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>>> Says the guy who's native language describes 154 as "one hundred, 4 and
>>> fifty." ;-)
>>
>> And who probably has an address of the form: street, house number,
>> zip-code, town name ;-)
>>
> Of course! It is sooo stupid to look /first/ for the house number and
> only then for the street ;-)
And then once you've confirmed you're at the correct housenumber and in
the correct street, you find you're in the wrong town! Yes I've done
this before when going to look at a place to rent...
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Am 16.03.2015 um 14:27 schrieb Francois Labreque:
> Le 2015-03-15 01:21, clipka a écrit :
>> Am 15.03.2015 um 03:14 schrieb Cousin Ricky:
>>> At just the right time, we Americans could catch ten digits today. The
>>> rest of the world will have to wait for the crude approximation in July.
>>> :-P
>>
>> Uh, yeah... because when it comes to date formats, the Gregorian date in
>> American notation is the pinnacle of mathematical thinking... >_<
>>
>> To get it right, wait for 2031-06-01, 19:30:59.236077... (if I got the
>> math right)
>>
> Says the guy who's native language describes 154 as "one hundred, 4 and
> fifty." ;-)
Says the guy who speaks a language in which 99 is commonly called
"four-twenty-ten-nine" :P
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On 16/03/15 20:11, clipka wrote:
> Am 16.03.2015 um 14:27 schrieb Francois Labreque:
>> Le 2015-03-15 01:21, clipka a écrit :
>>> Am 15.03.2015 um 03:14 schrieb Cousin Ricky:
>>>> At just the right time, we Americans could catch ten digits today. The
>>>> rest of the world will have to wait for the crude approximation in
>>>> July.
>>>> :-P
>>>
>>> Uh, yeah... because when it comes to date formats, the Gregorian date in
>>> American notation is the pinnacle of mathematical thinking... >_<
>>>
>>> To get it right, wait for 2031-06-01, 19:30:59.236077... (if I got the
>>> math right)
>>>
>> Says the guy who's native language describes 154 as "one hundred, 4 and
>> fifty." ;-)
>
> Says the guy who speaks a language in which 99 is commonly called
> "four-twenty-ten-nine" :P
>
Christine, stop pulling Francoise's pigtails! ...and all of you, it's
not Ricky's fault that he was unlucky enough to be born in the US of A
John
--
Protect the Earth
It was not given to you by your parents
You hold it in trust for your children
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On 03/16/2015 05:21 PM, Doctor John wrote:
> Christine, stop pulling Francoise's pigtails! ...and all of you, it's
> not Ricky's fault that he was unlucky enough to be born in the US of A
I'm not even /that/ lucky:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CesHr99ezWE
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On 16-3-2015 16:19, scott wrote:
>>>> Says the guy who's native language describes 154 as "one hundred, 4 and
>>>> fifty." ;-)
>>>
>>> And who probably has an address of the form: street, house number,
>>> zip-code, town name ;-)
>>>
>> Of course! It is sooo stupid to look /first/ for the house number and
>> only then for the street ;-)
>
> And then once you've confirmed you're at the correct housenumber and in
> the correct street, you find you're in the wrong town! Yes I've done
> this before when going to look at a place to rent...
>
Oh dear! :-)
--
Thomas
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On 17/03/15 02:03, Cousin Ricky wrote:
> On 03/16/2015 05:21 PM, Doctor John wrote:
>> Christine, stop pulling Francoise's pigtails! ...and all of you, it's
>> not Ricky's fault that he was unlucky enough to be born in the US of A
>
> I'm not even /that/ lucky:
>
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CesHr99ezWE
>
'The uploader has not made this video available in your country.'
:-(
John
--
Protect the Earth
It was not given to you by your parents
You hold it in trust for your children
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On 03/17/2015 08:15 AM, Doctor John wrote:
> On 17/03/15 02:03, Cousin Ricky wrote:
>> On 03/16/2015 05:21 PM, Doctor John wrote:
>>> Christine, stop pulling Francoise's pigtails! ...and all of you, it's
>>> not Ricky's fault that he was unlucky enough to be born in the US of A
>>
>> I'm not even /that/ lucky:
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CesHr99ezWE
>>
>
> 'The uploader has not made this video available in your country.'
