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#91
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Of course . . .
there is always the message that capitalism needs to be reigned in lest it go crazy and crush the weak and weary. Well, I should think you'd want them taught "the facts of life". The final sentence above is pretty much an emperically proven fact, is it not? Capitalism is ruthlessly fair. It treats everyone the same, regardless of race, creed, or political affiliation. It is the ultimate democracy, and its basic rules are immutable. It does not suffer fools gladly, however. Folks who ignore what is happening around them get steam-rolled by events, in a capitalist system. I'm up against it every day, in my business. Two days ago, a $60 million (that's not a typo) Marriott Hotel opened up less than 5 miles away -- and our phone stopped ringing. We went from having a gangbusters August, to being behind last year, in two days. The fact that this hotel was built entirely with taxpayer's money, by the City of Coralville, might surprise you. On the other hand, in a socialist area like the one I live in, this kind of thing happens all the time. (The University of Iowa has a government-built-and-owned hotel, the Iowa House. They also have a government-owned-and-operated daily newspaper, the Daily Iowan, that I used to compete against in my previous life.) The local Sheraton -- itself the beneficiary of almost unbelieveable tax breaks -- filed suit against the City of Coralville, to stop this obviously illegal undertaking by a local city government. Incredibly, the case went all the way to the Iowa Supreme Court, and the courts ruled that there was no law prohibiting an Iowa city from building a hotel. So, the case was thrown out, and we are now fighting for our lives against an additional 285 suites (we have 28) in a market that no independent business felt was necessary to build. Is this fair? Will the Marriott kill us? Will we survive the next two years, between them and the new $80 million dollar casino hotel they're building just south of town? I have no idea -- but I'll keep swinging for the fences in the meantime. That's capitalism -- and I don't want my kids teachers sugar-coating it. All that will do is weaken them for their upcoming battle, in a field called "life". -- Jay Honeck Owner/Innkeeper www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination |
#92
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Capitalism is ruthlessly fair. It treats everyone the same, regardless
of race, creed, or political affiliation. It is the ultimate democracy, and its basic rules are immutable. No, it is not. Capitalism is sort of mostly fair when it's practiced by equals. But capitalism makes some powerful and some not. The next generation inherets this, and at that point it becomes inherently unfair. Small companies are far more influenced by individuals than large ones. This allows large ones to get away with more. If they become large enough to become monopolistic and get away with it, the key has been thrown out. Large companies can purchase more votes than small ones, or individuals, and those votes keep them large and influential, despite any quality issues with their products. WalMart, with its decrees about RFID tags, may well be the biggest threat to privacy there is, but it is largely unstoppable because there is little of equivalent size with sufficient coherency to fight it. Capitalism is also about passing costs on to others, who cannot defend themselves against such a large entity. Dumping waste upstream harms all those downstream, but those downstream have little recourse against the capitalists upstream, especially when they are not in the market for the product in the first place. This is inherently unfair. Outsourcing is also "capitalism at work", yet has been derided as "unfair", both to American workers, and to the foreign ecosystem. But that's the way unrestrained capitalism works. Some restraints are necessary. The key is which ones, and preventing unrestrained government from becoming the evil we are trying to avoid with unrestrained capitalism. Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#93
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("Emily" wrote)
As someone smarter than many people in the world, I say yes. Many ...meaning 100? Many ...meaning 10,000? Many ...meaning 1,000,000? Let's assign "many" the value ...650,000,000. g Montblack http://www.worldometers.info/ Gonna cruise out of this city Head down to the sea Gonna shout out at the ocean Hey it's me And I feel like a number Feel like a number Feel like a stranger A stranger in this land I feel like a number I'm not a number I'm not a number Dammit I'm a man I said I'm a man Song: Feel Like a Number Album: Stranger in Town (1978) By: Bob Seger |
#94
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("Jay Honeck" wrote)
