American Computer Scientists Grace Hopper, Margaret Hamilton Receive Presidential Medals of Freedom (fedscoop.com) 126
An anonymous reader quotes a report from FedScoop: President Barack Obama awarded Presidential Medals of Freedom to two storied women in tech -- one posthumously to Grace Hopper, known as the "first lady of software," and one to programmer Margaret Hamilton. Hopper worked on the Harvard Mark I computer, and invented the first compiler. "At age 37 and a full 15 pounds below military guidelines, the gutsy and colorful Grace joined the Navy and was sent to work on one of the first computers, Harvard's Mark 1," Obama said at the ceremony Tuesday. "She saw beyond the boundaries of the possible and invented the first compiler, which allowed programs to be written in regular language and then translated for computers to understand." Hopper followed her mother into mathematics, and earned a doctoral degree from Yale, Obama said. She retired from the Navy as a rear admiral. "From cell phones to Cyber Command, we can thank Grace Hopper for opening programming up to millions more people, helping to usher in the Information Age and profoundly shaping our digital world," Obama said. Hamilton led the team that created the onboard flight software for NASA's Apollo command modules and lunar modules, according to a White House release. "At this time software engineering wasn't even a field yet," Obama noted at the ceremony. "There were no textbooks to follow, so as Margaret says, 'there was no choice but to be pioneers.'" He added: "Luckily for us, Margaret never stopped pioneering. And she symbolizes that generation of unsung women who helped send humankind into space."
I don't mean to sound like a downer (Score:2)
Re:I don't mean to sound like a downer (Score:5, Funny)
Obligatory XKCD: https://xkcd.com/435/ [xkcd.com]
Re:I don't mean to sound like a downer (Score:5, Insightful)
The applying part can be hard. Remember, no handy libraries to fall back on, no frameworks, no pre-built hardware components, no idea what was possible or even plausible. After all, physics is just mathematics applied to the real world.
Re:I don't mean to sound like a downer (Score:5, Informative)
Yep. Margret Hamilton basically wrote the code that got us to the moon by literally punching binary codes into hunreds if not thousands of feet of tape with a hole puncher and sticky tape, calculating how long each assembly instruction would take and working from there to build failsafes all throughout the code in case the inevitable malfunction happened. And those malfunctions came, and her code self corrected and avoided plunging astronauts to their deat. Brilliant stuff.
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Yep. Margret Hamilton basically wrote the code that got us to the moon by literally punching binary codes into hunreds if not thousands of feet of tape with a hole puncher and sticky tape, calculating how long each assembly instruction would take and working from there to build failsafes all throughout the code in case the inevitable malfunction happened. And those malfunctions came, and her code self corrected and avoided plunging astronauts to their deat. Brilliant stuff.
I find it sadly ironic that in the middle of you conveying this amazing story, your 2016 spellchecker code could not self correct...
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Margret Hamilton basically wrote the code that got us to the moon by literally punching
Bang! Zoom! Right to the moon!
Some things never change (Score:2)
In 1960 she took an interim position at MIT to develop software for predicting weather on the LGP-30 and the PDP-1 computers...Hamilton wrote that at that time, computer science and software engineering were not yet disciplines; instead, programmers learned on the job with hands-on experience.
Sounds like most "coders" today.
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And the problem with this is....?
The problem is the terrible code that results from it.
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I wanted to reply earlier but my computer with a 64 bit processor running at GHz clock speeds and with gigabytes of RAM, is somehow grinding to a halt because something, somewhere that I have no control over is accessing the hard drive 100%. Apparently, someone thought it was very important for Windows to index every single file on the hard at least twice a day, with no way of opting out or finding out how to opt out.
Then I tried to open the Control Panel, but somehow all the icons on the desktop disappeare
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She did no such thing. A few hundred people did this, and she partly wrote a small part of it and partly managed the rest.
It's odd, you know. There's a pattern here on slashdot. I mean most of the overt sexism has gone. Nonetheless, whenever there's a story like this there are always far, far more people coming out of the woodwork saying how the achievements are less than stated for a variety of plausible sounding reasons and yet those comments are few and far between when a guy is the subject.
