GasBandit
Staff member
New Jersey residents howling in terror at the thought of having to pump their own gas.
I didn't even realize full service was still a thing. I can't remember the last time I've seen one. From the article:New Jersey residents howling in terror at the thought of having to pump their own gas.
And who can argue with that?“We’ve got to move with the times, and the time has time for New Jersey to make this transition,” he said.
And the only other mandatory full-service State, Oregon is also considering taking steps in that same direction.New Jersey residents howling in terror at the thought of having to pump their own gas.
They wanted to survive in the most basic way possible.
They wanted $15/hour.
Which they wouldn't be able to do when the franchise owner was forced to close down.They wanted to survive in the most basic way possible.
Then maybe they shouldn't be working at McDonald's. Seriously, is there ANY job some people won't assert deserves 30k/year, no matter how unskilled or undemanding it is?They wanted to survive in the most basic way possible.
Nobody says that. You have exactly the same right to health care that he does - none. Health care is not a "right," and to assert otherwise is to lay ownership to another person's labor - the health care provider's. Last I checked, that was still the definition of slavery.Its the same attitude that says even though I bust my ass all night, every night at work, I have less of a right to health care than the dudebro who does nothing but drink, smoke weed, and play Call of Duty via Daddy's trust fund.
What I'm frequently mad about is someone who I perceive as contributing less to society having less debt than me.What you're really mad about is someone who you perceive as contributing less to society, and being a less worthwhile person, has more money than you.
Those who speak of the "right" to health care actually don't understand what their rights are, or even what it means to have a "right." A common argument that healthcare is a "right" is because everybody needs it at some point. Yet, I can name things people need much more urgently, frequently, and critically than health care. Food, for example. None of that, and you're dead in rather short order, and unpleasantly at that, to put it mildly. But nobody ever talks about the "right" to food. If you're hungry, and you can't afford food, so you go into a restaurant and eat without paying, you end up in jail. Because other people have rights too. Just like a doctor has the right to not have his skills, education, labor, time and attention taken from him without his consent.Ok Ayn.
Where, ironically, you get access to food and healthcare.If you're hungry, and you can't afford food, so you go into a restaurant and eat without paying, you end up in jail.
Food, shelter, exercise, healthcare... everything a human needs to thrive, right? Heck, there's even cable TV and education.Where, ironically, you get access to food and healthcare.
I had always assumed that this was the reason members of the Elite classes mysteriously turn up dead or "go missing" from time to time.arguing that the 1% should put out more is pointless. No one has the ability to make them.
Historically, this has been untrue. While some of the wealthy will invariably escape with SOME portion of their wealth and some of the others will evade the troubles through politics or supporting said revolution, it's usually the upper class that loses out the most in armed revolutions and it's usually the current middle class (or at least part of it) that takes their place. The poor usually do a bit better too... and the rich who fled with their wealth usually don't get to come back, having been labeled traitors by the successor government.Anything you can think of, there is a counter-move to weasel around it. Therefore, the only way everyone will have access to living wage, healthcare, etc. is through the government, because it is mandatory for us to pay them. Now, why do people take issue with this? Because they're only doing so well or not well themselves. The majority of the wealth will not change hands, and never will. If there was a revolution, it would change the government, maybe people from the impoverished and middle class would switch places, but those with money at the top will not change.
Occupy Oakland shutdown the 5th biggest port in the nation on a whim. It happened entirely because the police were completely unwilling to do what it would take to get rid of them. You don't think people would do it again (and permanently) if they were desperate enough?I don't really see that when people end up attacking their own neighborhoods as opposed to the wealthy ones.
As for livelihood, I don't see uprisings going on where these companies tend to outsource. The governments in Asia appear to welcome this practice.
I suppose that gels with "how do we sell more when we've reached market saturation?" issues I've seen talked about in the advertising world.Occupy Oakland shutdown the 5th biggest port in the nation on a whim. It happened entirely because the police were completely unwilling to do what it would take to get rid of them. You don't think people would do it again (and permanently) if they were desperate enough?
And as for livelihood... China's about to have it's own problems soon. It will soon become unprofitable to build in China and ship elsewhere (ether due to rising energy costs or a rising wage in China). Whether this means big business will move their factories somewhere else (like Africa) or simply move them back home when automation becomes sufficient is unseen, but the current business model (like ALL 20th century business models) is unsustainable in the long run when the simple introduction of jobs is enough to stabilize a region and promote Western ideals.
Ironically, Western ideals are the very thing keeping Capitalism from reaching it's end game: you can't get ALL the money when your very presence undermines the conditions you need to flourish completely. When you can't exploit workers fully, Capitalism dies a slow death.
Exactly. This is how Capitalism works against itself. In that case, the issue is that investors demand a certain amount of profit from their investments... but that can only happen under unsustainable conditions. There IS a point where you can't sell any more product, ether because further markets don't exist or you can't make a profit from those markets you haven't tapped into. When it becomes apparent that their investments will grow no further, most investors are going to sell their holdings and invest in something else with growth potential. However, this is self destructive... or at the very least shows no concern for the factors that make investing profitable.I suppose that gels with "how do we sell more when we've reached market saturation?" issues I've seen talked about in the advertising world.
