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Guard Dog

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Posts posted by Guard Dog

  1.  

    I was actually thinking of the use of feminine pronouns when referring to a man. If you could actually turn a horse into a zebra I'd call it a zebra. But painting black and white stripes on a horse won't make it a zebra. I will admit I am annoyed by the whole touchy feely "I identify as a woman so call me she" b------t. A thing is what it is. 2+2=4 no matter how anyone feels about it.

     

    I feel like I'm the King of England so I want all of you to refer to me as Your Majesty from now on. But even if you did when I show up at Buckingham in a U-Haul I'll be in for a disappointment.

    Why are you annoyed? Does (s)he get tax breaks that you don't for having a court recognize him as a woman or something? Only affects him*, really, which is why your King of England analogy doesn't hold water. That being said, if you can get the British Parliament to recognize you as the King of England, I'll be happy to address you as befitting your station.

     

    Let's imagine for a second that tomorrow gene therapy allows these people to have their chromosomal endowment rearranged. Would you still be uncomfortable referring to him a she?

     

     

    *to be fair, it affects everyone, because the whole pronoun thing is a total cluster****

     

    You know, I really don't know why it bothers me. It always irritates me when someone refers to their car engine as a motor too. An engine and a motor are two different things. I guess I'm just kind of anal retentive like that. I demand people call a thing what it is. But if they could magically replace Manning's Y chromosome with another X, well that would make him a her. Heck they don't even need to go that far. Once the surgeries are finished that's close enough. But until then he is a dude in a dress taking pills.

  2.  

    I was actually thinking of the use of feminine pronouns when referring to a man. If you could actually turn a horse into a zebra I'd call it a zebra. But painting black and white stripes on a horse won't make it a zebra. I will admit I am annoyed by the whole touchy feely "I identify as a woman so call me she" b------t. A thing is what it is. 2+2=4 no matter how anyone feels about it.

     

    I feel like I'm the King of England so I want all of you to refer to me as Your Majesty from now on. But even if you did when I show up at Buckingham in a U-Haul I'll be in for a disappointment. 

     

     

    People's gender identity can differ from their assigned sex. In this case we're probably dealing with someone with mental issues, but there are lots of people who have felt like they were born in the wrong body, and haven't been able to live good lives until they "look" like they feel. To me (probably because I'm Scandinavian!) it's just plain insensitive to refer to a trans person as the sex he/she was born into rather than the one he/she identifies with.

     

    Well I guess I can identify with that. I've always felt I had the wrong body. In fact I'm pretty sure Tom Brady cut ahead of me in line and ended up with the one I was supposed to get. :lol:

  3. So we have entered the last 48 hours of the Obama Administration. Over the past eight years I have written thousands of words of text criticizing his politics, his philosophy, his utter disregard for things more important that life, etc. And all with good reason. Many of you have as well. There have also been thousands of words of gushing praise from some over the same things.

     

    But in this thread I want to do something different. Nothing in life is entirely good or evil, successful or unsuccessful, you get the idea. So I'm opening this discussion to everyone but in particular Obama's harshest critics. Can you think of anything he has done that you agree with? Has there been a policy, law signed, executive order issued, pardon or commutation that left you thinking "good job"?

     

    I'd rather this not devolve into a general political thread... if it does so be it. Some folks can't help themselves I realize.

     

    For me the greatest achievement was rooted in something he did I didn't agree with. In 2010 he cut funding for NASA's Constellation program and cancelled the Shuttle Program. After all the years taking a major part in leading the human race into space the American Manned Space Program came to a unceremonious end. But following that he did something I did not expect considering his antipathy towards private enterprise. He encouraged and removed the long standing roadblocks to private spaceflight and went even further by contacting out actual spaceflight operations. Because of that we have companies like SpaceX, Orbital Mechanics, Virgin Galactic (although they are not doing government work I'm including them). The Falcon 9 is closer to being a reusable heavy lift  vehicle that the Space Shuttle ever was at a fraction of the cost. So, well done Mr. President.

     

    Any others?

    • Like 1
  4.  

    Correct me if I'm wrong here... and this is inconsequential to the story... isn't "Chelsea" Manning a man in drag? As far as I'm aware isn't all the XY plumbing still in place?

