From: MAKE via HackADay:
"This 24kj capacitor discharge bank is configured for 4500v @ 2400uf and can be charged up using microwave oven transformers. When triggered, it can release all of this stored... more inside
Ryjkyj
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TAXES (Election08 Talk)
I just want some opinions about this:
I've noticed a lot of comments with the election coming up in regard to "taxing the top 10%" and "the rich" getting "picked on" for one reason or another. Many people seem to think that wherever you are in life, in regard to your financial standing, that that's exactly where you put yourself. And that we should all pay the same amount to our government.
I see the reasoning behind that thinking. Don't get me wrong. To use a simple example: I don't want to work all day and think that the person next to me who is screwing off all the time is going to get the same thing I do on payday.
Still though, I have a problem with this opinion that everything we obtain in our lives is somehow based on our own skill and nothing else. A lot of the good and bad things in my life have seemingly come about by random chance. Call it the will of god if you want.
My questions (and I'll try to put them as simply as possible) are these:
Did the guy who made $10 million last year really do it because he worked one-thousand times times harder than the guy who only made $10 thousand? Is he really one-thousand times smarter? Is that even possible?
By that rationale, it stands to reason that if we were all born with the same IQ and the same physical capabilities, we would all make the exact same amount of money.
Look, I don't want to live in a Marxist society. But I do work my ass off and I'm smarter than the average bear. I think the people that made something of themselves by using the system in place should be giving something back. And I don't they're giving enough. At least, not here in America.
Do you? Any thoughts?
I've noticed a lot of comments with the election coming up in regard to "taxing the top 10%" and "the rich" getting "picked on" for one reason or another. Many people seem to think that wherever you are in life, in regard to your financial standing, that that's exactly where you put yourself. And that we should all pay the same amount to our government.
I see the reasoning behind that thinking. Don't get me wrong. To use a simple example: I don't want to work all day and think that the person next to me who is screwing off all the time is going to get the same thing I do on payday.
Still though, I have a problem with this opinion that everything we obtain in our lives is somehow based on our own skill and nothing else. A lot of the good and bad things in my life have seemingly come about by random chance. Call it the will of god if you want.
My questions (and I'll try to put them as simply as possible) are these:
Did the guy who made $10 million last year really do it because he worked one-thousand times times harder than the guy who only made $10 thousand? Is he really one-thousand times smarter? Is that even possible?
By that rationale, it stands to reason that if we were all born with the same IQ and the same physical capabilities, we would all make the exact same amount of money.
Look, I don't want to live in a Marxist society. But I do work my ass off and I'm smarter than the average bear. I think the people that made something of themselves by using the system in place should be giving something back. And I don't they're giving enough. At least, not here in America.
Do you? Any thoughts?
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This kind of surprised me.
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From BoingBoing.net
"Sophie Can Walk is a tour-de-force of cinematic advocacy greater than An Inconvenient Truth and a Michael Moore montage combined -- a film that speaks out bravely, albeit in a cute... more inside
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And another poem from George about some of his observations on consumerism and advertising. From the forty years of comedy special with Jon Stewert.
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This could just as easily have been me at that age. I'm glad I never took on a chicken.
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From: "What the Fuck Am I Doing in New Jersey"
I can't tell you how many moments in this particular clip are burned into my synapses forever.
"The federal communications commission (an appointed... more inside
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I know it might seem like I'm exploiting Carlin's death by posting all these but this stuff really is a huge part of my life from childhood up until now. I know all this stuff by heart. Getting it on the... more inside
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Larry and his brothers explain why they feel digital rights management is a bad idea.
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In honor of Issy's latest round.
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Has to be seen to be believed from my end...
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You're not worthy
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Some of these are priceless.
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Kevin Pollak doing the best Christopher Walker impression I've ever seen. Close your eyes and you can't tell the difference. This is from the movie "The Aristocrats" which is pretty much tastless and offensive... more inside


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