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Big Ol' Smitty

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Everything posted by Big Ol' Smitty

  1. Big Ol' Smitty

    The Republican Wish List

    I think it is right to question whether affirmative action is the right way to go about correcting past and present injustice. I don't, however, think it is "reverse discrimination."
  2. Big Ol' Smitty

    The Republican Wish List

    Numerous studies show that minorities who land their jobs through affirmative action are not less qualified than their colleagues.
  3. Big Ol' Smitty

    The Republican Wish List

    But discrimination is still very widespread according to social science data.
  4. Big Ol' Smitty

    The Republican Wish List

    White males do not lose the right to be hired for high-paying jobs; qualified women and minorities gain that right. True, awarding these rights will deprive some white males of their unfair chance to gain a high-paying job. But they should have never had such undue privilege in the first place, and taking it from them is not a violation of their rights.
  5. Big Ol' Smitty

    The Republican Wish List

    Affirmative Action is not meant to help blacks because of the color of their skin, but because they deserve compensation for past and continuing injustices.
  6. Big Ol' Smitty

    The Republican Wish List

    ^^^directed to 2Gold
  7. Big Ol' Smitty

    The Republican Wish List

    You make very good points and I pretty much agree with everything you said. I just don't know if the country is really enlightened enough to hire fairly without affirmative action.
  8. Big Ol' Smitty

    The Republican Wish List

    Affirmative action works by determining what percentage of qualified women and minorities are available to a company, and then setting a goal for hiring that percentage. For example, suppose a minority makes up 30 percent of the local population, but only 15 percent are qualified for the company's jobs. The goal for the company is 15 percent, not 30 percent. And if the company makes a good-faith effort to reach this goal but fails, then it incurs no legal penalty -- the goal is simply reset for the next year, and the next, and the next, if need be. The courts step in with quotas only in the case of blatant discrimination against clearly qualified minorities.
  9. Big Ol' Smitty

    EA NBA Live 2005

    My friend and I almost got into a fistfight over the game. It's great though.
  10. Big Ol' Smitty

    GTA: San Andreas

    Hey I have a question. How do you get progress up with your girlfriends quickly? I am at a point in the game where I can't progress with the storyline until I score with this chick. Whenever I do a date it just barely takes my progress up. What gives?
  11. Big Ol' Smitty

    Is the GOP headed toward irrelevance?

    ...I actually didn't think older people becoming Republicans had anything to do with getting jobs. I thought it was just kind of giving up on life and getting fat and complacent.
  12. Big Ol' Smitty

    All you loser liberals, from one of you!

    ^^^^^^^ Proving his point
  13. Big Ol' Smitty

    Iraq

    This may be a dumb question but... What if the people of Iraq elect an Islamic fundamentalist regime?
  14. Big Ol' Smitty

    check this shite out

    http://americablog.blogspot.com/ballotsohiosmall.jpg?CLICK ^^^^ those are votes from a primarily democratic district in Ohio being loaded by that person into that truck with that Bush/Cheney sticker
  15. Big Ol' Smitty

    check this shite out

    I didn't claim anything...it just looks bad. Also, I would like an explanation of why the results are so much higher for Bush than exit polling ONLY in states with electronic voting with no paper trails.
  16. Big Ol' Smitty

