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New Mr. Welch, meet GW Bush
Mr. Bush decided that 'there are no undetected errors' in the Texas penal system. Mr. Welch believes that humans are commodities and that pseudo-normal 'distributions' is quite good enough for application to commodities. At least one of these appears to have documented his own description as 'sociopath', despite the simplistic Econ bafflegab by which he justifies this behaviour.

These two are hardly unusual lately, it seems. Surely such essays as the above - are the research material as will be mined by future scholars trying to determine how the disintegration of a society into a worker-slave Gulag, came about. Microsoft + 'mushrooms' - must have given lots of people ideas about new methods for achieving homogeneity, at any cost.

More ugliness. It too is likely to become lost in the noise we'll generate with tomorrow's list of car crashes and people jailed for smoking dope in their living room.


Ashton
New Of course Bush was right
If not what they were originally charged for, his convicts were all guilty of something.

For most of them, if nothing else they are black.

Cheers,
Ben
"Career politicians are inherently untrustworthy; if it spends its life buzzing around the outhouse, it\ufffds probably a fly."
- [link|http://www.nationalinterest.org/issues/58/Mead.html|Walter Mead]
     The Folly of Forced Rankings at employee annual review time - (lincoln) - (6)
         Mr. Welch, meet GW Bush - (Ashton) - (1)
             Of course Bush was right - (ben_tilly)
         One-line summary - (drewk) - (1)
             Not a matter of trust, but commoditization - (mhuber)
         Unconditional forced ranking/firing is bad - (wharris2) - (1)
             Is 'ranking' then, done with the same consummate skill as - (Ashton)

*nog*
62 ms