     

    If I put on a superman suit it does not make me able to fly.

     

    My understanding is that she's not received the gender reassignment surgery; although I believe (but could be wrong) a federal court ruled that prison couldn't block gender reassignment (I seem to recall that she's on hormone treatment since 2015), I believe the logistical questions of how the surgery would be provided (as the military isn't equipped to provide it in house) and what to do with her afterwards were still questions now side-stepped by the commuting of the sentence. 

     

    Another thing. The President is willing to commute Manning's sentence after releasing information about what his administration was doing abroad. But not Snowden who leaked what he was doing right here to the American people.

     

    The rationale I heard was that Snowden didn't face the US justice system and either stand exonerated as a legitimate whistleblower (his claim) or convicted of treason (the state's claim), instead fleeing the justice system to Russia.  Manning faced the justice system, was dealt with fairly and accepted her culpability in what happened.  It probably also helped that the 35 year sentence has been deemed by many with knowledge of such things to be out of proportion with sentences given for similar action in the past.

     

    I guess the rationale on Snowden makes sense. As for Manning the commutation might have just saved the taxpayers the cost of cutting his manhood off so kudos to the President on the cost saving move!

  5.  

    Correct me if I'm wrong here... and this is inconsequential to the story... isn't "Chelsea" Manning a man in drag? As far as I'm aware isn't all the XY plumbing still in place?

     

    If I put on a superman suit it does not make me able to fly.

    No :)

     

    He went hormone treatment and  gender reassignment surgery so reshaping the male genitals  into the shape and function of a vagina. He effectively becomes she....why GD  do you think she is hot and feel guilty? Its okay, no judgement on this forums  :biggrin:

     

    :lol:  Ummm.... no

     

    I was actually thinking of the use of feminine pronouns when referring to a man. If you could actually turn a horse into a zebra I'd call it a zebra. But painting black and white stripes on a horse won't make it a zebra. I will admit I am annoyed by the whole touchy feely "I identify as a woman so call me she" b------t. A thing is what it is. 2+2=4 no matter how anyone feels about it.

     

    I feel like I'm the King of England so I want all of you to refer to me as Your Majesty from now on. But even if you did when I show up at Buckingham in a U-Haul I'll be in for a disappointment. 

    • Like 1
  6. Another thing. The President is willing to commute Manning's sentence after releasing information about what his administration was doing abroad. But not Snowden who leaked what he was doing right here to the American people.

     

    I might be crazy but I've always gotten this vibe from Barack Obama that he felt he real enemies were not in Russia, or China, or the Middle East. It always seemed like the people he thought were the real enemies were right here in the US.

     

    Of course his administration telling the police to keep an eye one me and people like me in 2009 because we were likely terrorists might have colored my view on that.

  7. You beat me to it Chilloutman. Of all the Apollo astronauts who walked on the moon only Buzz Aldrin, Alan Bean, David Scott, Harrison Schmitt & Charlie Duke are still with us. And they are all well past 80. It is likely they will all pass on before a human steps on another body other than Earth again. If you had told me that in 1972 when Apollo was cancelled I wouldn't have believed it.

     

    Actually in 1972 I was one year old so if you told me that I wouldn't have understood it.

  8. Trump getting elected is the best thing that ever could have happened to SNL. For so long it was just not funny because they never wanted to stick it to Obama. Now they have a President they hate and political humor is back on the menu. I'd call that a win.

    • Like 1
  9.  

    Now? There it nothing to see or do that is beyond the reach of your finger tips and the entertainment value of things like a circus is nowhere near what it once was. I guess all things fade eventually. 

    what is terrible is how some folks will never realize what is lost.  as a southerner, am expecting gd has experienced a college football game day, yes? watch a college football game or baseball game at the actual sporting venue is not the same as watching on tv or via internet.  in fairness, is not always better to watch spectacles live and in-person, but such entertainments is different when experienced direct.  live entertainment offers a whole range o' sights and sounds and smells and Scale not capable o' replication via any kinda media. and like it or not, as social primates, a spectacle experienced as a group o' thousands touches 'pon some primitive part o' our ape brains. is different. 

     

    perhaps all things do fade, but we can nevertheless feel diminished.

     

    HA! Good Fun!

