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13 Oct 13:13

News: Netflix To Temporarily Remove Every Movie Except ‘Hard Eight’

LOS GATOS, CA—Saying that everyone, including all 65 million of its subscribers, really ought to see the film at least once, Netflix announced Tuesday that it will suspend all streaming content except Hard Eight for a full month.

Officials from the online video subscription service, which boasts a library of tens of thousands of movies and TV shows in addition to the first feature film by acclaimed writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson, told reporters they will temporarily remove all other titles from the website and devote 100 percent of their server capacity to the 1996 neo-noir drama.

“We want to make sure every one of our members watches this thrilling character study of a veteran gambler and his young protégé, so for the entire month of October, Hard Eight will be the only video available on the entire site,” said chief content officer Ted Sarandos, who, upon discovering only a ...











13 Oct 13:03

These Two Adorable Guinea Pigs Sharing A Blade Of Grass Might Just Cause Your Heart To Explode

by Ali Velez
Philip.paulsson

Hahah nice.

Eat your heart out, Lady and the Tramp.

Two guinea pigs + one long blade of grass = pure heaven.

View Video ›

Facebook: video.php / Via Facebook: BivoirCavies

What's cuter than these two guinea pigs sharing one blade of grass?

What's cuter than these two guinea pigs sharing one blade of grass?

Bivior Cavies / Via Facebook: BivoirCavies

How about these two guinea pigs sharing one blade of grass in SLOW MOTION?!

How about these two guinea pigs sharing one blade of grass in SLOW MOTION?!

Bivior Cavies / Via Facebook: BivoirCavies

13 Oct 12:57

Guru denied copyright protection for Bikram yoga sequence of postures

by David Kravets
Philip.paulsson

Hahah WTF is that picture?!

Bikram Choudhury atop a student. (credit: tiarescott)

Sure, DC Comics can copyright the Batmobile. However, Yoga guru Bikram Choudhury, infamous for his hot yoga, cannot copyright his popular 26-posture sequence that also contains two breathing exercises, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday.

"Though Choudhury emphasizes the aesthetic attributes of the Sequence’s 'graceful flow,' at bottom, the Sequence is an idea, process, or system designed to improve health. Copyright protects only the expression of this idea—the words and pictures used to describe the Sequence—and not the idea of the Sequence itself. Because the Sequence is an unprotectible idea, it is also ineligible for copyright protection as a 'compilation' or 'choreographic work,'" the US 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. The decision upholds a federal judge's ruling that the sequence is "a collection of facts and ideas" not entitled to copyright protection.

The case began in 2011, when Choudhury sued a Sacramento, California-based yoga studio, Evolution Yoga, for copyright infringement. That studio offered yoga classes that were similar to Bikram's classes, which last 90 minutes and are conducted in temperatures of about 105 degrees.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

13 Oct 12:51

You'll Never Guess What The "E" In Chuck E. Cheese Stands For

by Jean-Luc Bouchard
Philip.paulsson

Full name: Charles Entertainment Cheese

No, it doesn’t stand for Ethan.

Beloved pizza party mascot Chuck E. Cheese has recently been given a makeover.

Beloved pizza party mascot Chuck E. Cheese has recently been given a makeover.

Check out those stylish Converse sneakers.

CEC Entertainment Inc.

But while his appearance may have changed, his iconic name remains the same.

But while his appearance may have changed, his iconic name remains the same.

CEC Entertainment Inc.

Some people mistakenly believe his name to be Chuckie, rather than the more refined Chuck E.

Some people mistakenly believe his name to be Chuckie, rather than the more refined Chuck E.

BuzzFeed

But few people know WHAT this middle initial "E" stands for.

But few people know WHAT this middle initial "E" stands for.

Andy Kryza / Thrillist / BuzzFeed


View Entire List ›

13 Oct 12:03

22 Post-Fame Lives Of Ex-Celebs (That Are Better Than Fame)

Philip.paulsson

#21! Star Wars kid is a McGill Law grad!

By CRACKED Readers  Published: October 12th, 2015 
13 Oct 11:48

Frankenstein

"Wait, so in this version is Frankenstein also the doctor's name?" "No, he's just 'The Doctor'."
13 Oct 11:19

Don’t Talk to Me

by Reza

dont-talk

12 Oct 16:50

Anonymous says FML

by Anonymous
Philip.paulsson

The Cracker Barrel part might work...

