i dont have anything of value to add.but please do carry on.[Edited on August 10, 2006 at 3:07 AM. Reason : ]
8/10/2006 3:06:42 AM
8/10/2006 9:22:24 AM
8/10/2006 9:49:58 AM
8/10/2006 12:30:30 PM
in my opinion, it seems like there is so much more the government could do to maximize profitslike what if they rationed out food portions and gas, etc- everyone would be going as efficiently as they could(so profits would be maximized)
8/10/2006 3:45:21 PM
^ In my opinion, "sacrifice for the good of the country" is near dead. Any politician that started rationing would be swiftly punted out of office.Am I cynical? Of course I am. We have an anti-war movement that has zero connection to the war but act on a self-righteous high horse (what are you protesting? there's no draft!). We have politicians that are consistently piling debt upon debt onto this country through their pet projects like a bridge to a tiny island of 50 people in Alaska. We have an administration that has started an FBI program to monitor internet pornography in households while the War on Terror continues, where you think FBI resources might be put to better use. We have a senior citizen population that has a massive pension waiting for them that will never be paid in full because there is not enough money but no one does anything to fix it.I am not a Republican or Democrat really, but still care about politics and look at its connection to national concerns. I want you to look at issues like possible oil shortages and ask yourself this: When a crisis comes, do you trust the people in power in this country (both parties) to do what is right, like rationing, or what is easy?
8/10/2006 4:51:59 PM
8/10/2006 7:26:27 PM
8/10/2006 11:35:54 PM
8/11/2006 12:16:41 AM
Sure, they are the big four, but collectively they barely control 18% of the market, but you evidently have a different definition of oligopoly.[Edited on August 11, 2006 at 1:29 AM. Reason : .,.]
8/11/2006 1:29:29 AM
In general--and I think that this relates to the overarching point of the thread--many citizens of the United States really do not know how to live free. Witness the recent wild debate and knee-jerk reactions concerning personal investment of some Social Security funds.It appears that many Americans are simply too scared to take full control of their retirement planning and other areas of their lives. It's really a shame.
8/11/2006 3:36:02 AM
^I've said it before, hooksaw, making sense on the wolf web will get you nowhere.
8/11/2006 11:02:22 AM
8/11/2006 11:12:32 AM
^ and no one else is?
8/11/2006 1:13:26 PM
^^ I suppose you're right, EarthDogg. I guess I'm just a glutton for punishment.I just don't understand why some people want more government and less freedom. It does not make sense to me, and it never will.
8/11/2006 4:33:11 PM
Let me toss this figurative bomb into the mix: One can make a case that a monopoly CAN be a good thing. Take the Bell Labs of time past, for example. It simply cannot be legitimately disputed that so many amazing technological advances (transistors, lasers, faxes, programming languages, and so on) could have been made if so many resources had not been concentrated in one entity.Remember, this is NOT necessarily my position; rather, it is one that has been offered by some economists. I am not submitting a pro-monopoly or pro-oligopoly argument here. What I am suggesting is that it often seems in this country that some of us want an individual or other entity to be successful--just not TOO successful. Some in this country loudly bemoan the plight of the poor while attempting to bring down the rich in the same breath. I think that is just wrongheaded.
8/11/2006 4:59:40 PM
8/11/2006 9:34:30 PM
8/12/2006 12:40:50 AM
8/12/2006 12:43:37 AM
8/12/2006 3:01:32 AM
No, that 18% only included the big 4, like I said. Another one would be Citgo. But you miss a big point. BP often doesn't own BP stations. Most stations are independently owned and regularly switch providers (taking down all the BP colors and putting up the Kangaroo colors). The reason is obvious, if you care, BP and Exxon don't want to face the risks associated with owning something so subjective as a fixed gas station, unless it is a sure thing.