    CNN Live projections

    *braces for flaming* Prior to the election, Bush criticized exit polling in swing states. In every state that uses non-electronic voting or e-voting with paper trails, the exit polls match up with the official results pretty evenly. In states that use e-voting with no paper trails, Bush is doing significantly better than what the exit polls indicate. Plus it appears as if CNN has changed their exit polling numbers to better coincide with the official results. I'll throw out this article as well: Published on Thursday, August 28, 2003 by the Cleveland Plain Dealer Voting Machine Controversy by Julie Carr Smyth COLUMBUS - The head of a company vying to sell voting machines in Ohio told Republicans in a recent fund-raising letter that he is "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year." The Aug. 14 letter from Walden O'Dell, chief executive of Diebold Inc. - who has become active in the re-election effort of President Bush - prompted Democrats this week to question the propriety of allowing O'Dell's company to calculate votes in the 2004 presidential election. O'Dell attended a strategy pow-wow with wealthy Bush benefactors - known as Rangers and Pioneers - at the president's Crawford, Texas, ranch earlier this month. The next week, he penned invitations to a $1,000-a-plate fund-raiser to benefit the Ohio Republican Party's federal campaign fund - partially benefiting Bush - at his mansion in the Columbus suburb of Upper Arlington. The letter went out the day before Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell, also a Republican, was set to qualify Diebold as one of three firms eligible to sell upgraded electronic voting machines to Ohio counties in time for the 2004 election. Blackwell's announcement is still in limbo because of a court challenge over the fairness of the selection process by a disqualified bidder, Sequoia Voting Systems. In his invitation letter, O'Dell asked guests to consider donating or raising up to $10,000 each for the federal account that the state GOP will use to help Bush and other federal candidates - money that legislative Democratic leaders charged could come back to benefit Blackwell. They urged Blackwell to remove Diebold from the field of voting-machine companies eligible to sell to Ohio counties. This is the second such request in as many months. State Sen. Jeff Jacobson, a Dayton-area Republican, asked Blackwell in July to disqualify Diebold after security concerns arose over its equipment. "Ordinary Ohioans may infer that Blackwell's office is looking past Diebold's security issues because its CEO is seeking $10,000 donations for Blackwell's party - donations that could be made with statewide elected officials right there in the same room," said Senate Democratic Leader Greg DiDonato. Diebold spokeswoman Michelle Griggy said O'Dell - who was unavailable to comment personally - has held fund-raisers in his home for many causes, including the Columbus Zoo, Op era Columbus, Catholic Social Services and Ohio State University. Ohio GOP spokesman Jason Mauk said the party approached O'Dell about hosting the event at his home, the historic Cotswold Manor, and not the other way around. Mauk said that under federal campaign finance rules, the party cannot use any money from its federal account for state- level candidates. "To think that Diebold is somehow tainted because they have a couple folks on their board who support the president is just unfair," Mauk said. Griggy said in an e-mail statement that Diebold could not comment on the political contributions of individual company employees. Blackwell said Diebold is not the only company with political connections - noting that lobbyists for voting-machine makers read like a who's who of Columbus' powerful and politically connected. "Let me put it to you this way: If there was one person uniquely involved in the political process, that might be troubling," he said. "But there's no one that hasn't used every legitimate avenue and bit of leverage that they could legally use to get their product looked at. Believe me, if there is a political lever to be pulled, all of them have pulled it." Blackwell said he stands by the process used for selecting voting machine vendors as fair, thorough and impartial. As of yesterday, however, that determination lay with Ohio Court of Claims Judge Fred Shoemaker. He heard closing arguments yesterday over whether Sequoia was unfairly eliminated by Blackwell midway through the final phase of negotiations. Shoemaker extended a temporary restraining order in the case for 14 days, but said he hopes to issue his opinion sooner than that. © 2003 The Plain Dealer I'm just sayin' is all... (removes tin foil hat)
  17. Big Ol' Smitty

    CNN Live projections

    More brilliance.
  18. Big Ol' Smitty

    CNN Live projections

    Lovely. You are one sick partisan fuck.
  19. Big Ol' Smitty

    CNN Live projections

    I feel that. I need to start stocking up on sweaters and learnin' me some hockey.
  20. Big Ol' Smitty

    Electoral Vote Predictor 2004.

    Dude, Bunning is beating himself. He has done so much dumb shit during this campaign that he has made almost impossible to vote for him. Saying his opponent looks like Saddam's sons? Not showing up for a debate at the last minute and then reading off a teleprompter as he debated via sattelite? Come on, man. Even a diehard partisan can see that the blown lead is his fault.
  21. Big Ol' Smitty

    Howard Zinn: Our War on Terrorism

    I don't think that is the goal of most of the Islamist terrorists--at least they don't want to "convert" the US. Muslim society has historically been more tolerant of minority religions than Christian society.
  22. Big Ol' Smitty

    Howard Zinn: Our War on Terrorism

    Wait a minute...I thought the root cause of terrorism was the terrorists' hatred of our freedom?!?! So...confused...
  23. Big Ol' Smitty

    Good piece on the Potential Problems

    In 1996, Harvard and Berkeley published separate studies that examined income inequality in all 50 states. According to Bruce Kennedy, the lead researcher of the Harvard study, "The size of the gap between the wealthy and less well-off, as distinct from the absolute standard of living enjoyed by the poor, appears to be related to mortality." Both studies found that states with higher income inequality have all the following social problems: Higher death rates for all age groups. Higher rates of homicide. Higher rates of violent crime. Higher costs per person for police protection. Higher rates of incarceration. Higher rates of unemployment. A higher percentage of people receiving income assistance and food stamps. More high-school dropouts. Less state funds spent per person on education. Fewer books per person in the schools. Poorer educational performance, including worse reading skills, worse math skills. Higher infant mortality rates. Higher heart disease. Higher cancer rates. A greater percentage of people without medical insurance. A greater proportion of babies born with low birth weight. A greater proportion of the population unable to work because of disabilities. A higher proportion of the population using tobacco. A higher proportion of the population being sedentary (inactive). Higher costs per-person for medical care.
  24. Big Ol' Smitty

    Good piece on the Potential Problems

    ^^^ I meant tone, not "tome".
  25. Big Ol' Smitty

    Good piece on the Potential Problems

    So you're not even going to address the content of the articles, then? And I assume the tome of the above would be characterized as "dismissive," perhaps "disdainful"?
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