Capitalism doesn't mean everybody (or every business) succeeds just "because capitalism." Nobody who understands capitalism, or the world in general, would make that assumption. That said, it's still the most efficient engine to generate weath in the fairest way.Exactly. This is how Capitalism works against itself. In that case, the issue is that investors demand a certain amount of profit from their investments... but that can only happen under unsustainable conditions. There IS a point where you can't sell any more product, ether because further markets don't exist or you can't make a profit from those markets you haven't tapped into. When it becomes apparent that their investments will grow no further, most investors are going to sell their holdings and invest in something else with growth potential. However, this is self destructive... or at the very least shows no concern for the factors that make investing profitable.
That's halfway to what I think the proper role of government should be in a free market society - ensuring balance by busting up trusts and monopolies when they become a detriment to competition, a-la Ma Bell. Of course, even there it wasn't done 100% right, but we're still better off than if one company owned all things telephony. Capitalism works best when businesses have to fight each other tooth and nail. Bad things happen when they collude or combine, or grow too large. Pop the bubbles before they get "too big to fail."so they would rather break down their companies into smaller ones that work together than pay that extra.
Right now, the single biggest issue the government should be addressing in this regard is breaking the collusion of the cable/internet connection markets. There is no actual competition when some providers have to rent their lines from their biggest local competitors because local municipalities have made it impossible to lay new ones... or when local markets decide to match prices to keep the shit under control. For that matter, the government should be subsidizing the updating and expansion of the current networks in order to improve net access as a common good... and needs to make it so the ISPs can't raise their rates in response to this better service. Say what you will about the government forcing phone companies to hook up EVERYONE who was willing to pay for a line, but it was an undeniable infrastructure improvement that helped the entire nation for decades... same with the interstate system.That's halfway to what I think the proper role of government should be in a free market society - ensuring balance by busting up trusts and monopolies when they become a detriment to competition, a-la Ma Bell. Of course, even there it wasn't done 100% right, but we're still better off than if one company owned all things telephony. Capitalism works best when businesses have to fight each other tooth and nail. Bad things happen when they collude or combine, or grow too large. Pop the bubbles before they get "too big to fail."
The rest of the world gets it.The US has some of the worst net access in the free world and it's entirely because the local dealers don't want to drop money on improving their networks to modern standards.
Yes, you heard right, for the majority of people out there, it's cheaper to buy a SIM from a British company, send it here to the USA, stick it in your smartphone, and "roam" using the exact same towers and network infrastructure than it is to have a contract with a domestic carrier.My fellow Americans, let me (again) re-iterate how badly we’re all getting overcharged: Three[.co.uk] offers a 30-day prepaid plan with unlimited data, unlimited texts, and 200 minutes of domestic calling, all for £20 ($31). That’s about one-third less than what I pay right now Stateside.
You got me curious, so I basically just Googled for recent news stories involving "golden parachutes."Unlike those hard-working executives with golden parachutes, who can walk away with a severance package worth millions after completely fucking up and costing the company billions.
This was one of the first ones to pop up. Let's make a few assumptions. What was Mr. Cahill's salary in 2014? About 4.1 million dollars in cash and equity.John Cahill, who agreed to sell Kraft Foods Group Inc. to H.J. Heinz after just a few months as chief executive officer of the macaroni-and-cheese maker, is entitled to a $19.9 million golden parachute
Infrastructure has to be the government's responsibility as well, that went for telephones last century, it goes for internet this century. It's just going to be one hell of a balancing act to limit them to regulating ISPs without getting their hooks into the stuff ON the internet.Right now, the single biggest issue the government should be addressing in this regard is breaking the collusion of the cable/internet connection markets. There is no actual competition when some providers have to rent their lines from their biggest local competitors because local municipalities have made it impossible to lay new ones... or when local markets decide to match prices to keep the shit under control. For that matter, the government should be subsidizing the updating and expansion of the current networks in order to improve net access as a common good... and needs to make it so the ISPs can't raise their rates in response to this better service. Say what you will about the government forcing phone companies to hook up EVERYONE who was willing to pay for a line, but it was an undeniable infrastructure improvement that helped the entire nation for decades... same with the interstate system.
Or just do what I want and make government lines that sell internet only for pennies on the dollar. The US has some of the worst net access in the free world and it's entirely because the local dealers don't want to drop money on improving their networks to modern standards... and the local government offered services have so far been some of the best, fastest networks in the country.
We got some flooding here, and it knocked 3 of our transmitters off for a while (we have backups fortunately), but the worst that is going to happen to me here is all the mosquitoes that will spawn in all the standing water in my neighborhood.For all the crap we give you, @GasBandit, I really hope you're staying safe with all the storms rolling through Texas (yes, ALL of Texas) at the moment.
It appears Austin is underwater, and Houston is coming close to it.
Hmph! I said it BEFORE Rand did!If it weren't for this thread and his binging on the Rand Paul kool-aid (health care=slavery is right out of Rand's speeches), GB would actually be one of my favorite posters.
No, really.
Well, Texas sure as hell does.
Hey, who knows when they're gonna run out of virgins, right? Gotta make sure the fam gets em while the gettin's good!
I assume the officers just do what they do in Virginia, and look for out of state tags.NJ has a "go with the traffic" clause in our speed laws whereby the driver needs to be going fast enough to not be a road hazard to other drivers, regardless of the listed speed limit.
Naturally, this gets into weird territory when the flow of traffic is going faster than the listed speed limit (which happens quite a lot on the NJ Turnpike).
Michigan has been ignoring 70MPH speed limits for years!