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• #11477
qwe
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• #11478
18 weeks in prison for Thought Crime. In England.
http://www.melonfarmers.co.uk/news.htm#Dangerous_Trolling_3892 -
• #11479
the other eel related story on that age is worse.
jesus...
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• #11480
18 weeks in prison for Thought Crime. In England.
http://www.melonfarmers.co.uk/news.htm#Dangerous_Trolling_3892That's not 'thought crime' - that's someone being a cunt.
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• #11481
the other eel related story on that age is worse.
jesus...
Ah !!! Ah !! Jesus !!!!! Fuck !!! Ohhhh ! Ah.
I don't like that story.
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• #11482
That's not 'thought crime' - that's someone being a cunt.
Can't it be both?
Any prosecution under the Malicious Communications Act (1988)(Amended) is necessarily a prosecution for a thought crime, since it is necessary to attribute a purpose to make out the offence; the simple act of creating the communication is not sufficient on its own.
It's hard to see how the alleged perpetrator can have both a mens rea and Asperger's Syndrome in this case, although I would find the prosecution equally offensive if the perpetrator was neurotypical.
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• #11484
qwe
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• #11486
qwe
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• #11487
With all the shit we had with the banks and politicians expenses.
They finally arrest someone. A black man.
For abusing his position!
got to laugh out loud for that one.
+1
The whole thing is so transparently corrupt at almost every level, and now this pitiful sacrifice at the altar of runaway free-market capitalism. Makes you slightly ashamed to be a part of it all really.
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• #11489
Australian passports to now come with 3 gender options: male, female and indeterminate
The reason why gender is even mentioned on a passport is because it facilitates a binary distinction, which of course helps with identification. Adding a either/neither option makes this impossible, so devalues the document. I would rather have a secure document that doesn't pander to me than a useless one that does.
Then again, this option is still only claimable with a doctors opinion (which is odd for a whole other bunch of reasons).
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• #11490
^party pooper
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• #11491
I wouldn't want to be in a plane full of undetermined people.
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• #11492
They finally arrest someone. A black man.
For abusing his position!
I don't think the fact he is black has got anything to do with it. Nick Leeson wasn't black.
Rogue traders get prison time. Fact. (see the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rogue_trader Wikipedia entry).
It's basically a deterrent sentence to everyone else working in the financial sector.
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• #11493
I don't think the fact he is black has got anything to do with it. Nick Leeson wasn't black.
Rogue traders get prison time. Fact. (see the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rogue_trader Wikipedia entry).
It's basically a deterrent sentence to everyone else working in the financial sector.
Only if they lose money.
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• #11494
qwe
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• #11495
Economists' claim that money was invented to replace the barter system, is a fairy tale.
So really, rather than the standard story – first there’s barter, then money, then finally credit comes out of that – if anything its precisely the other way around. Credit and debt comes first, then coinage emerges thousands of years later and then, when you do find “I’ll give you twenty chickens for that cow” type of barter systems, it’s usually when there used to be cash markets, but for some reason – as in Russia, for example, in 1998 – the currency collapses or disappears.
...
This (debt-trap) was the great social evil of antiquity – families would have to start pawning off their flocks, fields and before long, their wives and children would be taken off into debt peonage. Often people would start abandoning the cities entirely, joining semi-nomadic bands, threatening to come back in force and overturn the existing order entirely. Rulers would regularly conclude the only way to prevent complete social breakdown was to declare a clean slate or ‘washing of the tablets,’ they’d cancel all consumer debt and just start over. In fact, the first recorded word for ‘freedom’ in any human language is the Sumerian amargi, a word for debt-freedom, and by extension freedom more generally, which literally means ‘return to mother,’ since when they declared a clean slate, all the debt peons would get to go home.
...
Since antiquity the worst-case scenario that everyone felt would lead to total social breakdown was a major debt crisis; ordinary people would become so indebted to the top one or two percent of the population that they would start selling family members into slavery, or eventually, even themselves.
Well, what happened this time around? Instead of creating some sort of overarching institution to protect debtors, they create these grandiose, world-scale institutions like the IMF or S&P to protect creditors. They essentially declare (in defiance of all traditional economic logic) that no debtor should ever be allowed to default. Needless to say the result is catastrophic. We are experiencing something that to me, at least, looks exactly like what the ancients were most afraid of: a population of debtors skating at the edge of disaster.
And, I might add, if Aristotle were around today, I very much doubt he would think that the distinction between renting yourself or members of your family out to work and selling yourself or members of your family to work was more than a legal nicety. He’d probably conclude that most Americans were, for all intents and purposes, slaves.
...
When thousands of people begin assembling in squares in Greece and Spain calling for real democracy what they are effectively saying is: “Look, in 2008 you let the cat out of the bag. If money really is just a social construct now, a promise, a set of IOUs and even trillions of debts can be made to vanish if sufficiently powerful players demand it then, if democracy is to mean anything, it means that everyone gets to weigh in on the process of how these promises are made and renegotiated.” I find this extraordinarily hopeful.
-- What is Debt? – An Interview with Economic Anthropologist David Graeber
He gets into more detail in David Graeber: On the Invention of Money – Notes on Sex, Adventure, Monomaniacal Sociopathy and the True Function of Economics
I'm looking forward to his book ‘Debt: The First 5,000 Years’.
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• #11496
Mines trapped by water in a drift mine in the Swansea Valley
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-14940053 -
• #11497
Not the first time that's happened in Africa, and it won't be the last. Stealing fuel from pipelines is a way of life in several countries.
yep... its a shocking state of affairs. Institutional corruption and cronyism. The Niger Delta is a disaster zone.
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• #11498
qwe
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• #11499
congratulations agent Kewku Adoboli your mission has been successfull
bringing banking down from the inside
good work fella
although it'll end up with taxpayers somehow footing the bill won't it -
• #11500
...............................This article does not cite any references or sources.
FACT? :P
If it's a well-established fact, then it should be possible to cite reputable 3rd party sources for it. That's how Wikipedia works.
Released after serving 9 weeks of his sentence for stealing £14,000.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-essex-14922211