[Info-vax] The Gender Fluid IT Crisis

Dirk Munk munk at home.nl
Sun Jul 30 07:21:35 EDT 2017


Richard Maher wrote:
> On 30-Jul-17 5:28 PM, Dirk Munk wrote:
>> Richard Maher wrote:
>>> On 30-Jul-17 3:58 PM, Dirk Munk wrote:
>>>> seasoned_geek wrote:
>>>>> Not so much pitching my blog as pointing out the current IT crisis
>>>>>  which is bigger than Y2K ever was. Used to be quite a few IT 
>>>>> management types here.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Unlike Y2K this crisis will happen over and over again with each
>>>>> and every state.
>>>>
>>>> The solution is quite simple, forget all gender identifications.
>>>> There are countries that will no longer use a gender identification
>>>> in their passports.
>>>
>>> Undoubtedly that is the solution that will be forced upon businesses 
>>> if it ever gets to legislation outside "Land Rights for Gay Whales" 
>>> California.  (Or perhaps we'll once again see the same Purple Mafia 
>>> machinations that saw Brendan Eich (the inventor of Javascript) 
>>> hounded out of Mozilla for crimethink)
>>
>> Because he donated money to a anti gay-marriage group. Remember what 
>> happened to Alan Turing? I'm sure Mr. Eich is a brilliant engineer, 
>> but if you are the face of an organization, then you need other 
>> qualifications as well. Being homophobic isn't one of them, then you 
>> better step down and just do engineering.
>
> This is the typical bile, filth, and character assassination that one 
> gets subjected to. You and your ilk honestly make me fucking sick. 
> Apologists for the mafia and apologists for the fascist left.
>
> He believes(d) that marriage is between a man and a women. Something 
> that has been the law of the land for thousands of years

Sure, and in the country where democracy was invented (Greece), 
relations between grown men and teenage boys were considered normal. In 
other parts of the world all kind of other relations are considered 
normal, including polygamy.

> and he donated a small amount of his own money in support of that 
> belief/opinion in a purportedly free and democratic country.

Yes, and he still allowed to express his opinion. That doesn't mean an 
organization doesn't have the right

>
> You, you scurrilous piece of shit, have then tried to hold him 
> personally for the criminalization of Turing and the law of the land 
> pre-revisionist, "homophobic" when no such views are in evidence.
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newspeak#Crimethink
>
> We don't have to guess who your Grandad supported in the War do we 
> quisling?

My grandmother's brother was a resistance fighter, he died in 
concentration camp Neuengamme. Another more distant relative of mine 
also was a resistance fighter, and he died in the same concentration 
camp. The last months I have been searching archives to see what 
happened to him.  I've read the sentence of a German court-martial, I've 
read the transcripts of interrogations of war criminals, and slowly I'm 
piecing together the history of a complete resistance group.

How many relatives did you loose in a concentration camp, how much of 
this kind of research did you have to do to find out what happened to a 
relative in the war?

And by the way, I'm also working on two projects to erect memorials for 
two allied aircraft that came down here, and I'm in touch with the 
relatives of all crew members.

So perhaps the next time you jump to all kind of stupid conclusions that 
are so typical for your kind of people, please sit down and try to think 
a bit before you do.

>>
>>>
>>> Personally, I suspect that a genderless world may pose some 
>>> difficulties such as insuring against the risk of hereditary 
>>> testicular cancer
>>
>> Good health insurance will cover you for all diseases, be it 
>> testicular cancer or breast cancer.  And before I forget, breast 
>> cancer is also possible with men. Does your insurance cover that?
>>
>>> or ensuring "Women's" Sport doesn't suddenly start posting a whole 
>>> lot of new world records.(Taking gender out of European language 
>>> nouns may also be a bit trickier than one envisages.)
>>
>> Yes, there are some things like sports that can be a problem. In fact 
>> there have been some women in sport that were later identified as 
>> intersex people.
>>
>>>
>>> Still I see some merit in the idea. By nurturing and compounding my 
>>> dysphoria with your misguided affirmations, you will have opened up 
>>> yourselves to a lawsuit as sure as if you were a Feeder plying this 
>>> tubby little Gainer 1/2 doz beers an a couple of pizzas!
>>>
>>> Let my statistically relevant predisposition to suicide be on your 
>>> patronizing, naive, do-gooder, more-liberal-than-thou heads.
>>>
>>
>




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