Many of them don't even have the same arrest powers as a police officer has, so they're effectively just government security officers. It's really stupid -- if they're going to wear the label of police, they should have the same powers and training as proper police do.
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Here is the list: http://www.dhs.gov/xabout/structure/
Note it is composed of the US Coast Guard, Secret Service, ICE, etc. -- all of whom have arrest powers and the authority to carry a firearm in work circumstances.
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I didn't even know all that was under DHS. So... in that case I totally stick by statements that I have made in the past that they should be defunded and disbanded!
Re:Report shows people are still human (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh, but when it comes to a cop, they better be more than perfect.
Yes. Exactly.
We're talking about *cops*. We entrust them with our lives, and give them power over us, so yes, I think it's reasonable to expect them to be a little less careless than the average slashbot such as yourself. If they can't handle those expections, they should #gtfo, because they don't deserve the responsibility they've been given.
We're also not talking about a set of keys, here. We're talking about a *firearm*. Last I checked, most people aren't dumb enough to lose their 38 special between the seat cushions of their couch.
Frankly, I'm shocked this even surprises you.
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Yes, most people are. Try carrying a firearm 24/7 for a few decades. There's a significant chance you will lose one (or more) over the course of a career, no matter how careful you like to think you'll be.
We're human beings. We're flawed. We do that sort of thing. Some leave their coffees, their groceries, or even their CHILDREN on top of their cars when they drive off. Some forget to take the iron off the board when they leave and their house burns down. Some forget to put the bar in the window and
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We're human beings. We're flawed. We do that sort of thing. Some leave their coffees, their groceries, or even their CHILDREN on top of their cars when they drive off. Some forget to take the iron off the board when they leave and their house burns down. Some forget to put the bar in the window and their child falls out when the screen gives way. Some turn around to talk to their kid about some detail of the day and drift in front of a semi. And none of us are immune to this sort of thing.
No. But you also
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I'm not saying there shouldn't be consequences. I'm just saying it's going to happen.
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Yes, but we can make it happen a lot less.
This isn't about a freak accident, this is about 243 guns getting lost. With that many, there has to be a way to reduce the number. 243 guns in 2 years is a gun getting lost every 3 days on average.
From what I heard, if a cop loses a gun, that's a very big deal, with serious consequences. By the 5th gun getting lost in a short timeframe there should have been a serious internal investiguation about whether the officers are getting taught the right procedures, and at
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Yes, but keep in mind that the DHS incorporates almost all of the former federal law enforcement agencies, comprising over 225,000 employees as of last year.
Assuming about half of them are gun carriers, and given that the losses were over a 2-year period, that means that fewer than one tenth of one percent of gun-carrying agents per year lost their weapons.
According to several sources, about 25% of the guns were stolen out of lockboxes or safes - in other words guns that the officers did take reasonable mea
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On the other hand, the more responsible population generally has/wants better jobs than being a cop and the institutions themselves filter out any outliers (too smart, too expensive) leaving only those that have no viable other choices (because they're undereducated or underperforming) or those that like the power trips (because they've been repressed at school or home or because they're sociopaths).
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We're talking about *cops*. We entrust them with our lives, and give them power over us, so yes,...
Going off slightly off topic from the main article...
Who is we? I don't *entrust* my life to any police officer or any other official, and I sure as hell don't give them any "power" over me. This is on of the greatest myths, misconceptions, whatever-you-wanna-call-it that is self perpetrated amongst the American public. You alone are responsible for your own safety.
Don't get me wrong: I don't have issues with
Statistics (Score:5, Informative)
So, over 3 years, 179 / 188,500 weapons went missing, 0.09%, only slightly higher than the percentage eaten by beavers or flattened by steam rollers.
What a travesty. How could they have been so careless with our tax dollars. Let's impeach Obama.
=^P
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How about looking at personal responsibility and labeling the individual as at fault. If you do that, your statistics will mean more. One officer was issued two weapons and lost one.
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Re:Statistics (Score:4, Insightful)
I think you'd find the loss rate in the Army vanishingly small. The kinds of punishment a cop gets for misplacing a weapon pale beside what they can do to a soldier losing a rifle.
For a good number of years I was the company armorer and ran the company arms room when I was in the Army and we never lost a weapon--because every soldier knows what will happen to him if he loses his rifle, and every sergeant knows what will happen to him if his troop loses it, and so on up the chain.