Today, a 60 year old veteran hit on me by pointing to his white hair and saying: "Just because there's snow on the roof doesn't mean there isn't a fire down below." Then he told me vets eat free at Cracker Barrel. FML

12 Oct 16:03

This Mets Fan's Worst Nightmare Just Came True

by Sami Main

Lesson of the day: YOU CAN’T TRUST AMAZON.

Anthony Apruzzese, a comedian and performer with the Upright Citizens Brigade in NYC, came home to an emotional rollercoaster.

View Video ›

facebook.com

Everything was pretty much going well...

"I open up the box like a child on christmas' morn. I see that there is some kind of shipping sticker on the opener. no big deal, I think to myself, mouth thirsty for beer. hand ready to open beer with new mets opener."

Everything was pretty much going well...

facebook.com

...UNTIL TRAGEDY STRUCK.

"but then I peel back the label and find the worst thing one could find."

...UNTIL TRAGEDY STRUCK.

facebook.com

After getting a bit emotional...

After getting a bit emotional...

Facebook: Pruzman


View Entire List ›

12 Oct 15:40

Sports News in Brief: Roger Goodell Unveils Plans For NFL Game In Earth’s Core

Philip.paulsson

Hah! Also, not looking good for me this week.

NEW YORK—Saying that it is the perfect way to further increase the sport’s popularity, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell announced Monday that the league will soon begin holding a regular-season game deep within the Earth’s inner core. “This game represents an opportunity to bring the great sport of football over 3,000 miles below Earth’s crust,” said Goodell, adding that the primetime event in the planet’s 10,800-degree, nickel-iron core will be scheduled as a regular-season matchup between two non-divisional opponents. “The league still has so much growth potential throughout the various interior layers of Earth, and a thrilling spectacle of world-class football will only continue to strengthen the NFL brand. And based on the research and various seismological studies that we’ve conducted over the past several years, we’re incredibly confident that the inner-core games will be a huge success.” At press time, sources ...











12 Oct 15:28

This American Was Shocked When His Facebook Post About England Went Viral

by Alan White
Philip.paulsson

Wait, are there guns?

“The reason they drive on the left is because all their cars are built backwards.”

Scott Waters is a 66-year-old commercial artist and photographer from St Augustine, Florida.

Scott Waters is a 66-year-old commercial artist and photographer from St Augustine, Florida.

facebook.com

He told BuzzFeed he's also "an amateur musician who writes songs to sing at open mic once a week", a "gym enthusiast attempting to maintain muscle tone and an upright posture," and "an avid cyclist when my girlfriend pokes a flaming, hot stick near where I want to sit".

"I once worked for Apple Computer, but I've recovered," he added.

A few weeks ago he visited England, and he decided to share his observations on Facebook.

View Video ›

Facebook: iScottFL

I was in England again a few weeks ago, mostly in small towns, but here's some of what I learned:

  • Almost everyone is very polite
  • The food is generally outstanding
  • There are no guns
  • There are too many narrow stairs
  • Everything is just a little bit different
  • The pubs close too early
  • The reason they drive on the left is because all their cars are built backwards
  • Pubs are not bars, they are community living rooms.
  • You'd better like peas, potatoes and sausage
  • Refrigerators and washing machines are very small
  • Everything is generally older, smaller and shorter
  • People don't seem to be afraid of their neighbors or the government
  • Their paper money makes sense, the coins don't
  • Everyone has a washing machine but driers are rare
  • Hot and cold water faucets. Remember them?
  • Pants are called "trousers", underwear are "pants" and sweaters are "jumpers"
  • The bathroom light is a string hanging from the ceiling
  • "Fanny" is a naughty word, as is "shag"
  • All the signs are well designed with beautiful typography and written in full sentences with proper grammar.
  • There's no dress code
  • Doors close by themselves, but they don't always open
  • They eat with their forks upside down
  • The English are as crazy about their gardens as Americans are about cars
  • They don't seem to use facecloths or napkins or maybe they're just neater then [sic] we are
  • The wall outlets all have switches, some don't do anything
  • There are hardly any cops or police cars
  • 5,000 year ago, someone arranged a lot of rocks all over, but no one is sure why
  • When you do see police they seem to be in male & female pairs and often smiling
  • Black people are just people: they didn't quite do slavery here
  • Everything comes with chips, which are French fries. You put vinegar on them
  • Cookies are "biscuits" and potato chips are "crisps"
  • HP sauce is better then catsup
  • Obama is considered a hero, Bush is considered an idiot.
  • After fish and chips, curry is the most popular food
  • The water controls in showers need detailed instructions
  • They can boil anything
  • Folks don't always lock their bikes
  • It's not unusual to see people dressed different and speaking different languages
  • Your electronic devices will work fine with just a plug adapter
  • Nearly everyone is better educated then we are
  • If someone buys you a drink you must do the same
  • There are no guns
  • Look right, walk left. Again; look right, walk left. You're welcome.
  • Avoid British wine and French beer
  • It's not that hard to eat with the fork in your left hand with a little practice. If you don't, everyone knows you're an American
  • Many of the roads are the size of our sidewalks
  • There's no AC
  • Instead of turning the heat up, you put on a jumper
  • Gas is "petrol", it costs about $6 a gallon and is sold by the liter
  • If you speed on a motorway, you get a ticket. Period. Always
  • You don't have to tip, really!
  • Scotland, Wales, Ireland and Cornwall really are different countries
  • Only 14% of Americans have a passport, everyone in the UK does
  • You pay the price marked on products because the taxes (VAT) are built in
  • Walking is the national pastime
  • Their TV looks and sounds much better then ours
  • They took the street signs down during WWII, but haven't put them all back up yet
  • Everyone enjoys a good joke
  • There are no guns
  • Dogs are very well behaved and welcome everywhere
  • There are no window screens
  • You can get on a bus and end up in Paris
  • Everyone knows more about our history then we do
  • Radio is still a big deal. The BBC is quite good
  • The newspapers can be awful
  • Everything costs the same but our money is worth less so you have to add 50% to the price to figure what you're paying
  • Beer comes in large, completely filled, actual pint glasses and the closer the brewery the better the beer
  • Butter and eggs aren't refrigerated
  • The beer isn't warm, each style is served at the proper temperature
  • Cider (alcoholic) is quite good.
  • Excess cider consumption can be very painful.
  • The universal greeting is "Cheers" (pronounced "cheeahz" unless you are from Cornwall, then it's "chairz")
  • The money is easy to understand: 1-2-5-10-20-50 pence, then-£1-£2-£5-£10, etc bills. There are no quarters.
  • Their cash makes ours look like Monopoly money
  • Cars don't have bumper stickers
  • Many doorknobs, buildings and tools are older than America
  • By law, there are no crappy, old cars
  • When the sign says something was built in 456, they didn't lose the "1"
  • Cake is is pudding, ice cream is pudding, anything served for desert is pudding, even pudding
  • BBC 4 is NPR
  • Everything closes by 1800 (6pm)
  • Very few people smoke, those who do often roll their own
  • You're defined by your accent
  • No one in Cornwall knows what the hell a Cornish Game Hen is
  • Soccer is a religion, religion is a sport
  • Europeans dress better then the British, we dress worse
  • The trains work: a three minute delay is regrettable
  • Drinks don't come with ice
  • There are far fewer fat English people
  • There are a lot of healthy old folks around participating in life instead of hiding at home watching tv
  • If you're over 60, you get free tv and bus and rail passes.
  • They don't use Bose anything anywhere
  • Displaying your political or religious affiliation is considered very bad taste
  • Every pub has a pet drunk
  • Their healthcare works, but they still bitch about it
  • Cake is one of the major food groups
  • Their coffee is mediocre but their tea is wonderful
  • There are still no guns
  • Towel warmers!
  • Cheers


View Entire List ›

12 Oct 12:17

Oh Shit! Did Victor Cruz's Fiancé Just Send A Group Text To His Mistresses?

by Sydney Scott
Philip.paulsson

Hahaha nice.

Mmmmmohmygod.

Looks like New York Giants wide receiver Victor Cruz might be in a little bit of a pickle. Like, he truly might be in some deep shit.

