COMPUTER DIED


  • Considered Harmful

    @PJH said in COMPUTER DIED:

    @anotherusername said in COMPUTER DIED:

    Beastiality's still illegal, I thought?

    0_1465661294085_Screenshot from 2016-06-11 17-07-50.png

    I like how one link in that screenshot is :visited. Presumably someone thought gray meant they were in the clear, but had to make read the definition to be sure.


    Filed under: I guess what I'm trying to say is that PJH is :giggity: for horses., Also, Fox


  • Trolleybus Mechanic

    @PJH said in COMPUTER DIED:

    @anotherusername said in COMPUTER DIED:

    Beastiality's still illegal, I thought?

    0_1465661294085_Screenshot from 2016-06-11 17-07-50.png

    Someone took researching that plot point from Clerks 2 way too seriously.



  • @error or they just wanted to know what non liquet means. I was kinda curious myself...

    In law, a non liquet is a situation where there is no applicable law. Non liquet translates into English from Latin as "it is not clear." According to Cicero, the term was applied during the Roman Republic to a verdict of "not proven" where the guilt or innocence of the accused was "not clear." Lacuna is a related word which means "gap, void, defect, want, or loss" and is used to indicate a gap in the law. Lacunae are distinct from loopholes, in which a law exists but which can be circumvented legally due to an unforeseen or unintended inadequacy in the said law. A lacuna, on the other hand, is a situation in which a law or provision is lacking in the first place.

    That is to say, a court comes to the conclusion that the situation engaged in a case has no answer from the governing system of law. This is of particular relevance to international law since international courts, be it the International Court of Justice or ad hoc tribunals, cannot invent law to redress a lacuna. As has now become the practice, the last resort that can be taken recourse to in deciding contentious cases is the widely accepted law of civilized nations (see generally Barcelona Traction, as accepting the doctrine of estoppel as part of international law). The ex aequo et bono jurisdiction has to date never been accepted by states, and it is believed[citation needed] that states would never accept it. Thus, absence of determinable international law leads to the court declaring something non liquet. But it has been argued by many that invoking of the non liquet doctrine is opposed to the notion of law being a complete (and autonomous) system. Note that municipal courts enforcing international law are not constrained to declare an area non liquet.


  • Discourse touched me in a no-no place

    @anotherusername said in COMPUTER DIED:

    @error said in COMPUTER DIED:

    I like how one link in that screenshot is :visited. Presumably someone thought gray meant they were in the clear, but had to make read the definition to be sure
    @error or they just wanted to know what non liquet means.

    This. T'was the first time I'd come across the term.


  • Considered Harmful

    @anotherusername said in COMPUTER DIED:

    @error or they just wanted to know what non liquet means

    Buzzkill. I choose the reality which is more amusing to me.



  • @PJH And now we know why @Fox decided to live in Texas.


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