Daily Archives: November 1, 2013

Psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis… the heartbreaking monsters – Video

Posted: November 1, 2013 at 6:41 pm


Psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis... the heartbreaking monsters
http://www.arthritistreatmentcenter.com Psoriasis is more than a simple skin condition. It has been associated with a whole host of illnesses including heart...

By: Nathan Wei

Continue reading here:
Psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis... the heartbreaking monsters - Video

Posted in Psoriasis | Comments Off on Psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis… the heartbreaking monsters – Video

DIA MUNDIAL DE LA PSORIASIS – Video

Posted: at 6:41 pm


DIA MUNDIAL DE LA PSORIASIS
Campaña de difusión por el día mundial de la psoriasis.

By: Psoriasis FAPP

See the rest here:
DIA MUNDIAL DE LA PSORIASIS - Video

Posted in Psoriasis | Comments Off on DIA MUNDIAL DE LA PSORIASIS – Video

Moderate to NO Plaque Psoriasis – Video

Posted: at 6:41 pm


Moderate to NO Plaque Psoriasis
The Biweekly Show Season 22 Episode 4 The University of Delaware, Student Television Network Every Tuesday LIVE at 10pm, Pearson Hall or steam online at stn49.com STN49.com facebook.com/BiweeklyS...

By: UDbiweekly

Excerpt from:
Moderate to NO Plaque Psoriasis - Video

Posted in Psoriasis | Comments Off on Moderate to NO Plaque Psoriasis – Video

Health File – Psoriasis Treatment 26.9.2013 – TV5 – Video

Posted: at 6:41 pm


Health File - Psoriasis Treatment 26.9.2013 - TV5
Subscribe for more News Live: http://goo.gl/NHJD9 Website : http://www.tv5news.in Like us on FB@ http://www.facebook.com/tv5newschannel Follow us on@ https://twitter.com/tv5newsnow.

By: TV5newschannel

Link:
Health File - Psoriasis Treatment 26.9.2013 - TV5 - Video

Posted in Psoriasis | Comments Off on Health File – Psoriasis Treatment 26.9.2013 – TV5 – Video

The Best "Politically INCORRECT" Phone Message EVER! – Video

Posted: at 6:41 pm


The Best "Politically INCORRECT" Phone Message EVER!
Do you get tired of hearing the "Politically Correct" auto attendant recordings when you call a business? I certainly have and decided to record a "Political...

By: Jerry Hennerberg

Read more here:
The Best "Politically INCORRECT" Phone Message EVER! - Video

Posted in Politically Incorrect | Comments Off on The Best "Politically INCORRECT" Phone Message EVER! – Video

10 ways to avoid NSA surviellence and Internet censorship – Video

Posted: at 6:41 pm


10 ways to avoid NSA surviellence and Internet censorship
These are nessacary tools to avoid the NSA #39;s oppressive surviellence and the global internet censorship that is bound to come.

By: DigitalCombat

Visit link:
10 ways to avoid NSA surviellence and Internet censorship - Video

Posted in Censorship | Comments Off on 10 ways to avoid NSA surviellence and Internet censorship – Video

Bruised Apple: Buggy products and user censorship

Posted: at 6:41 pm

Apple share prices have been gyrating all week following the release of Q4 financials that showed iPhones up, iPads flat, and Macs down. Wall Street may be ambivalent about Apple profits, but users have a bigger beef: What's up with the parade of bugs hitting recent Apple products?

Of late, Apple users have experienced the torture of a steady drip of problems related to OS X Mavericks, an iOS 7 launch marred by multiple flaws, a new Safari version plagued by HTML5 defects, and new Haswell-powered Retina MacBook Pros that inexplicably freeze and hang up.

Ever since the death of Steve Jobs, Apple watchers have been quick to point out signs the company is in decline. Others mourn the loss of Apple's magic, but argue that innovation is still alive -- it just can't keep up with overhyped expectations. "What does it say about our odd modern age that an electronics company motivated primarily by profit could inspire a tribal fanaticism that most religions, sports teams, and politicians only dream of?" Lydia Depillis asks in New Republic. "And should we be so surprised when that brand fails to meet our expectations?"

One of users' key expectations of Apple has been that it delivers products that work -- elegantly, out of the box, without pain, without compatibility or performance issues. Consistently meeting that expectation has justified the premium prices the company charges. So it's this recent spate of technical issues -- more than any angst over the lost magic of a Jobs-led launch event -- that spells trouble for Apple. Whether as a result of rushing products to market, or finding it harder to issue trouble-free updates across the ecosystem of laptops, tablets, and smartphones it has created, Apple must execute better or risk user disenchantment.

In addition to the spate of technology issues hitting Apple products is the troubling news that the company is suppressing discussion of these bugs on its support forums. InfoWorld's Serdar Yegulalp writes that Lawrence Lessig, founder of Creative Commons and friend to Aaron Swartz, "found himself being thrown into Apple's memory hole this week when he tried to draw attention to a way in which some Apple users could regain Wi-Fi functionality in the wake of iOS 7's problems." Lessig's post informing U.K. users of their warranty rights vanished from the forum, as did a subsequent re-post.

"When did it become inappropriate to inform people about legally protected rights related to technical issues?" Lessig declared in his blog. "Is talking about legal rights the new porn?"

ZDnet's Blue Violet writes:

Apple's policy to remove comments that lend legitimate help is little more than a display of censorship for the internet thought leader, who clearly understands that it is Apple's right to censor its forum users.

But it shows that Apple is well aware of the problem and the critical mass being reached over iOS 7's serious technical problems -- and is both refusing to help and actively removing solutions it simply doesn't like.

A parade of technical problems plus censorship of discussion could add up to a lot of user disillusionment -- and real trouble for Apple.

Read the original here:
Bruised Apple: Buggy products and user censorship

Posted in Censorship | Comments Off on Bruised Apple: Buggy products and user censorship

The Future of Libertarianism – Video

Posted: at 6:41 pm


The Future of Libertarianism
http://www.brookings.edu/events/2013/10/29-2013-american-values-survey-libertarianism-in-the-21st-century Brink Lindsey, Cato Institute: Political circumstan...

By: Brookings Institution

Read more here:
The Future of Libertarianism - Video

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on The Future of Libertarianism – Video

WWE Wrestler Kane Talks Libertarianism, and His Heroes – Video

Posted: at 6:41 pm


WWE Wrestler Kane Talks Libertarianism, and His Heroes
Subscribe to the Tom Woods Show on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-tom-woods-show/id716825890?mt=2 [Click "Show more" below.] http://www.Libe...

By: TomWoodsTV

View original post here:
WWE Wrestler Kane Talks Libertarianism, and His Heroes - Video

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on WWE Wrestler Kane Talks Libertarianism, and His Heroes – Video

How The New York Times Got Libertarianism Wrong, Yet Again

Posted: at 6:41 pm

Why write an article on a subject you know nothing about? This is a question that Amia Srinivasan might usefully have asked herself. She is a Prize Fellow in philosophy at All Souls College, Oxford, one of the most prestigious academic positions in the academic world; and her webpage at Oxford includes several papers of outstanding merit. You would never guess that she is a serious philosopher, though, from her article Questions for Free-Market Moralists in The New York Times, October 2013. The free-market moralist she has principally in mind is Robert Nozick, the author of Anarchy, State, and Utopia (1974). If Srinivasan has read this book at all, the experience appears to have passed her by.

Srinivasan is disturbed by the growth of what she calls a dramatic increase in inequality in the United States over the past five decades.[1] In part, this increase stems from the rising influence of Nozickian ideas. Much better, she thinks, is the theory that John Rawls advanced to great acclaim in A Theory of Justice (1971). The persons in Rawlss original position would also make their society a redistributive one, ensuring a decent standard of life for everyone. By contrast, Nozickians look with indifference on the plight of the poor. Do poor people sometimes face options, all of which are bad? Never mind, says the Nozickian. So long as force is not used or threatened, everything in such cases is morally unproblematic. If you are poor, you deserve to be poor, and likewise if you are rich. You deserve whatever is the outcome of your free choices. Van Gogh, William Blake, Edgar Allan Poe, Vermeer, Melville and Schubert all died broke. If youre a good Nozickian, you think thats what they deserved.

