Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | jprince's commentslogin

So what do you do with those people who did do those despicable things as teens? I don't just mean this, but any reprehensible action. I think obviously we can maybe keep them from getting any kind of comfortable jobs, keep them doing drudge work. But even then, do you really want a neo-nazi cleaning your toilets? No, that's not good enough.

We need to round them up and contain them somewhere. Their remorse can't be enough. We can't have them contaminating our air. If we put them in a single location and kept them from getting in and out, concentrated, we could keep ourselves safe from these people.

/sarcasm


You appear to have issues with my statement, but also don't seem willing to provide a coherent rebuttal. If you are willing to speak your mind plainly and clearly, feel free to edit your comment.

Since you evoked concentration camps, I'd be remissed if I didn't point out that the vast majority of Nazi bureaucrats, including many directly involved in the administration of concentration camps, faced essentially no punishment and quickly re-entered the postwar workforce. No one involved in the illegal incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII was ever sent to prison.


It's interesting that you bring this up, considering we've placed people into camps for far less (such as the crime of 'crossing the borders'), not to mention the hardline stance we've taken against MS-13 including things such as deporting teenagers whom gave us information on MS-13 and were undoubtedly marked for death.

Can you tell me what the difference is between a neo-nazi gang and MS-13 and why one gets crocodile tears while the other has the book thrown at them?


I knew it'd make a comeback!


...well, I mean, it IS just next to Zimbabwe. Can't be that great, can it?

/sarcasm


This, absolutely. If I were looking to get my foot in the door, I would totally code a week for free. Hell, my first freelancing gig, I made 8$/hour.

The three months without pay thing...that's a little different. I'd tell them no way.


I think there's also a big difference in coding for a week for free for a qualified company and doing it for three college students, one of whom claims to be one of "the world's leading react developers" after a 3-month internship.


"If I were looking to get my foot in the door, I would totally code a week for free."

I absolutely would not. They're a company; they can afford to pay me. Me, however, my landlord isn't going to accept "I had to work for free" in lieu of rent.


What's the difference then between this and MapR, besides a similar CLDB pattern? (No single point of failure)


...and there goes OfferUp. My wife loves that app.


Yeah, because I'm totally going to be interested in listening to a bunch of Al Jazeera reporters try to do Al Jazeera America again. Totally unbiased reporting, that. :P


Al Jazeera America wasn't bad, and probably more even handed than most US news sources... in-line with BBC America imho.

That said, most people prefer their news source biased to their own political leanings.


What was wrong with Al Jazerra America?


Best Practice to Level Up: Don't make a whole new framework that is in no way compatible with the prior framework and just label it the same expecting people to use it.


Yes, one way to end an argument you can't win is to go straight to character assassination. Kudos, well done sir.


[flagged]


Sorry, when I read this, for some reason, I thought you were saying the author of this article was the guy posting this, and that because he had posted a sexist tweet, his proof that PHPixie was a fraud was invalid.


Or, "How to hire people who will slavishly work 100 hours a week for a 40 hour/week wage."


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: