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OT: The News Thread

Re: OT - The News Thread

I'm just saying, there are all kinds of logistics to work out. Who makes it? Who sells it? Can you smoke it in public? Can you open a smoking cafe? Do you limit it to a certain district?


What's wrong with treating it like alcohol? You can get busted for public drinking, establishments need liquor licenses...

I was going to bring booze up anyways...as long as alcohol is legal this whole pot debate is so hypocrisy-filled I don't even know where to start sometimes.


And to whoever mentioned hemp...it was the pulp and paper mills that used the propaganda machine to stop the hemp industry.
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

And as somebody who smoked hash after chemo to negate the nausea, and who now smokes weed it to alleviate the osteoarthritis I have thanks to the steroids that were part of the chemo...this country needs to get on the medical marijuana bandwagon.

I had one doctor who figured it was alright for me to be taking up to 300 (yes...300) Tylenol 3's a month, and all they did was create an addiction and liver problems.
Pot helps with the pain, makes me feel better about the chronic pain, and I'll still have a liver when I'm 60.
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

Apaches are pretty awesome aircraft. They'd definitely help with some of the combat missions in Afghanistan where militants are holed up in mudbrick complexes in an entrenched defensive position and we want to avoid casualities on the ground.
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

"WIKILEAKS VIDEO OUT. "classified US military video depicting the indiscriminate slaying of over a dozen people in the Iraqi suburb of New Baghdad -- including two Reuters news staff." US Intelligence covered-up the murders and tried to stop this video!




Taken from Reddit.com

Yikes, that is some harshness right there....pretty much as cold blooded murder as you can get. Gunner is willing the reporter to crawl for a weapon...and then almost excited to gun down unarmed people....

They even have permission to open up on civilians helping the wounded, which included children based on the death toll.

So a camera = RPG? Yikes.
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

What do you expect soldiers in the field to do? They are trained to kill - literally, and alot of them joined the forces to blow things up.

This type of things falls on the leadership.
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

I think one of the biggest questions of that video is why it seems locals in third world regions continually expose children to the war zone. Why the hell were their children in a truck going to pick up corpses? Why?
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

What do you expect soldiers in the field to do? They are trained to kill - literally, and alot of them joined the forces to blow things up.

This type of things falls on the leadership.

I expect them to use some common sense, and not to be eager to kill a guy who's likely holding his intestines in as he crawls away. I would also expect them to be honest with what they are witnessing. I mean, if you check out the site on wikileaks, they have stills and it's pretty obvious to me that the guy has a camera, and I have zero training in remote sensing on these gun cameras. It just makes me wonder wth were these guys thinking? It makes them look like they just wanted to kill some folks, and the urge to kill made them see things that weren't there. I understand that there was small arms fire in that part of town, and fellow troops may have been under fire, but they are fighting among civilians, they need to be 100% sure what they are doing or they just destroy any credibility. The gunner states he sees 5 or 6 ak-47's....which is not evident in that video...

As far as kids in a war zone, well that would hold true if this was a war zone, but this is a neighborhood in Baghdad in 2007....they were likely young men wanting to help a dying man out. Notice they aren't trying to pick up corpses, they went directly for the Reuters newsman.
 
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Re: OT - The News Thread

What do you expect soldiers in the field to do? They are trained to kill - literally, and alot of them joined the forces to blow things up.

This type of things falls on the leadership.

agreed to an extent, but leadership is supposed to trust to the assessment of the guys on the ground...and **** me was their assessment of the situation ever completely, completely warped to the point of paranoid insanity.
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

Figured I'd share since it's my school. So some people bought houses next to UOIT and Durham College... and now they're suing the city.

http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/article/790617--homeowners-sue-oshawa-over-rowdy-student-renters?bn=1

Cathy Provenzano’s two children can’t ride their bikes or go on their own to the park in their north Oshawa neighbourhood.

The hundreds of university and college students renting houses in their midst make it too risky, she says.

“Every Friday, every Saturday, there are parties. They offered booze to kids in the park once,” Provenzano fumes. “Now I have to tell my kids they’re not allowed to enjoy their neighbourhood.”

She’s one of numerous homeowners fed up with noise, parking, parties, garbage and vandalism. On their behalf, four members of the Cedar Valley Home Owners Association of north Oshawa are suing the city in a bid to reclaim their neighbourhood.

“We’re not asking for money,” says association president Emil Hanzelka. “We want this neighbourhood returned to single-family homes, which is what it was built for.”

The city has failed to enforce the zoning bylaw, they contend, allowing absentee landlords to rent out as many as six or eight bedrooms, which is illegal in a single-family area.

The allegations have not been proven in court. City solicitor David Potts can’t comment because the matter is pending.

After years of complaining, suggesting solutions and meeting with officials and council — all to no avail — residents feel Mayor John Gray has let them down and their only recourse is to take the city to court.

They cite broken glass, beer bottles and condoms strewn around, front lawns torn up by cars, eggs thrown at houses and garbage piled up. In one case, students retaliated against an older couple who complained about rowdy behaviour by sticking pieces of glass in their backyard to cut their dog’s feet, the homeowners allege.

“Every day I get complaints about bylaw infractions, parking, garbage, parties, you name it,” says Councillor John Neal, who’s spent years trying to find a solution.

The homeowners’ fight is with landlords who, they say, collect between $2,400 and $4,000 by renting out as many as eight bedrooms in one house to students attending nearby Durham College and the University of Ontario Institute of Technology (UOIT).

When Hanzelka and his wife moved into their retirement home 10 years ago, there were no students renting in the neighbourhood. Now, of 430 homes, close to half are lodging houses, he says. Dalhousie Cres., where the trouble started in 2006, has only about a dozen families left.

While many families have fled the “streets of broken dreams,” Hanzelka says, “it just makes me mad to even think about selling.” Appraisals show his house has dropped at least $100,000 in value, he says.

Two years ago, the city introduced a licensing requirement for landlords, which imposed tougher housing standards and limited the number of bedrooms in a house. But the homeowners argue the move did nothing to eliminate multiple tenants.

Twenty-eight landlords taken to court by a developer in a nearby community were found guilty of running illegal rooming houses and ordered to close them last year, but the city has failed to follow up, the homeowners allege. In a ruling released Friday, Ontario Superior Court Justice P.D. Lauwers found two landlords in contempt for failing to stop operating lodging houses.

More than 13,000 full-time students attend the fast-growing college and university near Simcoe St. and Taunton Rd. Only about 1,600 residential units are available in on-campus housing, with 550 more spaces to come this fall.
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

Now...is the issue that the schools don't provide enough affordable lodging for their students, or that the Municipal government doesn't properly enforce city by-laws....or both?
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

no lungs, mind you, but at least you'll have a liver.


You have no idea what prolonged use of codeine does to a body.
It's been almost a year since I told my doctor I wasn't taking them anymore, and I am so much healthier and happier I wish I had done this sooner.
More pain in general, but quality of life has improved tenfold.
As is so often the case, a simple natural solution is better in the long run then the man-made one.

Codeine has it's uses, but it is no long term solution.
As a matter if fact I can't think of one man-made pain killer that is.
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

Sorry for the size


yes, I say that a lot


NVih0.jpg



anyone notice the difference in the type of news that gets covered?
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

Now...is the issue that the schools don't provide enough affordable lodging for their students, or that the Municipal government doesn't properly enforce city by-laws....or both?

I think there's way too many students for the amount of space we have at this point, it's growing like crazy. But on the other hand some dummy bought a house DIRECTLY and I do mean directly (I park at someone's house on this street and walk through their backyard to the school) backing on to the campus and are surprised that there's college kids renting/having parties on the street.
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

Yeah, that's a little ridiculous. I feel bad to an extent for someone who bought their home in the neighbourhood some years ago and has seen the area change dramatically. But with that said, if the school was there when they bought their home they would have gradually watched the area change and should have just sold when it became clear that the area was going to change.

Though the proper bylaws should be adhered to, home ownership doesn't endow you with the right that your neighbourhood will never change from the way it was the day you bought the house.
 
Re: OT - The News Thread

My Godparents have a beautiful home in Oshawa that is very close to the UOIT campus that they just sold as a result of the above. They could no longer take the kids in the neighbourhood breaking beer bottles and glass at night, partying until the earlier hours of the morning, vandalizing property, and generally being destructive anymore. I feel bad for them because it was a nice neighbourhood and they shouldn't have to pack up and leave to escape problems like this. At Queen's we have a similar segment of student housing collectively known as the "Student Ghetto" but the permanent residents were pushed out years ago to the point that it's now rotting housing almost entirely comprised of 95-97 percent students. It looks like the same thing is happening here in Durham only with much nicer housing.
 
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