Against the view that people on the free market get what they deserve, she raises some standard objections. How people fare on the market depends in large part on luck. If you have abilities that command a high price on the market, this happy state of affairs mainly comes about because of luck. People, e.g., inherit certain desirable qualities from their parents, or acquire them from the environment. In addition, it is a matter of luck whether people are willing to pay money for the talents you happen to have. The influence of luck is all the more obvious if you, like Mitt Romney, have inherited a large sum of money from your parents. All these matters, in Rawlss phrase, are arbitrary from the moral point of view.

How then can Nozickians claim with a straight face that people deserve all they are able, and only what they are able, to get through free exchange? She acknowledges that even Nozick found it difficult to say this; but it is nevertheless the position that Nozickians are stuck with, according to her. It is precisely for this account of the Nozickian view that I directed against her the harsh comments in my initial paragraph.

She has overlooked one of the key themes of Nozicks book. It isnt just that he finds it difficult to say that you deserve what you get in the market. He doesnt say it at all. A theory of justice in which people were rewarded in accord with morally non-arbitrary characteristics would be a patterned theory. Nozick takes great pains, evidently lost on Srinivasan, to distinguish such patterned theories from his own historical theory. In his account, you get what you are entitled to, a very different matter.

An example will clarify the distinction. Suppose that someone badly needs a kidney transplant, and one of your kidneys would be an ideal match for him. You cant be forced to donate one of your kidneys: Nozick, all libertarians, and, I hope, Srinivasan would agree. Why not? Not because your possession of two healthy kidneys results from your meritorious activities. It is arbitrary from the moral point of view that you have two good kidneys and that the person who needs the transplant does not. Nevertheless, the kidneys belong to you: you are entitled to them. Libertarians view income in the same way. If your services are in high demand, you are entitled to the money you get. Srinivasan may be repelled by all of this; but if she wishes to criticize Nozick, and other libertarians who agree with him, this is the theory she needs to address. Instead, she assails a different account that Nozick explicitly rejects.

She fares no better with the other challenges she issues to the premises or implications of Nozicks argument. He does not hold that any exchange between two people in the absence of direct physical compulsion by one party against the other (or the threat thereof) [is] necessarily free. He does say that if you face severely limited options, and your predicament comes about because others have acted within their rights, your choice is still voluntary. This is a rather more nuanced claim, a matter that escapes Srinivasans attention.

Srinivasans remaining problems for Nozick rest on an elementary confusion. Nowhere does Nozick say that the structure of libertarian rights exhausts morality. Rather, rights tell us when force or its threat may be permissibly used. It is not at all the case that anything you are free to do, according to this structure of rights, is morally permissible. Neither is it the case that moral obligation is confined to freely chosen commitments; again, Srinivasan wrongly conflates moral obligations and enforceable obligations. It would, I suppose, be too much to ask Srinivasan to have a look at Invariances, Nozicks last book; but if she could steel herself to do so, she would find there a detailed discussion of the place of coercion within morality.

Srinivasan cannot seem to get Nozick right. She says of his minimal state The seemingly redistributive policy of making people pay for such a night watchman state, Nozick argued, was in fact non-redistributive, since such a state would arise naturally through free bargaining. This is triply in error. People are not forced to pay for the minimal state, though they would find it in their in their interest to do so; and the monopoly prices charged by the dominant agency really are redistributive, not just seemingly so. Further, the minimal state does not arise entirely through free bargaining. The Dominant Protective Association prohibits other agencies and independents from imposing risky decision procedures on its clients. Oh, well ...

It is unfortunate that The New York Times, the most famous of all American newspapers, did not select someone with a better knowledge of libertarianism to write about it. But the article, replete with errors as it is, may do some good. It may bring libertarian ideas to the attention of readers who otherwise might not have encountered them. As Quine once said after Nozick had complained to him of a negative review, I think by Carlin Romano, of Philosophical Explanations, Every knock a boost.

See the article here:
How The New York Times Got Libertarianism Wrong, Yet Again

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on How The New York Times Got Libertarianism Wrong, Yet Again