8/12/2006 8:52:49 AM
8/12/2006 10:18:06 AM
8/12/2006 11:54:24 AM
Ah, yes, the liberals as Scrooges; I love it. Unfortunately, unlike the ultimately reformed Ebenezer Scrooge, the liberals will never change their philosophy and help the Tiny Tims of world through individual efforts and private funding.Poor Tim:http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.cedmagic.com/featured/christmas-carol/1951-xmas-tiny-tim.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.cedmagic.com/featured/christmas-carol/1951-xmas-tiny-tim.html&h=300&w=400&sz=22&hl=en&start=8&tbnid=MnLhXublvZSLXM:&tbnh=93&tbnw=124&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dglyn%2Bdearman%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26sa%3DNBy the way, the version of _A Christmas Carol_ with Alastair Sim is my favorite. I actually won't do Christmas without watching it at least once. The film has important messages about greed, change, and charity that I use as an annual reminder to myself of how I should live my life.[Edited on August 12, 2006 at 4:17 PM. Reason : Link][Edited on August 12, 2006 at 4:19 PM. Reason : Link II][Edited on August 12, 2006 at 4:25 PM. Reason : Link III]
8/12/2006 4:09:31 PM
I await your latest economic manifesto, LoneSnark.
8/12/2006 4:16:45 PM
maybe you should await instructions on how to link to a picture.
8/12/2006 10:40:00 PM
8/13/2006 12:52:42 AM
8/13/2006 1:41:16 AM
Well, that is backwards. Usually Exxon sets up a separate company to manage its oil field, not the other way around. Obviously ownership does not imply ownership, my bad, they are clearly not "vertically integrated."
8/13/2006 8:15:26 AM
a bit old, but funnyCaption at the bottom: "Of course, the U.S.A. is not going to go bankrupt. The point of this piece is to make the inevitable alternative obvious. The U.S. will repay its debts, backed with the full credit of the government. Debts will be paid in full... with itty, bitty little dollars."
8/13/2006 7:14:44 PM
8/13/2006 8:19:26 PM
^ Sorry, that was sarcasm. The point is every stage of production/refining/sales is owned directly or indirectly by one organization, in this case PDVSA, which makes it just as vertically integrated as Exxon or BP. With the obvious proviso that I don't believe any of them are really vertically integrated since most of their oil gets refined in refineries owned by other companies and sold in franchise gas stations owned by independent individuals which are simply paying for the right to put up BP and Exxon and Citgo signs.
8/14/2006 9:51:05 AM
Okay, I'm waiting for said instructions, Kris.
8/15/2006 12:48:14 PM
ok another simple question i thought of...so i'm in alamance county, getting my oil changed, and while waiting i see on the tv an infomercial about buying gold...talking about how gold has gone up to like 700 an ounce...well it got me thinking...isnt our paper money(fiat i think) backed up by gold...well if our money is backed up by gold, and gold keeps rising, why is the dollar continuing to fall against other currencies like the euro and stuff?
8/15/2006 1:10:38 PM
8/15/2006 1:40:26 PM
well isnt their some rule that all our money has to be backed up by something?i was always under the impression(or atleast thats what i thought erickson told us in ec 202) that our money was backed up at the federal reserve(where we keep all the gold)
8/15/2006 1:45:55 PM
Our money has been backed up by nothing more than people's confidence in it since Richard Nixon pulled the United States off the gold standard in 1971.
8/15/2006 1:54:06 PM
The Federal Reserve does operate numerous vaults in which it holds the gold of both the U.S. as well as other countries. And if ordered to do so by Congress it could use that gold to buy dollars off the market. However, there is no current order to do so at any price, which means there is no explicit backing being provided by the gold reserves. But you may feel an implied backing in the event that the dollar collapses, but that would depend on who is in political control of the government and would require specific legislation.
8/15/2006 2:54:54 PM
8/15/2006 3:13:22 PM
8/15/2006 4:02:04 PM
8/15/2006 4:30:11 PM
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8/15/2006 6:59:45 PM