She lead the
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I don't have to "deal" with the fact that she was a project lead - that is well-known fact (since 1965, at least, but not in the 1962-1965 period). But the claim that "[she] basically wrote the code that got us to the moon by literally punching binary codes into hunreds if not thousands of feet of tape with a hole puncher and sticky tape, calculating how long each assembly instruction would take and working from there to build failsafes all throughout the code in case the inevitable malfunction happened" is
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You're being intellectually dishonest. You could have said "no, she didn't write all the code, she lead the team who wrote the lander code". That is a neutral eay of saying it. Instead you write this statement infused with negativity:
and she partly wrote a small part of it and partly managed the rest.
So yeah, that's your personal slant on it.
Your mention of sexism is confusingly random.
Except there is way more negativity and downplaying of achievements on threads about female luminaries versus male ones. S
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She did no such thing. A few hundred people did this, and she partly wrote a small part of it and partly managed the rest.
I would hope that you would be gracious enough to realize when you make a mistake, but I somehow doubt it. K.S. actually came out and said she led (part of) the project. How is he not giving her credit for that?
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Your mention of sexism is confusingly random.
No, actually it isn't.
Just take any other story of someone receiving an award for exceptional accomplishments.
Would you, in every case, say, "no, sorry, they don't deserve that because they worked on a team"? (as I am sure you are aware, nobody works in a vacuum. Nobody accomplishes something completely by themselves. You are always standing on the shoulders of giants.)
I am guessing that your answer would be no.
If it is, then you have to ask why you did it in this case?
Sexism is one possible answer. Therefo
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I can only dispute things that I know are factually wrong, and in this case, I know that and thus disputed the claims that were wrong.
Except you went over and above mere disputing. I already said that and you chose to ignore it.
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She did no such thing. A few hundred people did this, and she partly wrote a small part of it and partly managed the rest.
Please explain what part of that is "over and above mere disputing" or sexist. I don't see either.
The facts are the she was part of a very large team, and at some point in the project she managed some of the team members. That is all.
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From NASA:
At the start of the Apollo program, the onboard flight software needed to land on the moon didn't exist. Computer science wasn't in any college curriculum. NASA turned to mathematician Margaret Hamilton, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to pioneer and direct the effort.
Compared to your "interpretation" of it:
and at some point in the project she managed some of the team members. That is all.
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At the start of the Apollo program, the onboard flight software needed to land on the moon didn't exist. Computer science wasn't in any college curriculum. NASA turned to mathematician Margaret Hamilton, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to pioneer and direct the effort.
You see, this is exactly the kind of fact-free BS that irritates me. Here's a little reality check:
1) The AGC contract was indeed the first to be awarded [nasa.gov] during the Apollo program as a part of such, in mid-1961.
2) It was awarded to the MIT Instrumentation Laboratory.
3) The major reason why it was awarded to the MIT IL was the accomplishments of Charles Stark Draper with inertial guidance, given the fact that accurate, fully autonomous guidance for a two-week period was considered a necessity for the project
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It's curious that you called the text I swiped from a NASA page "fact free bullshit", then countered with uh... text from a NASA page.
And all the coolest bits came after 1965. She was running that development effort when all the people went to the moon.
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Typical SJW, always looking at everything through the lens of *-isms. Someone posted nerd-bait, an obviously overblown statement claiming to be literally true. Someone else got nerd-sniped by the nerd bait. No sexism involved.
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There were no textbooks to follow for what they needed to do. The maths behind complex dynamic systems is completely different to the type of static equations that the textbooks were full of.
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There are even more math textbooks today than then. But math is so diverse, even when restricted to practical applied mathematics, that there are still plenty of topics completely not covered by any textbook. A senior undergraduate thesis project can end up on a topic that is barely explored and maybe has only a handful of mentions in papers.
Re:I don't mean to sound like a downer (Score:4)
Yep, no one ever came up with a breakthrough in computer science. It was all solved by the 1950s and written up in text books.
What.
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Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins.
No, you don't.
Re:I don't mean to sound like a downer (Score:5, Funny)
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"Just" applied mathematics?
Re:I don't mean to sound like a downer (Score:4, Insightful)
"Just" applied mathematics?