Looks like New York Giants wide receiver Victor Cruz might be in a little bit of a pickle. Like, he truly might be in some deep shit.

Jamie Mccarthy / Getty Images

According to MediaTakeOut, the football player's fiancé allegedly just introduced all of his mistresses to each other via group text.

According to MediaTakeOut, the football player's fiancé allegedly just introduced all of his mistresses to each other via group text.

MediaTakeOut / mediatakeout.com

Neighbors / reactiongifs.com


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12 Oct 12:15

Marvel Studios Announces "Ant-Man And The Wasp"

by Adam B. Vary

Black Panther and Captain Marvel will move release dates to make room for the Ant-Man sequel.

Paul Rudd and Evangeline Lilly in Ant-Man.

Zade Rosenthal / Marvel

In a development comic book fans have been anticipating for years, Marvel Studios announced on Thursday that the character of the Wasp, one of Marvel Comics' most beloved and prominent female superheroes, will co-headline her own feature film. Ant-Man and the Wasp, a sequel to 2015's Ant-Man, will open on July 6, 2018.

In order to make room on Marvel Studios' already crowded release calendar, the company also announced that Black Panther would move up from July 6, 2018 to Feb. 16, 2018, which places it before the release of Avengers: Infinity War – Part 1, which will still open on May 4, 2018. Captain Marvel — the company's other major female superhero film — will move back from Nov. 2, 2018 to March 8, 2019, which still places it before the release of Infinity War – Part 2 on May 3, 2019. And if that isn't enough of a release date soup, the studio also claimed dates for three new, untitled movies, on May 1, 2020, July 10, 2020, and Nov. 6, 2020.

Marvel Studios' announcement confirms the promise of a teaser that played at the end of Ant-Man, in which Dr. Hank Pym (Michael Douglas) shows his daughter Hope van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly) an updated version of the Wasp suit that Pym's wife Janet van Dyne wore before she (presumably) died. Director Peyton Reed told BuzzFeed News in July that the Wasp "would be a very big part" of an Ant-Man sequel, but that, in truth, Hope was already as capable as Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) in the original film.

"One of the fun things about the movie to me is Hank has this problem so he recruits Scott from outside, but the solution to his problem was right there under his nose the entire time: It is Hope," Reed said. "She is clearly the person who is far more qualified to solve this problem, but Pym can't see it."

Marvel Studios' announcement did not specify whether Lilly would return to play Hope van Dyne, nor if Reed would return to direct, and representatives for Marvel Studios, Lilly, and Reed did not immediately return BuzzFeed News' requests for comments.

Additional reporting by Jarett Wieselman.

12 Oct 12:13

Which "Game Of Thrones" Character Are You Based On Totally Unrelated Questions?

by Vikky Mathieu
Philip.paulsson

I'll take it!

"You got: Daario Naharis

You have a mysterious and magnetic personality. Your charisma is equalled only by your natural sensuality. You’re original, rebellious, and you have a big imagination."

This quiz is dark and full of questions.

12 Oct 12:01

Nvidia Shield Android TV: A powerful do-it-all box that lacks content

by Mark Walton
Philip.paulsson

I don't understand things with so little storage. 16GB? A 32GB micro SD card is like, $8 now. Same thing with phones... why even offer anything less than a 64GB version, ESPECIALLY if you don't offer the MicroSD expansion slot... storage is SO CHEAP!

Specs at a glance
OS Android TV (Android 5-based)
CPU Nvidia Tegra X1, 8-core 64-bit ARM CPU (4x A57 2MB L2, 4x A53 512KB L2)
RAM 3GB
GPU NVIDIA Maxwell 256-core GPU
Storage 16GB (plus microSD expansion)
Networking 802.11ac, 2x2 MIMO Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.1, Gigabit Ethernet
Case Size 25mm × 210mm x 120mm
Connectivity 2X USB 3.0 ports, USB 2.0 micro USB port, HDMI 2.0 port with HDCP 2.2, infrared
Starting price £149.99 ($199) with Shield controller. Stand is £24.99 ($29.99), remote is £39.99 ($49.99)

The Nvidia Shield is almost certainly more important to Google than it is to Nvidia. After the failure of Google TV—in part thanks to its lacklustre UI and poor developer support—its follow-up Android TV needed to do better. Unfortunately, that hasn't quite happened. Sure, Google's own Nexus Player is fine piece of hardware, and Razer's Forge TV has its charms, but neither sport the flagship specs, nor the feature set of Nvidia's sleek black box. There's no doubt that the Shield is the best Android TV device money can buy, but like all Android TV devices, it comes with a few compromises.