>
> :-(
Great. This technology was utilized so that global corporations such as
The Google could do business in totalitarian countries such as China
that wished to censor content based on geographic origin, but
corporations seem to love it more than governments do.
The video is a commentary by John Oliver on the voting rights of
residents of the USA's territories.
As you may have heard, the USA just celebrated the 50th anniversary of
the march to Selma, Alabama. The state violence on that march led to
the passage of the Voting Rights Act, which assured the rights of black
Americans to vote--a mere 95 years after the Constitution gave us this
right.
A fact that sits uncomfortably in the back of the mind of every American
who isn't a neocon[1] is that there are 4.1 million American citizens in
Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands
who still do not have the right to vote for president, and have no
voting representation in Congress. Even worse, the Americans in American
Samoa aren't even granted citizenship. ([1]The neocons aren't even
aware that we are Americans.)
As a Virgin Islander, I had considered this to be an artifact of the
Constitution, which devotes all of half a sentence to the territories
(article IV, section 3). However, the video shows that this matter was
decided in the Insular Cases in 1901, using horrifyingly racist
reasoning. What's more, even as racist as the Supreme Court was back
then, it was a patronizing racism, rather than hate-based racism.
(Science had not yet fully realized that race is a culturally relative
artifact, not a biological reality.) The court intended our
disenfranchisement to be only temporary.
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Am 17.03.2015 um 22:26 schrieb Cousin Ricky:
> A fact that sits uncomfortably in the back of the mind of every American
> who isn't a neocon[1] is that there are 4.1 million American citizens in
> Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands
> who still do not have the right to vote for president, and have no
> voting representation in Congress. Even worse, the Americans in American
> Samoa aren't even granted citizenship. ([1]The neocons aren't even
> aware that we are Americans.)
I presume they do pay taxes, right?
So much for "no taxation without representation"...
> As a Virgin Islander, I had considered this to be an artifact of the
> Constitution, which devotes all of half a sentence to the territories
> (article IV, section 3). However, the video shows that this matter was
> decided in the Insular Cases in 1901, using horrifyingly racist
> reasoning.
Yeah, the first half of the 20th century was that way. Hitler was only
the tip of the iceberg.
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On 17/03/2015 21:26, Cousin Ricky wrote:
> On 03/17/2015 08:15 AM, Doctor John wrote:
>
> The video is a commentary by John Oliver on the voting rights of
> residents of the USA's territories.
>
I like John Oliver. He is biased in the right direction and he is funny.
Why don't you tell them to go away if they don't want to give you voting
rights. And apply to be a British Overseas Territory. You could join up
with the ready made community there. And get free entry into museums. ;-)
--
Regards
Stephen
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On 03/16/2015 02:27 PM, Francois Labreque wrote:
> Le 2015-03-15 01:21, clipka a écrit :
>> Am 15.03.2015 um 03:14 schrieb Cousin Ricky:
>>> At just the right time, we Americans could catch ten digits today. The
>>> rest of the world will have to wait for the crude approximation in July.
>>> :-P
>>
>> Uh, yeah... because when it comes to date formats, the Gregorian date in
>> American notation is the pinnacle of mathematical thinking... >_<
>>
>> To get it right, wait for 2031-06-01, 19:30:59.236077... (if I got the
>> math right)
>>
> Says the guy who's native language describes 154 as "one hundred, 4 and
> fifty." ;-)
>
Hi Guys, been busy lately, so not always time to check p.o-t
The story about this as I remember it is that most of GB used to say 4
and fifty (and some still do) but that some king or queen decided that
fifty four better fitted what was written.
And that we write 54 because four and fifty was exactly what the arabs
were saying too, and they write right to left.
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