rePost::Rich Germans want higher taxes | FP Passport

Hey friends what’s your over and under for this??
How many Rich people from the Philippines do you think would sign a petition such as this?

Rich Germans ask for higher taxes
Fri, 10/23/2009 – 4:12pm
They’re the kind of citizens any cash-starved government would want: a group of wealthy Germans have launched a petition this week calling for higher taxes on wealthy Germans. The group claims that Germany could raise €100 billion if the richest people paid a five percent wealth tax for two years.
Germany is not known as a low-tax country–tax revenues were 37% of GDP in 2007, in line with other EU countries, and above countries like South Korea (29%) and the United States (28%). The petitioners claim, though, that those who “made a fortune through inheritance, hard work, hard-working, successful entrepreneurship, or investment” should put their money into an economy that, while better off than some other EU counterparts, is still facing rising unemployment through next year.
via Rich Germans want higher taxes | FP Passport.

rePost::Yahoo GeoCities closes on Oct. 26 – Computerworld Blogs

Well this is sad news, Ow the memories!

Yahoo GeoCities closes on Oct. 26
GeoCities, once the Internet’s third most visited domain, will be shutting down on Oct. 26, taking with it thousands of user home pages and decades of data. All that information will be history…. Fortunately, some historians are making sure it’s not lost to the annals of time.
Founded in 1994 as Beverly Hills Internet, what is now Yahoo GeoCities was one of the first services to offer an easy way for early Internet surfers to publish their own Web pages. Whereas most hosting options of the 1990s were expensive, thus limiting their use to more entrepreneurial pursuits, GeoCities’ free hosting space became the home for thousands of sites built around thematically oriented “neighborhoods”: conservation, fashion, military, sports, finance, travel, and more.
via Yahoo GeoCities closes on Oct. 26 – Computerworld Blogs.

rePost::Free legal aid assured for victims of illegal recruitment – Pinoy Abroad – GMANews.TV – Official Website of GMA News and Public Affairs – Latest Philippine News

This is good news!

Free legal aid assured for victims of illegal recruitment
10/26/2009 | 04:14 PM
Victims of illegal recruitment may now be assured of free legal aid from the Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP) Quezon City Chapter after the group inked a memorandum of agreement (MOA) with the Task Force Against Illegal Recruitment (Tfair) under the Office of the Vice President.
“This is indeed good news to all victims of illegal recruitment. Now we have a partner, the IBP-QC chapter, in our campaign against illegal recruitment,” said Tfair chairman and Vice President Noli De Castro in a statement.
De Castro, who is also presidential adviser on overseas Filipino workers (OFW), said the Tfair will evaluate and refer to IBP-QC “high priority” large scale illegal recruitment cases.
He said the IBP-QC will help qualified OFW victims in the prosecution of their individual or collective administrative, civil or criminal claims and actions against illegal recruiters.
As stated in the MOA, De Castro said the IBP-QC shall provide these legal services for free. “No acceptance and appearance fees shall be charged to the OFW victims and no fee shall be charged for drafting pleadings.”
via Free legal aid assured for victims of illegal recruitment – Pinoy Abroad – GMANews.TV – Official Website of GMA News and Public Affairs – Latest Philippine News.

Idea For The Day::A Casino for Conservation? : Guilty Planet

I’d gladly play in a casino like this!

A Casino for Conservation?
Category: Solutions
Posted on: October 25, 2009 3:14 PM, by Jennifer L. Jacquet
What if you could gamble for a good cause? Why not build a casino where the profits go to conservation?
The idea came to me last night while watching a BBC documentary on gambling with Louis Theroux (see preview below). The segment features a woman who has lost $4 million over the last 7 years (don’t worry, she says she had fun doing it) and a Canadian mattress man who lost somewhere over $250,000 in one weekend. Imagine if these people could lose their money and know that it ultimately wound up going toward a good cause rather than in the pockets of already rich casino owners?
via A Casino for Conservation? : Guilty Planet.