But let's start with the good stuff. Where the Nexus Player sported an odd, if largely inoffensive hockey puck design, the Shield is a thing of beauty. It's slightly bigger in terms of footprint than your typical smart TV box at 25mm in height, 210mm in length, and 120mm in depth, but its sleek design made up of sharp angles and a subtle LED light strip just looks darn cool. The mix of glossy and matt plastics helps with the aesthetics too, although, like seemingly all consumer electronics these days, it's a magnet for fingerprints. Fortunately, with the Shield placed under a TV, you likely won't be handling it all that often.

The Shield can be positioned horizontally or vertically, but it's a wee bit wobbly in its vertical position unless you purchase a separate stand for a substantial £24.99. One word of advice if you do take the plunge, though: Nvidia has used some sort of black magic to create what might just be the stickiest rubber coating in existence and applied it to the bottom of the stand. More often than not it simply wouldn't budge from the surface it was on when I needed to move it, and I ended up having to pry it up with a fish slice.

Read 32 remaining paragraphs | Comments

12 Oct 11:49

Elon Musk: “If you don’t make it at Tesla, you go work at Apple”

by Mark Walton
Philip.paulsson

LOL sick burn.

If there's one CEO you can count on for consistently amusing outbursts and quotable sound bites, it's Tesla CEO Elon Musk. Today's EMOTD (Elon Musk of the Day) comes courtesy of German business newspaper Handelsblatt, where the outspoken CEO hopped aboard the banter bus and revealed that his cheeky employees often refer to Apple as the "Tesla Graveyard."

In response to claims that Apple is poaching key members of Tesla staff to work on its long-rumoured self-driving car project, Musk joked: "Important engineers? They have hired people we've fired. We always jokingly call Apple the Tesla Graveyard." But just to make sure that his comments weren't entirely dismissed as harmless CEO-style jostling, he added: "If you don’t make it at Tesla, you go work at Apple. I’m not kidding."

The sick burns continued when Musk was asked if he took Apple seriously as a competitor in the automotive market. "Did you ever take a look at the Apple Watch?" he laughed, as if the seamless stainless steel construction and hand-crafted leather bands of Apple's latest i-thing were nothing to him. "No, seriously: it’s good that Apple is moving and investing in this direction," he added. "But cars are very complex compared to phones or smart watches. You can’t just go to a supplier like Foxconn and say: 'Build me a car.'"

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

09 Oct 16:45

Atlantic Charger skipper rescued from Frobisher Bay angry no helicopter responded

Philip.paulsson

It's nice to be reminded sometimes that Canada is full of dumb people, too.

The fishing captain who was plucked from a life-raft in the Davis Strait last month is wondering why a search and rescue helicopter wasn't dispatched from Labrador.

Brad Watkins, who skippered the Atlantic Charger before it sank in off Resolution Island Sept. 22, said he's grateful to the "awesome" search and rescue team that responded.

However, he says his crew members were disappointed and angry by the absence of a helicopter during the rescue.

atlantic charger liferaft

The crew of the Atlantic Charger spent hours in a life raft before being picked up by a cargo ship. (Canadian Armed Forces)

"They wanna know where the chopper was too. They asked me, 'Where was the damn chopper,' and I started asking questions," Watkins told CBC's The Broadcast.

Watkins and he and his men spent hours in a life-raft before they were put aboard a cargo ship and then brought to Harbour Grace by another fishing boat, the Katshsheshuk.

"If it wasn't for those vessels, would there ever have been a chopper arrived in that area?" Watkins said.

Brad Watkins

Skipper Brad Watkins says his men asked him 'Where's the damn chopper?' (CBC)

"We got no life-saving equipment down there. We've got a lot of men on the water, a lot of seafarers, and if they go in the water, if there's not another commercial vessel in the area then there's not much hope."

'Save some lives'

Watkins says members of his crew had limited radio contact with search and rescue, but were told it would take hours to get a helicopter from Gander.

"The boys were told the chopper was going to be five hours before she was dispatched … they may have heard wrong through this radio, but I am quite sure they said it was going to be the next morning before the chopper would show up," Watkins said.

map resolution island

The Atlantic Charger was fishing for turbot, a long way from home. (CBC)

"And as far as I'm being told by sources, the chopper wouldn't have made it. She had mechanical troubles. There wasn't even a back up chopper."

Watkins vowed to put pressure on government to ensure there were resources put in place for future incidents.

"I can't help but think all the money we're sending overseas, I'm all for that, but help our own people first," he said.

"Put a chopper down in [Happy Valley-Goose Bay] and save some lives when it needs to be saved."

Atlantic Charger

The Atlantic Charger was a state-of-the-art fishing boat with the best technology. Watkins says it was facing a 'wall of water' and rogue waves before it went down. (CBC)

As for what caused his boat to sink, Watkins says he may never know, but weather was a big factor.

"She took a couple of bad [swells] and never recovered. If there's other stuff that went on there, something that give out or broke for water to get into the vessel, I guess we'll never know that because she's not afloat," he said.

"But we do know that a couple of rogue waves, one after the other did initially put the boat under, and she didn't recover."

With files from Jane Adey
09 Oct 15:11

Dealmaster: Get a 4K LG smart TV for only $549!

by Ars Staff
Philip.paulsson

Wow, that price drop happened a lot faster than I thought it would. Why isn't Sean on here??

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at TechBargains, we have some new deals for you. The highlights are two LG smart TVs running webOS 2.0—both have gotten a steep price cut, and on top of that, you can use gift cards provided at checkout to lower the price even further. In total, it brings the LG 50-inch 4K UHD smart TV down to just $549 (originally $1,899) and the LG 43-inch LED smart TV down to $279 (originally $599). If you've been flirting with webOS or smart televisions in general, now's the time to snatch one of these up.

For those who aren't interested in smart televisions, we have the usual list of PC, smartphone, game, and accessory deals below.

Featured

Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

09 Oct 14:56

News in Brief: 22-Year-Old Broke, Homeless 10 Days After Taking Control Of Own Finances

MILFORD, CT—Intermittently gnawing at an old apple core and scratching at his unruly bramble of stubble, 22-year-old Daniel Hardin admitted to reporters Thursday that he had become completely broke and homeless 10 days after taking control of his own finances. “I thought it was time to take my payments and bills into my own hands once I graduated, but barely a week after doing that, I found myself fighting off raccoons for access to the best backyard sheds to sleep behind,” said a dirt-caked Hardin, who noted that his current daily routine of finding discarded items to hawk for small change and washing his bare feet in a drainage pipe—which supplanted his previous life of mindlessly charging all his purchases and speaking endlessly on his cell phone without any thought to the costs incurred—can be traced back to the exact moment less than two weeks earlier when ...











09 Oct 14:19

How U.S. Supreme Court Just Made It Tougher to Challenge California Vaccine Law

Philip.paulsson

It's sad that people are so stupid that we need to make it a law to vaccinate people.

The U.S. Supreme Court will not hear a challenge to a requirement in New York state that all children be vaccinated before they can attend public school. The justices on Monday let stand lower court rulings that the policy does not violate the constitution.

This decision matters in California, where a new law passed this summer requires virtually all schoolchildren to be vaccinated against a range of diseases in order to attend school.

The high court’s move means that potential challenges to the California law are “not likely to succeed,” Prof. Dorit Reiss, a vaccine law expert at UC Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco, told KQED.

During the rancorous debate over the bill, SB277, one of the arguments I heard from those opposing it was that the Supreme Court’s major cases on childhood vaccination were decades old — or more — and that the world had changed dramatically since the last major rulings.

Yes, this is the health blog, but bear with me while we take a look at two key cases.

First, in 1905, the Supreme Court in Jacobson v. Commonwealth of Massachusetts essentially ruled that the states could enforce mandatory vaccination laws.