Yep. What she did was just applied mathematics. When the next story about not so female tech luminary comes up (Torvalds), we can go back to fawning all over him. No claims of "just applied mathematics" there or claims the achievements were overstated.
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1) Didn't do it fast enough.
2) What about X? Why doesn't X get a medal?
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Or, given the recent voting:
3) Why no white males?
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2) What about X? Why doesn't X get a medal?
Hopper's medal is difficult to question in any way (she's already a National Medal of Technology recipient), but Hamilton is more of a pop culture idol, to be honest.
Re:Great and long overdue! (Score:4, Funny)
I wonder what negative slant the Obama haters will come up with for this one?
*ahem*...
THIS IS JUST MORE RAMPANT SOCIAL JUSTICE WARRIOR CLAPTRAP PISSING ON MEN! WHERE ARE THE MEDALS FOR THE MEN WHO BUILT THE MACHINE"S THESE WOMEN USED HUH??? WHAT ABOUT THEM, OBUMMER!?!?!
These "programmers" were just punching holes in paper. My kids can do that!!! What did they do that was so great huh??? Adding 1's and 0's? Guess what, it's 1 you elitist snobs, now where's my medal???
Thank GOD we prayed on it and JESUS TRUMP is going to make AMERICA GREAT AGAIN by putting women back where they belong. Everything was better when women wore sexy skirts and brought you drinks at work then stood around waiting for you to grab them by the p***y. Now they're just GODLESS hairy legged ABORTION machines, carrying dead fetuses up in their vaginas and trying to be equal to MEN. They're all HARLOTS and GOD will strike them down like they deserve. NASTY WOMAN!!! THROW HER IN JAIL!!!
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But on another hand, if it was actually an SJW thing, would be Anita Sarkeesan and Brianna Wu getting the awards instead of those women that actually did real things.
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LOL "JESUS TRUMP"
I was about to say "let the meme's begin"... but it has already begun....
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*slow clap*
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Obama doesn't even know his own field, much less ours. (See the recent Snowden/pardon story, and especially the comments.) And if we are really honest about it, formal language theory isn't really our field either, even if we use tools utilizing it every day (grep, lexx, gcc...).
If "regular language" was a call out, the credit belongs to his speechwriters for not cutting it out of the gobbledygook report that his tech advisers surely handed them with the recommendation. They (the speechwriters) wouldn't
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Comments aside, these two were good awards. Very fitting, and honestly later than these ladies deserved. It almost makes up for him sullying the awards by giving the same thing to a bunch of entertainers and other Hollywood pukes who will be forgotten five minutes after they die.
Gee, this reminds me of a certain prize that Obama was awarded about five minutes after he became president.
Re: Regular Language (Score:2)
You know that politicians employ speech writers, right?
You think Trump is going to skip that, as well as fire the ones he had during the campaign?
Don't be ignorant.
Grace Hopper's resistance (Score:5, Interesting)
Many criticized the idea compilers at the time for "dumbing down programming", fearing loss of understanding about the guts. Thus, the idea kind of languished until organizations realized they had to rewrite all their code for different brands or later models. The idea of a machine-agnostic middle language then became financially appealing to reduce recoding.
Thus, it wasn't really the alleged human-friendly angle that made compilers marketable, but the portability of the code.
Re:Grace Hopper's resistance (Score:5, Interesting)
Portability was a factor but not nearly on the level you describe - note how operating systems remained in machine code right until the end of the 1960s and nobody tried to write one in a compiled language until Kernighan and Ritchie. Consider also the language that Hopper created: Cobol. A language that remains universally hated by programmers, second only to BASIC in horribleness for a trained coder - yet it was incredibly successful. It was written to look like the kind of forms that business executives filled in regularly and to make it possible for them to write their own code.
That never actually happened very much -but it did get executives to start seeing the value in programming and COBOL became a major industry. To this day there are giant systems at many corporations (especially banks) that are written in COBOL and programmers who can work the language (and stomach it) get paid very high salaries (not least because so few are willing to learn it - most of us would rather earn less than have to fill in forms designed for burocrats to write an algorithm).
