2 pages of not voting
10/6/2008 1:54:49 PM
No bordersNo hateNo presidentsOh eight!That's what I'll be chanting soon. McCain's in Albuquerque this afternoon.
10/6/2008 2:04:33 PM
go get 'em tiger.
10/6/2008 2:16:00 PM
A little ridiculous because I did voter registration in the same area.I'll register you to vote and then tell you I don't want any masters a few weeks later.[Edited on October 6, 2008 at 2:19 PM. Reason : want]
10/6/2008 2:19:06 PM
VOTE FOR THE EMPIRE
10/6/2008 2:24:21 PM
^^ I respect you for your zeal, though it often comes into conflict with reality.
10/6/2008 4:24:29 PM
sorry, wetthebed, but none of those things you listed are "fairness." All of those are tyranny. Fairness is treating everyone the fucking same, no matter what.
10/6/2008 5:05:34 PM
Ironically, I've never heard a rich man dis a poor man, but many a times have I heard a poor man dis a rich man. I think the rich man's actions speak for himself: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4182/is_19981120/ai_n10124032Not defending the rich (cause there are a lot of cocky rich people out there), just bring to light the idiocy of the poor man.Of course, none of us reading this thread are really poor. So, the poor man isn't represented well in these types of forums.
10/6/2008 5:06:03 PM
10/6/2008 5:10:31 PM
10/6/2008 5:25:50 PM
then either you are saying that we need an equal number of brain surgeons and plumbers (good luck justifying that one), or you're saying that we should pay plumbers and brain surgeons equally (which is what i think you're saying, that we should live communally, etc...)Fuck being a brain surgeon, then. No way I'm learning all that when I could make the same money as a plumber....and just like that, you are killing ants with sledgehammers, but don't have sledgehammers where you need them.[Edited on October 6, 2008 at 5:29 PM. Reason : asdfads]
10/6/2008 5:28:39 PM
As you probably know, I take a different view of human motivation. People don't simply work for money. There's sanctification that comes from doing a job well, particularly when it benefits the community. Such intrinsic motivation often produces better than results.
10/6/2008 5:33:46 PM
Except that your assumption ignores everything we know about human beings.
10/6/2008 5:44:35 PM
Not so. Luckily, it's support by considerable psychological research.
10/6/2008 5:47:54 PM
Sources?[Edited on October 6, 2008 at 5:52 PM. Reason : nevermind, I'm not having this argument]
10/6/2008 5:50:40 PM
You know I'm going to drop a link anyway.http://www.geocities.com/capitolhill/1931/secI4.htmlIf that's not enough, well, open up the reeducation camps. (On a strictly voluntary basis, of course.)
10/6/2008 5:55:12 PM
OMFG GEOCITIES!!!that is proof, man
10/6/2008 6:01:56 PM
Yeah, yeah. The site cites peer-reviewed research.
10/6/2008 6:04:35 PM
10/6/2008 6:14:45 PM
If nothing else, we can agree that Splenda's nasty.
10/6/2008 6:17:58 PM
10/6/2008 6:49:57 PM
10/6/2008 7:26:26 PM
10/6/2008 9:10:07 PM
^nobody said everybody deserves a nice home. nobody has ever said that so why would you say it like that? NOBODY SAID ANYTHING LIKE THAT. Everybody has the right to own a home even if its a small home or large home whatever fits them. You somehow suggest a notion that people are able to pay much more for rent but not able to own a home when their mortgage would likely be less than their rent. That just doesn't add up. It sounds more to me like you want to continue to exploit these people into paying your mortgage for you while you get free equity off of them. If they owned their own then your exploitation market would lose demand. And another suggestion of fairness is that mortgage rates should be determined only by principle.
10/6/2008 10:47:19 PM
10/6/2008 10:52:48 PM
10/6/2008 11:17:58 PM
of course not. he's a liberal.
10/6/2008 11:18:24 PM
All you have to do is ask yourself "what would they think today?" Obviously free speech is independent of time. I'm not done thinking about it but I'm trying to use my imagination and so far think searches and seizures are also independent of time. You obviously can't expect something written in the 1700s to be 100% applicable forever, can you?
