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wloutet

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Posts posted by wloutet

  1. 15 minutes ago, Tre Mac said:
    23 minutes ago, CBH1926 said:

    TBH, those that don’t vote can shut the &^@# up and stop complaining.

    You don’t vote, you don’t matter!

    Eh, can't blame the public if they don't want to chose between who's the least corrupt. 

    If that is the case, no candidate is worth your vote, then you still vote, but purposely spoil your ballot.

    • Cheers 1
  2. 48 minutes ago, NewbieCanuckFan said:

    I will say this, the GOP governors that are opening up their states (some, not even two weeks in the shutdown) that see virus rates shoot way up will have only themselves to blame.  Not Donnie.  

    Yes, that was Trump's strategy. He knew that the Governor's were in charge of their states, not him. But he had been saying "I'll make the call, it's up to me!" (or words to that effect). I think that somebody pointed out to him that if he let the Governor's decide, then he couldn't be blamed. The next day he relented. Now, if it backfire's it is their fault. Q.E.D.

    • Cheers 1
    • Upvote 1
  3. A couple of questions for you guys and girls. I thought I saw that one of the problems in the US of getting out the payments to people was that some of the computers were still using COBOL and were from the 60's and 70's. Can this be correct?

    Secondly, with the USA being so good in Nobel Prizes, technology companies, some excellent Universities, and so on, why can it not get an easy way for EVERY eligible voter to get a vote?

    • Upvote 1
  4. Whenever we have Olympic games (summer or winter) I always hope for ABUSA to win. It stands for Anybody But United States of America! I usually meet (for the last 20 years) with the same people at Yellow Point Lodge (Near Ladysmith) starting the the last weekend in June. This year we have been having ZOOM meetings as we don't know if the lodge will be open at the end of June. The same people come back each year, and many are from the states. On meeting them, they almost always say, "I didn't vote for Trump", and they seem very embarrassed that he is their president.

    • Upvote 1
  5. With Trump now saying, "It's up to the states to decide how and when they bring things back to normal", I have two thoughts. Didn't he just say a day or two ago that he would make the decision? And, I think he might be setting the states become a scapegoat for when it doesn't succeed. If it blows up in, let's say, Florida, then he can say, "Well the Governor there really made a huge mistake, it wasn't me!".

    • Upvote 2
  6. Speaking of "yeast", I heard a story of a fellow who had trouble with birds building nests in his horses' hair. After many attempts at trying on his own to solve it, he asked a veterinarian who said to sprinkle yeast in the hair. Sure enough it worked! When asked why, the veterinarian replied, "Yeast is yeast, and nest is nest, and never the mane shall tweet!!!

    • Haha 1
  7. 9 minutes ago, BPA said:

    BTW...the Earth is flat and the sun revolves around the Earth.

    Recently watched the NETFLIX show about the Flat Earther's convention. A few years ago, I was so intrigued with how people could still be saying the earth is flat, I read a book from the library on the history of the Flat Earth Society. It is amazing how they refute all attempts with showing them that earth is not flat. Things like, the pictures in 1969 from the first spaceships in space and their picture of the Earth from space, they refuted by saying it was an aberration of the camera that makes the Earth "appear" round. These people should study Eratosthenes' work from about 200 BCE where, not only did he prove the Earth was round, but he also worked out the size of Earth pretty accurately. Ever since then, I have see the same sort of denial about COVID-19, and "Social distancing".

  8. 44 minutes ago, gurn said:

    So sad that people just can't believe things with out actually having a relative die.

    Yes, I have always thought that the far right might have different views about gun control or abortion rights if one of their children had been involved in a school or mass shooting or an abortion done in a back alley gone wrong, or a daughter pregnant after a rape.

    • Wat 1
    • Vintage 1
  9. 3 minutes ago, stawns said:
      4 minutes ago, coho8888 said:

    Distance learning may work for part of the curriculum in universities and colleges but not for elementary and high school.  Part of the learning environment requires social interactions between the students and teachers and amongst the students themselves.  Kids don't even use phones anymore to talk.

    Having taught in a self-paced school, 1400 students in all 8 courses, self-paced, AND having taught a class of 30 with 6 different Math courses all going on at once, so the only alternative was Distance Learning, I have come to the conclusion that a lot of the success boils down to self-discipline. And, a lot of students just do not have that yet, and they will use their i-pads and smart phones to watch movies, text friends, play games, instead of watching the (very good) online videos. Also, in my classes, I go beyond the curricular stuff, with math in the news, math in sports, math in history and so on.

    • Cheers 1
  10. John Conway, a very noted Mathematician in the US (he was born in Britain), has passed away at 82, from COVID-19. He was into "surreal" numbers and new infinities, but was best known for inventing the mathematical "Game of Life" (not the board game). I found that I had his book, "The Book of Numbers" on my bookshelf, so I have some new reading material as I haven't cracked it for about 3 years.

  11. 3 minutes ago, BPA said:
      3 minutes ago, stawns said:

    I think we're looking at the birth of universal guaranteed income.

    It will be interesting to see how the USA deals with their health care now. Suddenly there might be a realization that Bernie Sanders was on the right path, and that Trump should not get rid of "Obamacare" without a very, very, good replacement

     

    • Cheers 1
    • Upvote 2
  12. 9 minutes ago, Gawdzukes said:
    41 minutes ago, Chris12345 said:

    Let's kick in with some positives....

     

    Who's cooking a turkey this weekend?

     

    Who's drinkn? Sounds like we are day drinking on the deck...just the two of us. No invites.

    Curried Lamb, with Scotch, and Red Wine with Chinese..

     

    • Upvote 1
  13. As a Math teacher, I would sometime ask my students, "How many can program a computer?". I very rarely had no more than or two of thirty students. I today's age, it is an important thing to learn for four reasons (1) It helps expand your ability to work with logic, (2) It gives you the ability to work with some software such as programming Microsoft Excel, (3) It could make you more valuable in whatever job you might get into, (4) It could lead to a future career.

    With students at home now, maybe looking for something to do, now is a good time to start learning. There are many sites on the internet that teach you how to code. You can learn on your own, you don't necessarily have to take a course.  Just a thought. Works for adults too.

     

    • Like 1
  14. 1 hour ago, Canada Hockey Place said:
    • Shakespeare wrote King Lear under quarantine from the Plague around 1606. 
    • Walt Disney, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Haile Selassie I, Franz Kafka,  Edvard Munch and Georgia O'Keeffe are listed as notable  survivors of the Spanish flu. 
    • Horace and John Dodge (founders of Dodge), Gustav Klimt and Fredrick Trump, grandfather of Trump are listed as notable victims. 

    Also, Newton did his great work from his parent's farm when he had to leave Cambridge because of the 1666 plague. Wasn't Trump's grandfather also in the casino and entertaining ladies business?

    • Cheers 1
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