COBOL's problems aside - it's design does show one absolutely clear intention: user-friendliness. One could argue that trying to make programming userfriendly by analogy to burocracy was a wrong way to approach it, but you can't argue that, that was the intention. Hopper was clearly trying for userfriendliness and in that regard was way ahead of her time.
She was also involved in numerous other groundbreaking things. My critique of COBOL should in no way be read as disparaging to it's creator - on the contrary, it was a major breakthrough and while COBOL itself was a terrible language the concept of a compiler that could turn a human-readable text into code would change computing forever. Portability was just one of the many advantages that came out of it. Hopper definitely belongs in the same class as Ada Lovelace or Alan Turing as one of the principle drivers of the computing revolution.
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nobody tried to write one in a compiled language until Kernighan and Ritchie
That's simply not true. MULTICS was written in PL/1, the B5000 (1961) had an OS written in ALGOL60. Writing operating systems in high-level languages was common by the time UNIX came along, it was only rare on the very cheapest computers (where UNIX ran), and UNIX was written in assembly until the PDP-11 port.
Re:Grace Hopper's resistance (Score:4, Informative)
Yet Multics wasn't portable and when both Honeywell stopped making the hardware it basically died.
>Writing operating systems in high-level languages was common by the time UNIX came along
But writing them portably was not - Unix's single greatest contribution was proving that you can write a portable operating system, every aspect of it's design contributes to that - not just writing it in a high level language but breaking it down into a group of loosely coupled tiny programs that communicated using a simple (the simplest possible in fact) interface, treating everything as the simplest object (a file) - the whole thing was fundamentally designed for portability. Pre PDP-11 port versions were experiments with the idea, it wasn't unix until it was written in C.
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But writing them portably was not - Unix's single greatest contribution was proving that you can write a portable operating system
Not really. The first 'port' of UNIX involved rewriting it in a completely different language. Subsequent ports involved massive rewrites of large portions. It wasn't until around 3BSD - long after Bell Labs had ceased to be the driving force behind it - that the pmap abstractions were introduced. The only reason that UNIX was portable was that it had such low hardware requirements: it didn't take advantage of any complex features and so you could implement something that provided the same interfaces on
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COBOL really isn't such a bad language. It has some nice features, like native variants that map very well onto hierarchical data like XML. The biggest problem with COBOL is shitty COBOL programmers. The language makes it easy for idiots to make code that doesn't crash, so bad programmers can get poorly written code into production. Java has much the same problem, it isn't that Java's a bad language per se, just that it makes life too easy for bad programmers, so you get stuff that uses too much memory,
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COBOL really isn't such a bad language. It has some nice features, like native variants that map very well onto hierarchical data like XML.
Better than S-exps?
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Of course, if you didn't like COBOL, there was always Fortran to fall back on. An engineer's wet dream, total nightmare and mystery for the rest. Or there was Assembly Language for the narcissistic masochists: "this inscrutably undecypherable code is mine, mine, mine, even if it kills me with a terminal ulcer".
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Well it didn't take that long afterwards before we had lisp. Upsides: functional programming can be really beautiful (look at good Ruby code sometime - it's poetry man) ... downside - LISP was terrible at it,
so
many
parentheses
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speaking of ruby poetry
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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COBOL, Fortran, and LISP were very much version 1.0 . no one had ever done anything like it. Mistakes were made but through them it allowed much better languages to be developed Like VB, based on BASIC which borrowed syntax from both Fortran and COBOL. Or Python which adopted Fortran's white space significance three years after Fortran 90 discarded it.
But seriously, they broke ground in a new area with COBOL and Fortran. An attempt to fix Fortran and COBOL resulted in Pascal which then led to UCSD Pascal wh
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An attempt to fix Fortran and COBOL resulted in Pascal
You left out Algol and PL/I ("fixing" Fortran and COBOL, roughly respectively.)
Algol [Re:Grace Hopper's resistance] (Score:1)
Algol was amazing for its time, for it was designed in the late 50's yet has most of the procedural features we use and take for granted today, such as nested blocks instead of (just) go to's, and made a distinction between modifiable and read-only parameters (similar to by-ref versus by-value).
I hope that team gets a nice award also.