Reiss noted that Jacobson found “states have extensive leeway to require vaccination.”

California never had a religious exemption written into the law. Instead the state had only a “personal belief exemption,” now abolished by SB277. Only those children with a medical exemption may attend school without being vaccinated.

And that brings us to the second key case.

In 1944, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in Prince v. Massachusetts. The case was not explicitly about vaccines — a Jehovah’s Witness was charged with violating child labor law by having her child sell religious material. Rather, the case is seen as one that spells out limits on parental rights. Parents do not have absolute authority over their children, and that can include decisions about vaccination. From the decision:

 “The right to practice religion freely does not include liberty to expose the community or the child to communicable disease or the latter to ill health or death.”

“You don’t get out of a general law because you have a religious exemption,” Reiss told me. She used taxes as an example. You may have a religious objection, but you still must pay. Because SB277 is “not aimed at a particular religion,” one cannot apply a religious exemption.

Returning to the challenge to the New York law, Reiss said that by declining an opportunity to consider it, the Supreme Court is not reaffirming these older decisions. But it is also  declining an opportunity to reconsider those rulings.

“If we can read anything into the decision [to decline the New York case] it’s that there are not four justices on the Supreme Court who think Jacobson is such bad law that it should be overturned,” Reiss wrote on Skeptical Raptor.

Here in California the new vaccine law appears to raise a different constitutional question — all California children have a constitutional right to an education. Under SB277, children who are not vaccinated cannot attend school.

Is the constitutional right to an education violated by SB277?

Reiss said she believes a constitutional challenge on these grounds would be incorrect. She pointed to a series of famous cases in California, Serrano v. Priest, which found inequity in school financing. Schools were found to be “discriminating on wealth,” Reiss said.

But requiring schoolchildren to be vaccinated is not a violation under Serrano v. Priest, Reiss said, because choosing not to vaccinate is a behavior and not a fact of one’s existence, such as wealth or race. “It is perfectly legitimate for the state to regulate behavior, which is what SB277 does,” Reiss said.

09 Oct 13:49

The Moon Entering Earth's Shadow

The Moon Entering Earth's Shadow On September 27/28, from all over the planet's nightside moon watchers enjoyed a total lunar eclipse. The dramatic celestial spectacle was widely imaged, but this lunar eclipse picture may look a little strange and unfamiliar, made with a point and shoot camera of a bygone era. Loaded with a 4x5 inch sheet of film, the Speed Graphic camera was fixed to a tripod on the Island of Cyprus. Its shutter locked open for 90 minutes, it recorded the trail of the Full Moon at perigee from the beginning of the partial eclipse phase (top) until mid-totality found the Moon near the western horizon. Entering Earth's shadow, the Moon grew dimmer and its moontrail narrower as the eclipse progressed.
09 Oct 13:43

Anonymous says FML

by Anonymous

Today, in the middle of a presentation, I fought a shart, but the shart won. FML

09 Oct 12:54

US claims four Russian cruise missiles fell short of Syria, hit Iran

by Sean Gallagher
Philip.paulsson

LOL the US is in trouble for bombing a doctors without borders hospital. They're response? B...b...b...b...but Russia bombed Iran on accident! At least we got the right country!!

Sadly, this diversion tactic will probably work.

A still from Russian Defense Ministry video of the launch of Kalibr cruise missiles from Russian Navy ships in the Caspian Sea.

5 more images in gallery

On Wednesday, four Russian navy ships in the Caspian Sea launched a barrage of 26 cruise missiles against targets Russian officials claimed to be "important militant facilities" of the Islamic State in Syria (ISIS). The missiles flew over northwest Iran and the Kurdish territory of Iraq before striking their targets in Syria, according to a Russian defense ministry spokesperson. However, according to US officials, four of the 26 missiles didn't make the full trip—instead falling in Iran. Both Russia and Iran deny that four missiles fell in Iran.

The strike was conducted with Kalibr 3M-14T cruise missiles (designated by NATO as the SS-N-30A). These inertial-guided, rocket-boosted turbofan cruise missiles have a range of up to 1,500 miles while carrying a 990-pound warhead. The missiles followed a flight path of over 700 miles before striking targets in Syria; Russian defense ministry officials claim they have an accuracy of within three meters. Brought into service in 2012, the Kalibr and its export Klub variants are roughly on par with the US Navy's Tomahawk cruise missile, though the anti-ship variants may be more advanced in many ways—they are capable of a number of terminal maneuvers to defeat ships' defensive systems, including a supersonic dive.

