7/26/2008 7:09:47 PM
7/26/2008 7:31:21 PM
7/26/2008 7:42:53 PM
And when people CHOOSE to regulate blow jobs they will.
7/26/2008 11:18:09 PM
^ People will never choose that, because regulating blow jobs will likely do practically nothing to stop HPV.However, stopping restaurants from using transfat will SIGNIFICANTLY reduce the amount of transfat you eat, because when you go out and by your own cooking grease you wouldn't look for the hydrogenated oils, you look for regular canola oil or something similar.It makes sense to regulate transfat as a means of reducing unsaturated fat intake, but it doesn't make sense to regulate blow jobs as a means to stop HPV from spreading.
7/26/2008 11:29:01 PM
I'm pretty sure that in NC blowjobs are considered "crimes against nature" so yeah they're already illegalI wonder if the religious right might have had something to do with that
7/26/2008 11:57:47 PM
^ Yeah, no. Sodomy laws were/are very old, greatly predating the "religious right." Sodomy laws in NC are probably not valid since the Supreme Court ruled them unconstitutional in '03, though this was about homosexuals acts it probably carries over, and no one has tested it.
7/27/2008 4:41:04 AM
7/27/2008 4:42:08 AM
^You've obviously never been to San Francisco. Everything is very expensive. Let me give you a few hints why: government, government, and ... guess what #3 is? Government!Government regulation of rent to "protect" low income home-owners? Rental prices go up. Government regulation to ban plastic bags? Grocery prices go up. Government regulation that institutes universal health care? Price of eating out goes up 4%. You have a hard time believing because you don't live it. California produces incredible entrepreneurs and then the government does everything possible to make sure it doesn't happen again. The rest of us are the wiser. And who are you to argue with an earnest, hard-working owner of a burger joint in the place that invented burger joints? Those guys don't raise prices for fun. They're businesspeople, too.It's obvious -- starting with McDonald's which made it their explicit goal, and they're a multi-billion dollar enterprise -- that exorcising the trans fat presence while maintaining consistency is a hard thing to do. Most companies source from Sysco and they have a price list to choose from. If that burger joint raises prices it's because they are ordering from a 'set menu' where the non trans fat options cost more. McDonald's took years and they are totally vertical.You say I'm using bombastic rhetoric but I'm the only one quoting from the cited article and actual facts, here. Want to differ? Bring it.[Edited on July 27, 2008 at 4:54 AM. Reason : foo]
7/27/2008 4:54:35 AM
Oh God, another thing that pisses me off about the crap government passes is that it will never help the smaller business over the larger one. I totally agree with ^ But the reality is that McDonalds does have strong capacity to cope with such decisions, but the crazy good hole-in-the-wall Chinese places (one of the few things I remember from when I was in San Fran) will not be able to cope.When only large corporations with special connections are allowed to exist, then that's not capitalism, and that's not a free world. Closest thing we've seen so far is communism. Not the idealist form, the fuck you up in Siberia form.
7/27/2008 8:13:17 AM
7/28/2008 4:28:29 AM
Once again: unlike conventional fats, there is no realistic way that people can eat trans fats in a "healthy manner". It is akin to inhaling asbestos in a "healthy manner". The FDA's daily recommended allowance for fat is 65 grams (on a 2000 calorie diet), 20 grams of which being saturated fat.
7/28/2008 11:34:42 AM
^
7/29/2008 12:30:21 AM
This thread is full of mental masturbation.A huge portion of the population doesn't even know what trans fat is, much less what its effects are on them. Displaying trans fat on menus is not going to help that. Nor will it rid trans fat of it harmful effects, which are not a "risk." It does cumulative harm to your body over a lifetime.Trans fat bans and restrictions are popping up several places in the US, as well as Canada and Europe. Healthier oil preservation processes are being developed, so it's only a matter of time before it will be phased out.Are you for freedom of choice for the sake of it, or are you for the improvement in quality of living of everyone?[Edited on July 29, 2008 at 1:21 AM. Reason : .]
7/29/2008 1:09:25 AM
7/29/2008 1:55:47 AM
^OK I am not electing you to any position in government.Anyone give me a good reason why I should not be allowed to open the International House of Trans Fat and serve willing, knowing customers in the state of California? Anyone? Really? Funny how we can have two pages of discussion and no real conversation on the actual topic beyond "trans fats are bad, ban them kkthx." Absolutely pitiful.[Edited on July 29, 2008 at 4:13 AM. Reason : foo]
7/29/2008 4:13:22 AM
7/29/2008 11:25:20 AM
7/29/2008 11:27:24 AM
7/29/2008 12:09:54 PM
7/29/2008 12:11:39 PM
are you saying I can't sell rats for human consumption?
7/29/2008 12:15:15 PM
That was in reference to the Upton Sinclair novel.
7/29/2008 12:18:06 PM
7/30/2008 4:56:36 AM
7/30/2008 1:25:56 PM
It's not like they're banning salt or fat or chocolate.Trans fat is very easily replaced and I've yet to see a solid argument for its existence.
7/30/2008 1:46:38 PM
^^Still trolling.Look -- here's how this works. If you think something I said was a "straw man argument" you must put some effort into explaining WHY you think that. Otherwise you're just trolling and I'm not going to respond to you.As to whether I actually did make a straw man argument -- clearly not. I was using rhetoric to state that his underlying mentality leads naturally to over-regulation. In fact my statement has nothing to do with what he "wants" because I wasn't asking him what he wants to begin with, nor do I care.I know you think you're smart and have built up a lexicon of logical fallacies, but if I'm explicitly using a rhetorical device to make a point, you can't treat it like it's a formal argument. Learn something about actual rhetoric and argumentation before you start trotting out terms you learned on Wikipedia (or in your textbook, or whatever).[Edited on July 30, 2008 at 1:54 PM. Reason : foo]
7/30/2008 1:54:14 PM
If you are arguing online and you use the phrases "Strawman" or "Ad hominem attack" then you automatically win
7/30/2008 2:24:10 PM
7/30/2008 3:23:51 PM
7/30/2008 3:32:26 PM
7/30/2008 6:08:29 PM
^You're trolling because you're repeating the same arguments over and over and dragging out Wikipedia terminology without elaborating. In fact, one might argue, you are presently using a straw man to attack my position -- i.e. that I didn't have a legitimate reason for attack you as a troll; that I was just biased.No reasonable person would read this thread and come to that conclusion.As to over-regulation versus under-regulation: completely ridiculous and moot question. Obviously the burden of proof that a law should exist rests on the shoulders of the people proposing it. Also your question rests on the presumption that my alternative is to "do nothing," when I clearly said over and over again that the appropriate alternative is public education and full disclosure. If you want to call that "under-regulation," please feel free to come up with reasons why. I think any reasonable person would consider my alternative quite moderate and a total ban quite extreme.Again, you're trolling and ignoring most of what's already been said. This is your last shot to post something reasonable.[Edited on July 30, 2008 at 11:45 PM. Reason : foo]
7/30/2008 11:42:49 PM