     

    Oh no argument there. Especially your College Football example. I've found the NFL to be a lot more antiseptic as a live event compared to College ball. Whatever "it" is the college ball has, the NFL doesn't. Some things just have to be experienced live.

     

    I remember being so excited when a circus or fair of some kind was around. I grew up near a little town in Florida called McIntosh. They had a huge two day festival every year called 1890 Days for when the town was founded. It was very cool, period costumes, crafts, exhibits, a parade, all this great food and stuff like that. I loved it. My brother still lives there and told me they stopped doing it a few years ago because not enough people showed up the cover the costs.  That broke my heart when I heard that.

  10. I remember going to Circus World in Orlando FL as a kid. It's hard not to be nostalgic about the things that we loved as children but to tell the truth I'm not sure how much appeal it has in the modern world. Animal abuses aside, a "spectacle" used to be a pretty rare thing and the different and interesting foods and exhibits were all new experiences to kids during the 1900's. Now? There it nothing to see or do that is beyond the reach of your finger tips and the entertainment value of things like a circus is nowhere near what it once was. I guess all things fade eventually. 

    • Like 3
  11. Ben, I'm going to be a hard "no" on this for all the reasons I've described. Fist off as I told you in the beginning and Gromnir reiterated, it's a much more complex subject that you are crediting. 

     

    Let add one more point. And I'm going to use my former business as an example. My share of the start up costs was over $200k. That was how much of our own capital we each invested to float the company before it started making a profit. I don't have that kind of money lying around. I mortgaged my house, raided my retirement savings, and sold off a few other assets to raise it. Basically I risked (which is an appropriate word) my entire life's savings on that venture. We had 13 salaried employees. They had a job to perform and we compensated them for their time. They were good folks, hard working professionals who cared about the future success of the business. But they had nothing invested in it but their time. If the business failed they would lose their job. I would have lost everything. In that situation i certainly would want to hear their thoughts on business decisions that pertained to their areas of expertise but the actual decisions would be made by the six people who, as Barack Obama put it "had skin in the game". 

  12. A corporation is, 99% of the time, a private enterprise. Even if it's stock is publicly traded it is not a "public" company in the way you are thinking. It has owners. They should, and do, organize in such a way as makes the most sense for their business and management. Up until two years ago I was a one sixth owner of a company I helped start. My partners and I discussed every business decision between us and came to a consensus. That was they way that made the most sense for us. There was no President (well actually there was but it was a meaningless title in application) or CEO. I'm invested in another business right now but I'm a minority share holder and I don't participate in it's operation in any way. That is a business owned by one man and he makes all the decisions my himself. And it has been reasonably successful. 

     

    Look at Cargill. It has some 200k employees and does over $100M in revenue. It has a fairly common management structure with a CEO, President, and various Vice Presidents but it is a private company owned by one man. Everyone in management serves at his pleasure and he can make changes any time he sees fit. Before I left to start the business I mentioned I worked for Crown Castle International for three years. it's actually six different and largely independent companies under one name and each with it's own management. And it is a publicly traded company so it's owned by it's shareholders. 

     

    The point I'm trying to make here is there is not cookie cutter pattern for corporate organization. Nor should there be. Every business is unique and has unique challenges. 

    • Like 1
  13.  

    Ben, first of all corporate organization is as varied as it gets. Some companies do things kind of the same, some are different. There are differences between private and public companies, differences between the actual power held by different CEOs, Presidents, and Boards. I realize what you are trying to discuss here but this just cannot be accurately boiled down to a single concept that can be discussed like that.

    Whatever we come up with could be turned into a law. I believe in Germany it even is a law, so... ;)

     

    OK, not happening on this side of the pond, but ok. 

  14.  

     

     

    There is entirely too much common sense on this forum to field too many zealots one way or the other.

    Hahahahahahahaha.

     

    Hey I didn't say there were none!

     

    Well I'm glad you didn't forget about me.

     

    You? You're like the anti-zealot. Some folks care too much. You don't care at all!

  15. Ben, first of all corporate organization is as varied as it gets. Some companies do things kind of the same, some are different. There are differences between private and public companies, differences between the actual power held by different CEOs, Presidents, and Boards. I realize what you are trying to discuss here but this just cannot be accurately boiled down to a single concept that can be discussed like that. 

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