Honestly, you have to pass a test to drive a car, but there is no "minimum requirement" for reproducing. Imagine what a lovely world it could be, if only some basic skills were required of every human before they had children? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugenics In this world, the Mensa Society guys would be gettin' it ...all the time! "How can I be more 'popular' with the ladies?" "Develop your spatial relationship problem solving skills, for starters." Montblack Hoping those E.Q. points put me over the top - "Hello triple digits." |
#95
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On Thu, 17 Aug 2006 11:33:32 -0400, "Skylune"
wrote: 15-18 hours!! No wonder you fly. Buy a nice BMW, Audi, or Porsche and you should be able to halve that. Used to own a Porsche... Also had the speeding tickets to prove it... Top ticket was for 154 in a 55 -- apparently he clocked me when I was slowing down for a curve... http://grumman581.googlepages.com/1989porsche944-turbo These days, most of the vehicles that I drive, I don't have to worry about them scraping bottom on a speed bump... Well, except my sport bike... I've had it up to 140 and it was still accelerating quite nicely... Yeah, had to slow up for a curve on US-151 somewhere between Marion and Monticello, IA... http://i3.tinypic.com/wco9ll.jpg |
#96
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote I'm up against it every day, in my business. Two days ago, a $60 million (that's not a typo) Marriott Hotel opened up less than 5 miles away -- and our phone stopped ringing. We went from having a gangbusters August, to being behind last year, in two days. The fact that this hotel was built entirely with taxpayer's money, by the City of Coralville, might surprise you. On the other hand, in a socialist area like the one I live in, this kind of thing happens all the time. (The University of Iowa has a government-built-and-owned hotel, the Iowa House. They also have a government-owned-and-operated daily newspaper, the Daily Iowan, that I used to compete against in my previous life.) You know, after reading your post an hour or so ago, I have gotten more and more ****ed-off. Since when does a government have the right to tinker in direct competition with the private sector? You need to get together with the Sheraton owners, and do some lobbying to get some kind of new law passed, or a new damages suite, or forcing the issue to the highest court, or something. I will be among the first to contribute to a legal defense fund, for *that* cause !!! Damn, just damn !!! -- Jim in NC |
#97
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Childhood immunizations. There are no children turned away without immunization anywhere in America. There *are*, however, millions of criminally stupid parents who don't GET their children immunized. Explain that to the parents whose kids became paralyzed/retarted/infected/died as a direct result of vaccines. I know, the probability of that happening is low, but if it happens to YOUR kid, it doesn't matter what that mathematical probability is. The ones who actively choose not to immunize have taken steps to become educated about the risks and benefits of vaccines than the vast majority who blindly follow what the doc says. Try explaining to a widow whose husband died in a small plane crash why everyone who doesn't fly are criminally stupid, because flying is a vey safe activity. As you know, flying is a calculated risk and a choice. You can't force that upon everyone just because you and the FAA think it is safe. |
#98
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On 2006-08-16, Jay Honeck wrote:
Imagine! $640 to go fly! This *might* explain why there are only 9 registered Cherokee 235s in all of Britain, no? What's worse is the airlines are claiming that they are subsidising GA through the fees they pay to the CAA - and conveniently leaving the fuel taxes out of the calculations. Of course, fuel for airlines is tax free. If you have a plane that runs on Jet-A (for example, the new Diamond DA-40 or Twin Star), you have to pay VAT on jet fuel which the airlines don't. (However, Jet-A is still very cheap - about 1/3rd of the cost of avgas even with VAT added) -- Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de |
#99
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On 2006-08-16, David Wright wrote:
It takes 5 hours to travel from London to Edinburgh by train, at a cost of around £80 ($160). They've slowed down that much? When I worked for British Rail, London King's Cross to Edinburgh took 3hr 59 mins by InterCity 225 Luton (about 30 miles out of London) to Edinburgh with low cost carrier easyJet.com for around £20 ($40) in just under 50 minutes. Plus 2 hours check in time at the departure airport, and a further 45 minutes to get to the centre of Edinburgh, don't forget :-) -- Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de |
#100
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Honestly, you have to pass a test to drive a car, but there is no "minimum requirement" for reproducing. Imagine what a lovely world it could be, if only some basic skills were required of every human before they had children? Jay, I thought you didn't like socialism or social engineering? :-) Matt |
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