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Affentitten

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Posts posted by Affentitten

  1. You know for a fact? Great proof.

    What if the product is not the same? If it's a patent product it's likely not. If it's a generic or post-patent, then you as the consumer have the choice at the pharmacy counter. In fact, you're far more likely to be constrained by your pharmacist's business deal than your doctor's post-it note block.

    What you're rather stupidly alledging is that your doctor will say "Gee, this product would be perfect for my patient....but these other guys gave me a pen. It's not quite the right drug, but what the hell. A biro's a biro."

  2. Yeh I always get a bit cheesed off by all the pens, notepads and computers with drug names on them in my Doc's surgery.

    The Anusol Pentium 4 is a real pain in the arse ;)

    Actually Australia is one of the most vigilant countries in the world when it comes to this sort of thing. And if you think your doctor is persuaded by a biro, you need to get another quack.

  3. A grain of truth. But I think the age cut-off to join the ADF is actually 60. Though of course, I can't see them sticking you in the infantry at that age.

    About 15 or so years ago, part of this rationale was applied to the police force in NSW. Basically there were some issues with 18 year old school bully types walking out of high school and straight into the police academy. This was a particular issue with young guys from the country areas who had basically seen bugger all of life. And suddenly they were in the city having to deal with something like a domestic dispute between two elderly homosexuals. They were also easy prey for older, smarter and much more corrupt police.

    So they made it compulsory that cops were going to have to do some form of tertiary education. Not just so they could get a nice diploma to hang on their wall, but in the hope that a year or two of college would grow them up a bit and perhaps give them a little more life experience.

  4. It is somewhat ironic that just a hundred years and change after he dies, this same guy Geronimo has morphed into such a popular hero that when his name is used as a code word in an modern modern operation that kills a modern terrorist, there apparently are plenty of people who are ready and willing to get huffy.

    We have the same thing here with Ned Kelly. Robber, murderer, thief, cop killer. But nowadays he portrayed as some gentle Irish freedom fighter trapped by circumstances and an oppressive colonial state.

  5. What about Charlie Uniform November Tango? That would make the White House press release hard to write?

    I've always favoured making military code words more gentle and ridiculous. Would have been much more humiliating if Osama's codename had been Ballerina / Donkey / Gaylord / Bullwinkle

  6. And while there may not be garbage trucks in much of Pakistan, it is still apparently normal to take your own rubbish and dump it somewhere - burnign it ALL onsite is apparently not teh norm for the country any more than pickups are.

    In a lot of Asia and the ME your garbage is taken away by the local untouchables for a small fee. So once a day old Mr Parvaaz and his two sons come along on their donkey cart and you pay them 5 cents to take your crap away. They then pick through it, resell what they can and burn the rest on some wasteland.

  7. What... all the kerfuffle to fly the tape to NZ in their state of the art 1950's RNZAF jet just so that the 3 people in Kiwiland who had televisions at the time could view the moon landing? Amazing!

    Regards

    KR

    Well there was great interest given the similarities between the culture in NZ and the surface of the moon.

  8. Why would they need a stealth helicopter?

    The Pakistanis knew they were there .

    Nope.

    From BBC

    Mr Panetta said the Pakistani government was also not informed of the operation in advance because the CIA feared that word of it might have been leaked.

    "It was decided that any effort to work with the Pakistanis could jeopardise the mission. They might alert the targets," he told Time magazine.

  9. Aff, most scientific research ends up as wasted money but we need to keep funding it or limit our objectives to building a society where each of us has a bucket of seaweed carried on our head and a square metre of land to stand in. The risk/reward equation is somewhat skewed by the (nearly) infinite reward offered by movement between solar systems: the limiting variable becomes the likelihood of the race surviving long enough to generate the results from research that allow us to exploit that reward.

    Yes but given a finite bucket of money for scientific research, I am looking at the potential reward for spending say $X billion on:

    1) A cure for malaria / cancer / crack addiction

    2) Bringing greater equality to education / healthcare / justice

    3) Finding out what sort of gases might be present in the rings of Saturn

  10. BTW how do you rate the risk of running choppers at night across an unreliable friendly territory and the possibility that that OBL has no AA assets local? And that the Pakistani's do not open fire on the wrong people.

    .

    Totally worth the risk for this sort of pay off. I'm pretty sure they assessed whether there were laser beams in the local minaret.

  11. I don't think it is a far stretch to say that considering the relationship between Pakistan's military, the Taliban, Al Qaeda and other terrorist organizations that it is any huge surprise to find him where they did.

    I'd also suggest that the reason this intelligence took years to come to fruition was because the USA didn't want to share too many details with Pakistan! They played a great hand there.

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