10/6/2008 11:22:35 PM
10/6/2008 11:28:19 PM
10/7/2008 12:25:08 AM
10/7/2008 12:39:07 AM
10/7/2008 5:24:17 AM
10/7/2008 7:28:28 AM
10/7/2008 12:33:55 PM
10/7/2008 2:14:27 PM
10/7/2008 3:59:22 PM
10/7/2008 7:40:05 PM
see. healthcare is a right. you heard it here first
10/7/2008 10:41:06 PM
10/7/2008 11:46:41 PM
Because we're talking about the selling of money, each bank does indeed have a set amount and the rich do care about the price so all of your assumptions are out of the window with money but are good with pizza which is why the government won't ever need to regulate the selling of pizza.
10/7/2008 11:51:12 PM
You are again wrong. the interest charged to borrow is a price for the fixed supply of money just as wages are a price for the fixed supply of workers. But at that market rate, an individual employer can have all the labor he wants, all they have to do is pay more than their competitors. Well, if a bank wants more funds to loan, all they need to do is pay more for the funds than their competitors. As such, if making loans to the poor is wildly profitable then banks will compete for depositors to make such loans. That they are not strongly implies that such loans to the poor are being shunned for reasons other than not enough funds to go around. Afterall, banks are like grocery stores in that they face significant fixed operating costs, so more customers is always preferable to fewer.
10/8/2008 12:11:15 AM
any grocery store would close their doors today if i told them i would buy every truckload of food as soon as it came off the truck as long as they want. if that happened then government would need to step in.
10/8/2008 12:54:35 AM
Do you think before you speak? Ok, you own a grocery store. When you first openned you lost money every month for perhaps a year or more. You did this because you knew from experience that in time consumer loyalty would kick in and profits would start rolling. This loyalty (more habbit than anything else) is valuable, afterall it cost you a lot of money to achieve it. Now, wethebest shows up one day and proclaims what you said. What do you do? Presumably you will jack up the markup on the products, so selling everything to wethebest would be far more profitable than stocking the store. But doing that would destroy whatever customer loyalty you had built up. How do we know wethebest will be here forever to buy the food? Wethebest could stop showing up tomorrow, but your customers have already shifted their habbits to Walmart down the street. More likely, the grocery store will refuse you and politely ask that you come back tomorrow when you will discover another identical truck rushed from warehouses unknown. Then wethebest demands two trucks; then four; then eight; etc. So, the question is, could Bill Gates buy every loaf of bread in the country? The answer is no. As Bill Gates starts trying to buy all the bread, the price will rise a lot. While an extra $2 per loaf is not much for a household buying a loaf a week, it is devastating to someone trying to buy a billion loafs. But more importantly, as with the grocery store above, traditional modes of transportation are already tied up in long-term contracts. Bread can be more cheaply delivered to a rural grocery store every week for decades than a similar quantity of bread delivered to Bill Gates house once. As such, most of Bill Gates money will vanish into negotiation costs and transportation costs. But, assuming he persists, bakeries will step up production, tapping into the world's store of grain. As the flood of bread increases, even Bill Gates with all his billions could not keep up. After it all, Bill Gates probably managed to produce hard shortages somewhere. The people ate corn based wraps instead. But Bill Gates would be ruined, his companies would be liquidated and he would never be able to do this again. As such, such an eventuality is absurd. It has never happened in recorded history. So why is it the sole basis for your world-view?
10/8/2008 1:41:55 AM
because credit is much less availble than bread. you can't simply make more and there is no alternative1 bill gates can't buy every loaf but if 10 bill gates 100 oprah winfreys 1000 donald trumps 10,000 alex rodriguezes and so on buy all the bread they can by the time you get down to the little guy there isn't going to be much if any left. but again, if you had guaranteed loyalty from multiple parties why wouldn't you deal with the ones with the larger orders first?This isn't about a person buying up all of one thing its about a collective class doing it.
10/8/2008 2:05:44 AM
10/8/2008 3:29:26 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02Lj54edyUkThis remix version is substantially better. [Edited on October 8, 2008 at 10:50 AM. Reason : (embed failed)]
10/8/2008 10:46:30 AM