Elink Video :: Beau Lotto's TED Talk

… our brains did not evolve to see the world as it is. We can’t. Instead the brain evolved to see the world that was useful to see in the past; And how we see is by continually redefining normality.
TED Talk by beau lotto here

rePost::The meme of honourable death : Greg Laden's Blog

I heard this about a month ago uttered multiple times by friends:

Pain is inevitable, Suffering is optional.

I feel that this is quoted somewhere but that doesn’t subtract from its validity. You always have a choice. You always can say no.  You can always say yes.
I’ve always hated and basked on the feeling of helplessness . It’s the perfect excuse  for failure. It’s never your fault, It’s always because of other people, external circumstances that you did or did not expect.
I call BS on this. For that little slice of the universe we call our life, WE ARE NEVER HELPLESS. We fear ourselves. we fear failure. we fear success.
I bask in failure I bask in success. For they are the same. It is I that is unique. It is you that is unique. Shit Happens. Stuff Happens. Live. Love!

A useless sacrifice, you may say; but while the men who saw them die can tell such a story round the camp fire the example of such deaths as these does more than clang of bugle or roll of drum to stir the warrior spirit of our race. [emphasis added]
At no point during this particular engagement could anyone with a modicum of rationality have believed that this was a good idea. Even if the officers in charge, who were taken out of action right away, honestly thought that bringing the artillery, with its horses and its gunners, to within killing range of several hundred sharp shooters would be an effective strategy, it would not have taken long to figure out that they were wrong. Yet once the operation started up, the “right” thing to do was not to back off, not to question authority, not to run and hide because death was a near certainty and success impossible. No. The “right” thing to do was do die, and the reason to die was because … well, because it was the right thing to do. Those soldiers that were hiding in the hollow or the hut were forgiven by Doyle, because there was not much they could do. But the soldiers that stayed with the artillery were honoured by him, and by the British Government and the people back home and their comrades.
The meme of honourable death served the British Empire well.
via The meme of honourable death : Greg Laden’s Blog.

rePost:: Less Wrong: Let them eat cake: Interpersonal Problems vs Tasks

Nice post on the difference between tasks and problems, very generalizable. to most facets of decision making/problem solving etc.

When I read Alicorn’s post on problems vs tasks, I immediately realized that the proposed terminology helped express one of my pet peeves: the resistance in society to applying rationality to socializing and dating.
In a thread long, long ago, SilasBarta described his experience with dating advice:
I notice all advice on finding a girlfriend glosses over the actual nuts-and-bolts of it.
In Alicorn’s terms, he would be saying that the advice he has encountered treats problems as if they were tasks. Alicorn defines these terms a particular way:
It is a critical faculty to distinguish tasks from problems. A task is something you do because you predict it will get you from one state of affairs to another state of affairs that you prefer. A problem is an unacceptable/displeasing state of affairs, now or in the likely future. So a task is something you do, or can do, while a problem is something that is, or may be.
Yet as she observes in her post, treating genuine problems as if they were defined tasks is a mistake:
Because treating problems like tasks will slow you down in solving them. You can’t just become immortal any more than you can just make a peanut butter sandwich without any bread.
Similarly, many straight guys or queer women can’t just find a girlfriend, and many straight women or queer men can’t just find a boyfriend, any more than they can “just become immortal.”
People having trouble in those areas may ask for advice, perhaps out of a latent effort to turn the problem into more of a task. Yet a lot of conventional advice doesn’t really turn the problem into the task (at least, not for everyone), but rather poses new problems, due to difficulties that Alicorn mentioned, such as lack of resources, lack of propositional knowledge, or lack of procedural knowledge.
via Less Wrong: Let them eat cake: Interpersonal Problems vs Tasks.

rePost::We're more likely to behave ethically when we see rivals behaving badly : Cognitive Daily

So it appears that all three of our initial questions about why we cheat play into real-world cheating. We’re influenced by our chances of getting caught, by how much attention we’re paying to the ethical issues involved, and whether or not people like us are doing it. And we reserve special disdain for our rivals, taking care not to behave in the unethical ways they do. Perhaps if the University of Chicago wants to cut down on theft in their cafeteria, what they really need to do is point out how often those unethical Northwestern students steal silverware.
via We’re more likely to behave ethically when we see rivals behaving badly : Cognitive Daily.