brimstoneSalad wrote:You could publish them easily
Seriously? And all the time I've spent immersing myself into the linguistic literature before I could write those papers doesn't count? And all the time I've spent studying programming before I could make a simplified programming language to write a paper about it doesn't count? Not everybody is able to do stuff like that, and those that are able to often aren't willing to. It's far from "easy".
brimstoneSalad wrote:difference between a descriptive claim and a predictive one
But even with descriptive claims, linguistics is still harder than political science. Which claim can you be more certain is true, "'Šišmiš' means 'bat' in Croatian." or "Bernie Sanders said something like 'American Dream is more easy to achieve in Venezuela these days than in the US.'"?
brimstoneSalad wrote:Literally Americans can not tell you anything about Croatia, even that it's a real country.
OK, I thought the schools in the US teach something as important as that, at least symbolically important.
Though I can kind of see why the US would want to erase something like that from history. Croatia, or, better say, what was left of it in the late 18th century (the area around Ragusa, modern-day Dubrovnik) established diplomatic relations with the US expecting military help from the US if Ottoman empire attacks it (which Ottoman empire didn't because Dubrovnik agreed to pay taxes to the Ottoman empire, while maintaining some degree of autonomy). Unfortunately (or fortunately, for it's very hard to tell what would have happened otherwise), at the beginning of the 19th century, the Ottoman empire actually conquered Dubrovnik, and we received no help from the US, or even some explanation of why we didn't receive any help. Soon after that, Napoleon "liberated" parts of Croatia, including Dubrovnik. That fact about diplomatic relations between Croatia and the US is not really important in the sense that it modified the course of history, it's just symbolic.
And I guess they aren't teaching in the American schools about how the US, at the beginning of World War 2, supported the Chetniks, which turned out to be a huge mistake, since Chetniks only pretended to fight against Fascism, while, in fact, they were secretly giving resources the US and the UK gave them to the Fascists.
brimstoneSalad wrote:They have an unbiased bias, which is a bias to remain unbiased even in cases where the right side is obvious, so they typically stick to reporting on facts and dig for "both sides" even when there isn't another side.
I am not sure what you mean. Do you mean to say that those accusations that the English-speaking media make about human rights violations in China and Russian are true? Do you think that Tiananmen Square actually happened?
My perception is that the political system in China today is similar to the political system that was implemented by Ante Marković in the 1980s, and most of the people in Croatia remember Marković'es reign as a very good period.
brimstoneSalad wrote:What happens if you refuse to pay the fine on ideological grounds, Teo?
As the law later says, they will confiscate some property from you.
But it's a bit hard to tell what would actually happen if you are proven guilty of "insulting the anthem" in Croatia. The Croatian singer Josipa Lisac recently actually performed a parody of the Croatian anthem, she ended up in court and she was judged to be innocent (I don't know the details), so it doesn't really tell us what would happen.
See, that law obviously can't be enforced today, you can't possibly pay a certain number of "dinars" today when the currency named "Croatian dinar" doesn't exist today. I am not sure what the abbreviation "DEM" refers to, my guess is that it also refers to some currency which doesn't exist today. So, even if you are judged guilty of "insulting the anthem", most likely what will happen is the same thing that happened to Karl von Habsburg when he put the "von Habsburg" name on his website (which is illegal in Austria), he was proven guilty but nothing happened because the law saying that he ought to pay a certain number of Austrian Kronen was not enforceable then.
brimstoneSalad wrote:You realize I do not trust you on any subject, right?
Why don't you trust me about that? I published papers about that in peer-reviewed journals. And it's not even particularly obscure, I think that quite a few people who haven't studied etymology know what "Vilo Velebita" actually means.
brimstoneSalad wrote:Anyway, it doesn't matter way something means, it matters what people think it means.
By that logic, laws in the US that explicitly favor men over women are now constitutional, because "All men are created equal" meant "All human beings are equal", but "men" now usually means "male human beings". That's obviously not how it works, laws don't change their meaning as the language changes.
brimstoneSalad wrote:Google says it means this:
Why do you think Google Translate knows better than somebody who has published linguistic papers in that language?
brimstoneSalad wrote:If vague, it does give them that power. Vague laws are used in North America and Europe like that too, creating cases of overcharging people by applying laws that barely fit, and yet it can stick.
As far as I can see, if laws are vague, usually exactly the opposite happens. Security companies are known to successfully defend themselves in courts when they refuse to give people money by appealing to the lack of clarity of the laws and the contracts. The Croatian politician Branimir Glavaš was able to postpone ending up in jail for a decade by appealing to ridiculous legal technicalities, in spite of clear evidence that he poisoned Čedomir Vučković.
brimstoneSalad wrote: If you're interested in this subject then become a defense lawyer and argue your interpretation before a court to see what it actually means.
Hey, listen, I don't have a lot of time to study law, I am studying computer science and it's very demanding. But the idea that you can end up in jail for posting an anti-police message on Twitter even if there is no law explicitly saying that's illegal seems so ridiculous I'm having trouble taking it seriously.
But, let's say, for the same of argument, that it's true, that 1 in million Croatians do end up in jail for posting an anti-police message on Twitter. How is that worse than what's going on in America, where 3% of the population are in jail, mostly for trying to cure themselves with drugs (whether or not they actually work) that politicians have decided they should be illegal in the US?
brimstoneSalad wrote:If you're comparing laws restricting freedom of speech to copyright laws to justify their ambiguity then you've already lost.
I am not trying to justify them, I am just saying such laws exist everywhere, not just in Croatia. That law wasn't intended to restrict freedom of speech. A law that explicitly says "You must not criticize the police." wouldn't get passed, two thirds of the Croatian Senate certainly wouldn't vote in favor of it, not even half would. But unclear laws such as that law or the copyright laws do get passed, as well as do the laws that end up protecting the security companies when they break their obligations.
brimstoneSalad wrote:Not really, that's along the lines of reading Korean language North Korea state propaganda and thinking that's meaningfully contributing to your understanding of the issue.
I thought everybody would agree people who speak Korean and who can North Korean media are more qualified to talk about North Korea than those that don't.
Do you think the life in North Korea is really as bad as the English-speaking media make it look? Don't you think life in North Korea today is almost certainly better than life in Croatia was in the early 1990s, and that it's better than anywhere in the world 100 years ago? Don't you think most of the people in North Korea are living happy lives there without us knowing that?
Let's face it, Communism doesn't always lead to people living horribly. Quite a few people in Croatia who lived under Communism support it. So much so that the first thing the new president Zoran Milanović did when he got to power was to return the sculpture of the Croatian communist leader, Josip Broz Tito, to the Pantovčak Square in Zagreb.
The Croatian Constitution to this day explicitly denies protection of property rights to citizens (Article 50 allows the government to confiscate property if the it thinks that's for public good), though, in praxis, the property rights are obeyed.
I am not saying that Communism is a good thing, in fact, the government infringing upon property rights is almost always a bad thing. But that's not worse than the War on Drugs that's going on today in the US.
brimstoneSalad wrote:There are already NGOs and such collecting this information.
What exactly is an NGO? Why would they be reliable sources of information about politics?