I doubt any of the DHS employees got more than a wrist-slap
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A guy from another company in our battalion apparently took a nap on the night land nav course, woke up, and forgot to bring his weapon along when he finished the course. Their whole company ended up in the field for two weeks looking for it, and his platoon an extra two weeks beyond that. I can only imagine how bad life must have been for him.
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Bingo. If this were Fark.com, this'd have been [NEWS FLASH] People lose and steal shit.
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I think they're intentionally misleading you with their statistics. There are only around 200,000 employees in DHS and the vast majority are paper pushers. I'd be surprised if over 10% are actually "agents" in the gun-toting ATF, Border Patrol sense.
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It's a small number in the big picture, but the importance of losing a firearm should not be underestimated. It should be grounds for instant dismissal and punishment.
Re: Statistics (Score:5, Funny)
Don't search for that on Google. Just... don't.
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I think he's saying the guns are eaten by beavers.
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I believe he was referencing the number of weapons eaten by beavers. A serious problem.
What do you expect if you make the guns out of freaking wood?
While the officer was inside? (Score:1, Redundant)
Worse. Law enforcement Officer. EVAR.
(Ohhhh, wait, nm I see wut u did there...)
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You missed a key detail (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, this is very common.
Yes, but law enforcement vehicles which need to be left running are equipped with a lockout switch which keeps the engine running and the accessories energized without allowing the vehicle to be driven
You start the car normally, turn on the lockout switch, and then remove the ignition key. The car can be shut off by turning the lockout switch off, but it cannot be restarted or driven without the ignition key.
There's never a good reason to leave the keys in a running and unattended vehicle. This is what th
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My assumption was that to some degree they are just making the police car into a bait car. If someone is dumb enough to steal a police car, they would be more than happy to let him drive off in it in exchange for the pleasure of arresting him in a few minutes.
spelling nazi (Score:1, Informative)
grammer nazi
That would be grammar, son.
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No problem here, a grammar nazi can still have spelling problems!
Too big to fail (Score:1, Offtopic)
And we really need this huge, bloated, self-justifying, all-powerful organism to run our health care system because...?
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The Department of Homeland Security runs our health care system? Oh my god, that explains SO MUCH!
Re:Too big to fail (Score:4, Informative)
...because the alternative is a ravenous beast that feeds on the sick to generate monstrous profits. Socialized medicine has been shown to work* in countries all over the world. I (a non-American) don't have to worry that changing jobs will mean a loss of health insurance, nor that a catastrophic illness/injury will make my family paupers.
*work in the sense that decent healthcare is enjoyed by all residents of a country, instead of having superb care for the rich, generally adequate for the middle class, little or none for the working poor.
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I lived in Europe for 3 years. Other than the beer and hoards of much skinnier women (than the US) I didn't see much else to be impressed with.
There's a more relaxed attitude towards gambling too. That gives you booze, pretty women and blackjack. What else were you looking for again?
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because its better than our corporate healthcare (Score:2, Offtopic)
who care more about delivering value to stockholders, than delivering you life
the idea that there will be government death panels is hilarious, since we currently have corporate death panels: ex-nurses in cubicles looking at your list of CPT codes purposefully working hard to make sure you don't cost so much as you die
besides, i wonder if you've ever dealt with the maze of paperwork between hospitals, doctors, health insurers. now THAT'S a bloated bureaucracy. not that the feds won't indulge in odious amoun
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No one else has proven capable.
Next question?
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This is YRO how, again? (Score:1)
No, I didn't RTFA, but the summary doesn't even try to explain how this is affecting my rights, online or otherwise.
Lost? (Score:1, Informative)
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Actually, my first thought was if they checked on eBay.
A fair trade (Score:2)
The border guards can have my laptop if I get their gun?
Are you pondering what I'm pondering, Pinky? (Score:2)
1. Buy cheap gloves und wear them. ;)
2. Steal HS gun.
3. Shoot Cheney.
4. Put HS gun back.
5. Burn gloves
6. Give the media a anonymous tip.
7. Rinse, and repeat (with another real douche)
8. Watch them beat the shit out of each other with accusations.
9. Be quick, before they can react with new rules.
10. PROFIT.
happens all the time (Score:2)
The government and police lose guns (including machine guns) all the time. It hrdly ever makes the news, it's just a well-known dirty little secret.