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Science
Technology has always found its greatest consumer in a
nation's war and defense efforts. Since the last attempts at a
"Star Wars" defense system, has technology changed
considerably enough to make the latest Missile Defense
initiatives more successful? Can such an application of
science be successful? Is a militarized space inevitable,
necessary or impossible?
Read Debates, a new
Web-only feature culled from Readers' Opinions, published
every Thursday.
(3236 previous messages)
lchic
- 12:16am Jul 23, 2002 EST (#3237
of 3327)
UK ? problems with the Chinook's software ?
"" There was at least a possibility of a technical
malfunction, he said.
Sir Malcolm pointed out that to arrive at a guilty
verdict, the air marshals had to prove that there was
"absolutely no doubt whatsover" the pilots were at fault.
The MoD was judge and jury in its own case and a court of
law would have thrown out the case in matter of minutes.
In a withering attack, Sir Malcolm accused defence
ministers of "sheer stubbornness". He described the
government's response as a "miserable and pathetic"
decision.
John Cook, father of one of the pilots, described the
ministry's stance as "absolutely pathetic". He added: "No
one knows whether the aircraft was serviceable or not."
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/homeaffairs/story/0,11026,761711,00.html
lchic
- 12:27am Jul 23, 2002 EST (#3238
of 3327)
Empire - Policy - unnecessary deaths
"" ... But while a Black Book of Communism has been
compiled and everybody is aware of the horrors of nazism,
popular historians have been surprisingly uninterested in the
dark side of the British Empire. There are exceptions, such as
Mike Davis's powerful Late Victorian Holocausts, but much else
still lies buried in the academic literature. Davis and others
have estimated that there were between 12 and 33 million
avoidable deaths by famine in India between 1876 and 1908,
produced by a deadly combination of official callousness and
free-market ideology. But these were far from being a purely
Victorian phenomenon. As late as 1943 around 4 million died in
the Bengal famine, largely because of official policy.
The point of cataloguing Britain's imperial crimes is not
to trash our forebears, but to remind our rulers that even the
best-run empires are cruel and violent, not just the Belgian
Congo. Overwhelming power, combined with a sense of boundless
superiority, will produce atrocities - even among the well
intentioned. Let's not forget that Leopold's central African
empire was originally called the International Association for
Philanthropy in the Congo. http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,761626,00.html
lchic
- 12:42am Jul 23, 2002 EST (#3239
of 3327)
Business & Markets http://www.economist.com/
lchic
- 12:55am Jul 23, 2002 EST (#3240
of 3327)
B R A I N - his hers
If the male brain is less
sensitive (emotional recall) than the female's ... then more
females should be involved in 'human decision making
processes' http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_medical/story.jsp?story=317482
lchic
- 12:59am Jul 23, 2002 EST (#3241
of 3327)
Fisk - pakistan intelligence services http://www.independent.co.uk/search.jsp?keywords=fisk
Middle East http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/
kalter.rauch
- 02:11am Jul 23, 2002 EST (#3242
of 3327) Earth vs <^> <^> <^>
mazza9
7/22/02 11:36am
[shuffling...hanging my head...]
I presume lchic
7/22/02 5:26am means I'm "intellectually challenged" since
her ally, Rshowalt is the "other poster" she cited. It
wouldn't surprise me if she STILL hasn't clicked on my link,
no doubt fearing it's a diabolical imperialist trojan horse.
kalter.rauch
- 02:31am Jul 23, 2002 EST (#3243
of 3327) Earth vs <^> <^> <^>
lchic
7/23/02 12:55am
...more females should be involved in 'human
decision making processes'...
Click the link, lchic...New Search Engine ...prove
to yourself, if not everyone else, that your "female brain" is
decisive enough to take even this simple action.
Oh yeah...after you find out I was only trying to help
(dumb male), you might attempt the impossible (for a female)
and say "Thank You!"......
Anyway...you're welcome!
lchic
- 06:45am Jul 23, 2002 EST (#3244
of 3327)
Google off! Take your HotBot with you! Cry to
Mamma! Yahoo!
DotCom2002
lchic
- 07:01am Jul 23, 2002 EST (#3245
of 3327)
"" ... evidence suggests that most chief executives have
only a negligible impact on the performance of the
companies they run. There are, of course, exceptions. But
corporate performance depends far more on what industry a
company is in, what proprietary advantages it has, and the
general quality of its workforce, than it does on who's at the
very top. http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldcom/story/0,12167,761721,00.html
wanderer85us
- 07:23am Jul 23, 2002 EST (#3246
of 3327) Bush and Cheney - inside traders - bad apples
that need to be tossed out.
lchic
7/23/02 7:01am
Executives are just there to skim off the cream, leaving
the rest for the poor working stiffs to fight over.
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