A Pakistani man who became a Humanist and renounced Islam sought political asylum in the UK. His application was refused. From The Guardian:
Walayat, who has lived in the UK since 2011, said he had received death threats from members of his family and community in Pakistan after integrating into secular British life, forming a relationship with a non-Muslim partner and refusing to conform to the expectations of conservative Islam.
In true British pub quiz fashion, the Home Office tested his claim to be a Humanist by asking if he knew the names of any Greek philosophers who were humanistic.
When tested on his knowledge of humanism, Walayat gave a “basic definition” but could not identify “any famous Greek philosophers who were humanistic”
The last pub quiz I was at, the question master was adamant that Apollo 14 was the last manned mission to the Moon... I see the Home Office takes things as seriously.
Walayat joined the Humanists UK organisation in August, but said he had believed in the basic principles of humanism from childhood.
Now more than 120 leading philosophers have signed a letter asking the Home Secretary to reconsider the man's case since "Knowledge of Plato and Aristotle is not a reliable test for whether someone is a humanist.”
Sometimes I despair.
Men Only: Inside the charity fundraiser where hostesses are put on show
Female journalist goes undercover at posh ‘men only’ London fundraiser, reports widespread groping
WPP Cuts Ties With London Charity Dinner After Groping Report
Grab 'em in the ass, grab 'em in the wherever.
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Congressman Accused Of Harassment Defends Himself, Says He Saw Aide As A 'Soul Mate'
Intel Has a Big Problem. It Needs to Act Like It
During the six months Intel was quietly working to try to fix the vulnerabilities, Krzanich sold $24 million in company shares. Intel says the stock sale was part of a plan that had been in place before anyone there knew about Meltdown or Spectre, but the day after Krzanich’s CES speech, two U.S. senators sent letters to the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Justice demanding investigations. Consumer and shareholder lawyers have filed a dozen class actions against Intel, and there are few signs the pressure will let up on Krzanich anytime soon. In a research note, an analyst for Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. called the stock sale “indefensible.”
I have written many, many sigs; and I've kept them all around in a textfile.
I would like to use many sigs here. It would be wonderful if the sig part of the account allowed for multiple sigs. It should be trivial to write such a thing — even in Perl, shudder — and it would be a fun enhancement to the site.
You just need storage of multiple lines of HTML, separated by some obvious token like a linefeed. Actual line breaks in sigs would be <BR> as per usual. Obvious user account options to sequence in order (requires additional storage of one integer), or presented pseudo-randomly. Total length of any one sig could still be limited (although I'd sure like that limit to increase a bit, or at least not count HTML tags against it.)
Bonus: it'd be way better than That Other Site, and more fun. Those people are so mired in their own egos and incompetence it'd be/take years, or until never, for them to catch up. That goes for all Soylent improvements anyway.
Pseudocode:
President Trump signed a bill Friday to reauthorize a controversial government surveillance program, extending the ability of law enforcement officials to collect and keep — but not always see — the private communications of American citizens.
Trump first suggested a year ago — with no supporting evidence — that Obama authorized eavesdropping on Trump Tower during the election. He made a similar suggestion last week when he tweeted that the law had been used "to so badly surveil and abuse the Trump campaign by the previous administration."
The bill was set to expire Friday unless Trump signed the renewal into law. It has now been approved by Congress three times under three different presidents.
Trump signs bill extending surveillance law — the same law he says was used to spy on him
I was down in the shack and I wonder if anyone is on the 2 meter simplex call frequency turned into a wonderful hour long rag chew with a station about 30 miles away. I just recently got back on the air after spending about a week validating the operation of my little 100 watt HF/VHF/UHF station and I've really been enjoying it. With my dipole I've been able to work South Korea, China, New Zealand, Indonesia, Australia, Falkland Islands, Cuba, Argentina, Venezuela, and many more countries in South and Central America on 20 meters and 40 meters using FT8.
What a blast!
From The Guardian:
Intriguingly, the Ancient Greeks had a word for what’s missing: isegoria, which they thought must accompany freedom of speech, and which means equality of speech – people need to hear their own voices reflected in political discourse.
Well, we have Farcebook and Witter.