It was never really a commercial success, but influenced Pascal, Ada, VB, C, and all of C's descendants (Java, JavaScript, Php, C#, etc.)
Perhaps if the licensing were more flex
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An OS and a domain application are very different animals. Efficiency and memory usage are usually a much bigger relative factor for an OS compared to a domain app. Systems software, like OS's, file systems, drivers, and databases, typically needs to be more "tight" per machine resources. Thus, their code was hand-crafted for a longer period in history.
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I said COBOL was bad for programmers - I never said it was bad.
Which part of "major breakthrough" and "way ahead of her time" didn't you understand ?
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Quote: "and while COBOL itself was a terrible language the concept of a compiler [was good]..."
And the rest of the tone looks like you are trashing COBOL in general.
"Major breakthrough" and "ahead of [its] time" are not necessarily compliments of COBOL as a language.
The Wright brothers' first airplane was practically junk as far as the utility of an airplane is concerned, but it WAS a "breakthrough" and "ahead of its time". Your characterizing o
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My intended meaning was somewhere in between. I think COBOL was fantastic at what it was designed for - I just think it was the wrong thing to design something for. But I don't hold that against Hopper in the least, she was breaking entirely new ground - it's impossible to do that and know the best direction to take - by definition if you go into an entirely new field you're going to make missteps which other can ONLY avoid BECAUSE you made them.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:5, Insightful)
No. Just because you value the field of their contributions more, does not mean that her contribution to her field was any less - or even that the field is any less important. And it's not your decision to make.
If you want to choose who gets presidential medals of freedom - run for president.
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It is his right to criticize abuse of symbols meant to celebrate accomplishment.
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And my right not to agree with his criticism.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:5, Informative)
different kinds of courage and service to the nation, both similarly valuable.
Ellen absolutely deserves what she got, coming out publicly at a time when even TV and "liberal Hollywood" still played LGBT folks for laughs and mockery (and still do at time), risking her career in the process. But her doing so is a big factor in the swift public acceptance of LGBT folks over the past 2 decades, one of the fastest changes in cultural norms we've ever seen, as both she was seen as imminently likable by folks (instead of as "the other"), and for the inspiration she gave many other individuals who maybe wouldn't have had the courage to do so in their own lives, which also helped show people that this wasn't some phantom group of people that "regular folks" didn't know, but that in fact LGBT folks were themselves "regular folks", that most of us know one or two, and indeed there were already part of families and lives.
So yes, Ellen absolutely deserves it.
the full citation:
Ellen DeGeneres is an award-winning comedian who has hosted her popular daytime talk show, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, since 2003 with her trademarked humor, humility, and optimism. In 2003 Ellen lent her voice to a forgetful but unforgettable little fish named Dory in Finding Nemo. She reprised her role again in 2016 with the hugely successful Finding Dory. Ellen also hosted the Academy Awards twice, in 2007 and 2014. In 1997, after coming out herself, DeGeneres made TV history when her character on Ellen revealed she was a lesbian. In her work and in her life, she has been a passionate advocate for equality and fairness.
You can read the others here, [whitehouse.gov] including Tom Hanks, Robert De Niro, Bill and Melinda Gates, and others.
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we're not talking about the special theaters, or the area of the video store behind the curtain.
Who should get a medal? (Score:3)
Here's the list [whitehouse.gov] of the latest Medal of Freedom recipients.
That web page says
The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the Nation’s highest civilian honor, presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.
I'd like to see medals given to people who routinely save lives, like doctors, nurses, and emergency responders. If not the Medal of Freedom, then some other medal.
Also people who bring us our food and water, like farmers and water utility workers. We can live a matter of days without water, and weeks without food. So farmers and water utility workers are super important. But when's the last time you heard of a farmer getting a medal for producing a good crop, or a water utility worker getting a medal for supplying clean water?
Also caring teachers in the inner cities should get medals.
And people who risk their lives to rescue others in need, like these people [cbslocal.com].
Who else should get a medal?
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We need to ask the question: how does this advance the cause of social justice?
If it doesn't, then why do it? Go on to the next, more deserving person.
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Also caring teachers in the inner cities should get medals.