Colonel General Andrey Kartapolov, chief of the Russian General Staff operations directorate, told TASS that the Russian ministry of defense had "reached an agreement in advance with our partners on making the cruise missile strikes." The Russian Defense Ministry worked with Iran and Iraq, a defense ministry spokesperson said, to plan the flight path so that "the missiles traveled only over desolate areas and didn’t pose any danger to civilians."

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09 Oct 01:53

Hello Bill

by Reza
Philip.paulsson

Just to beat Andrew. Which is, incidentally, what I'm also going to do this week in fantasy.

hello-bill

09 Oct 01:51

The 25 Most GIF-Worthy Moments Of The 2015 Blue Jays Season

by Paul McLeod
Philip.paulsson

Go Jays!

A magical season as told through gifs from the fan blog The Blue Jays Hunter.

When Kevin Pillar defied gravity and earned himself a new nickname with this Superman catch.

When Kevin Pillar defied gravity and earned himself a new nickname with this Superman catch.

Major League Baseball / The Blue Jays Hunter

When normally stoic manager John Gibbons was feeling a little crazy.

When normally stoic manager John Gibbons was feeling a little crazy.

Major League Baseball / The Blue Jays Hunter

When Josh Donaldson made that miraculous dive to avoid the tag at home plate.

When Josh Donaldson made that miraculous dive to avoid the tag at home plate.

Major League Baseball / The Blue Jays Hunter

When Donaldson offered some constructive criticism to the Angels dugout.

When Donaldson offered some constructive criticism to the Angels dugout.

Major League Baseball / The Blue Jays Hunter


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08 Oct 17:15

23 Dogs Who've Out-Dogged Themselves

by Michelle Regna
Philip.paulsson

PUPPIES

We are not worthy.

This dog who just wanted fuller lips.

This dog who just wanted fuller lips.

imgur.com / Via reddit.com

This dog who's got the best seat in the yard.

This dog who's got the best seat in the yard.

imgur.com / Via reddit.com

This dog who won't let a time-out bring him down.

This dog who won't let a time-out bring him down.

youtube.com

And this one who will let you out.

And this one who will let you out.

Via imgur.com


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08 Oct 17:11

6 technologies that will help humans survive on Mars

by Inhabitat
Philip.paulsson

BTW, in case my recommendation wasn't strong enough in my previous comment: GO SEE THE MARTIAN!!!

By Cat DiStasio Planet Earth is abuzz with headlines about Mars. First, NASA announced the discovery of flowing water on the red planet. Then The Martian opened to rave reviews. We have so many questions about the mysterious frozen planet. Does liq...
08 Oct 16:43

Suspicious of tethering, AT&T threatens to kill man’s unlimited data plan

by Jon Brodkin
Philip.paulsson

Please, like that's proof of his innocence?? "He provided Ars a screenshot from his phone which shows that he can’t tether unless he contacts AT&T to enable the feature."

Longtime AT&T customer Evan Shapiro still has one of the carrier's old unlimited data plans, but AT&T seemingly doesn’t want him to keep it.

Shapiro received a letter from AT&T last month telling him that he needs to either stop tethering or move to a limited data plan that allows him to tether. (Tethering shares a phone’s Internet connection with another device, such as a laptop.)

One problem: Shapiro says he’s never tethered. He provided Ars a screenshot from his phone which shows that he can’t use the device's built-in tethering functionality unless he contacts AT&T to enable the feature. 

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08 Oct 16:16

Meet the laundry-folding washing machine of our lazy-ass future

by Mat Smith
Philip.paulsson

FINALLY! Now maybe I'll consider doing laundry at home.

Socks are the hardest. For an future washing machine that washes, dries and then folds the results, it's one of the small barriers that remains in that latter stage. But as a research project that started back in 2008, Laundroid is finally getting...
08 Oct 15:53

News in Photos: Brutalized Toothbrush Wishes Owner Would Just Let It Die