These are the true heroes of our society. They take the unwanted spawn of the dregs of society and help them become caring and educated individuals that contribute positively to society. Without these people, our entire country would look like Los Angeles in the 1980s. Constant internecine warfare.
I know many of those teachers will never receive anything more than a word of thanks from some of the children that they helped, but be assured that *I* personally deeply respect what you are doing.
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Funny story about this
The Jargon File made reference to The First Bug being in the Smithsonian and somebody from there heard and basically was about to say "Oi no we don't" but it turns out the folks that did (the NSWC) had been trying to get it to the Smithsonian.
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Just because President Obama said that doesn't make it reality. Alternatively, Obama could have the Justice Department file formal charges against Snowden, and then pardon him in response.
In reality, Obama doesn't give a shit about Snowden. Snowden did his part of exposing how evil the US is, and now he's forgotten about. He is no longer the "useful" part of being an idiot.
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That's not true. He can write a pardon preemptively if he chose.. The president's power in this regard is limitless, except for impeachment (which makes total sense).
In Biddle v. Perovich 274 U.S. 480 (1927), the Supreme Court reversed the doctrine, ruling that "[a] pardon in our days is not a private act of grace from an individual happening to possess power. It is a part of the Constitutional scheme. When granted it is the determination of the ultimate authority that the public welfare will be better served by inflicting less than what the judgment fixed."[11]
I think this fits snowden's situation quite well. Of course, today's federal government would probably disagree, as they are the criminals here.
from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Are the feminazis still pushing sexist nonsense like this ? After what the electorate told them at the last election ?
I think what the election told feminists was that you can be on tape as admitting to abusing women and still get voted in as president?
That fact doesn't really shut feminists up so much as prove them right.
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Are the feminazis still pushing sexist nonsense like this ? After what the electorate told them at the last election ?
I think what the election told feminists was that you can be on tape as admitting to abusing women and still get voted in as president?
We've known for years that the feminists are happy supporting a sexual predator and accused rapist, as long as he supports abortion.
For all the outrage over someone talking dirty, as if the liberals want us to go back to the 1950's morality codes, one particular part of that conversation has been overlooked. Trump said "And when you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything.", followed by ""Grab 'em by the pussy, you can do anything."
If Trump had been running as the pro-choice Democratic nominee, a
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Wow, that's a lot of words.
Could have shortened that to "I don't understand how this 'feminism' works in practice but in this scenario I literally invented, liberals and feminists are all awful, I'm always right, and I'm willing to gloss over the entire history of sexual assault, the existing power imbalance between genders and classes, and pretty much the rest of reality of being a woman in America to keep that fiction going in my head. SEE HOW RATIONAL I AM"
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Wow, great response. Maybe your next one will be based on our world. That world being the one I personally remember happening while I was in the military with Clinton as my Commander in Chief.
Here are few examples of how Clinton's scandals were thought of back then:
http://articles.latimes.com/19... [latimes.com]
If disgust with the current crisis depresses women's votes in November, we will see an anti-women's rights majority in Congress roll back the gains for women of the past 30 years," said a joint statement released Thursday by 15 feminist and civil rights organizations.
http://www.nytimes.com/1998/01... [nytimes.com]
The initial public reaction of feminists and other women's advocates to President Clinton's latest trouble can most charitably be described as restrained. They have a problem:
How do you defend a man whose relations with individual women, at least in some cases, are widely believed to have been irresponsible, disrespectful, exploitive and profoundly destructive?
And yet how do you attack a President with the best record ever on issues related to women?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/... [washingtonpost.com]
Throughout Clinton's dealing with the sexual harassment lawsuit filed by Paula Jones and more recently with allegations that he had sex with Lewinsky, a former White House intern, women generally have supported him, and leaders of liberal women's groups have remained neutral on, if not sympathetic to, his plight.
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) complained yesterday about what has been "the deafening silence" of women's organizations after their criticism of Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas and then-Sen. Bob Packwood (R-Ore.) in recent years.
With the various issues those articles bring up, the recurring theme is what I pointed out: the feminists are happy supporting a sexual predat
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How feminism works in practice? Well that's a first. Usually people like you are quoting the dictionary definition to make the requisite argument from authority.