7/26/2007 2:04:12 AM
hooksaw = that wlfkpck4life bitch or whatever that guys name was?That guy was as intellectually void as hooksaw is. I bet they are the same person.
7/26/2007 7:46:17 AM
Doesn't he still post?It's probably Wlfpack2k or whatever. The lawyer with the colossal ego and the imaginary friends. [Edited on July 26, 2007 at 8:41 AM. Reason : .]
7/26/2007 8:40:58 AM
^ I thought that was Oeuvre or however you spell it?[Edited on July 26, 2007 at 10:04 AM. Reason : fucking French with their vowell movements!]
7/26/2007 10:03:26 AM
FYI, Bald Hate:hooksaw = hooksawI have one username and this is it, get it?
7/27/2007 8:05:21 PM
A golden oldie.
8/23/2007 7:28:35 AM
8/23/2007 12:46:05 PM
bump by request
8/20/2010 1:20:14 AM
8/20/2010 1:30:46 AM
I told a New Yorker that where I'm from, taking the bus is looked down upon. People see it as something that only poor people do. It's definitely like that in Charleston, a bit less in Raleigh because of the Wolfline.He was baffled by that statement and said he'd never heard of that before. Even Bloomberg takes the subway to work.
8/20/2010 7:32:06 AM
MBTA crimes risingJune 28, 2010
8/20/2010 7:35:41 AM
you
8/20/2010 8:10:40 PM
8/20/2010 8:31:41 PM
only poor ppl in Charlotte take the bus, but the lightrail is full of yuppies during the weekdays, party bros at night, and families on the weekend
8/20/2010 8:49:24 PM
True. The only problem with buses seems to be poor people. Maybe this is another reason we need to privatize the bus system. If we had special buses with Wifi and higher fares, yuppies might ride the bus and we wouldn't need to bankrupt the city building metro lines.
8/22/2010 11:54:30 AM
They're a problem to me, but you're only looking at half the equation. In all likelyhood the poor would be underserviced by public transportation if you privatized it.
8/22/2010 1:46:43 PM
Private investors don't build metro lines for the same reason the Government should stop building them: they are an inefficient form of mass transit.
8/22/2010 5:22:02 PM
Well they don't do it with buses either, so my point still stands. And there was an article in the NY times several months back applauding how effective the Charlotte metro line was, but I'm sure you disagree.
8/22/2010 6:58:56 PM
Private Transportation Riddled with Crime:http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2010/autos/1008/gallery.most_stolen_cars/index.htmlLook at all the cars being stolen!http://blog.motorists.org/traffic-tickets-are-big-business/"Not including parking tickets, we can estimate that somewhere between 25 and 50 million traffic tickets are issued each year."Criminals!And don't even get me started on the road rage incidents. When will all these private transit woes be stopped?
8/22/2010 8:55:44 PM
^^ But they do. In fact, the private market even managed to offer mass transit when doing so is illegal. Just a few weeks ago I pointed out right here on this board what was happening with illegal microbus service in New York City. Just last week we hear about the operator of a bus line in Illinois being arrested for the privilege. Here in America, the government is the only entity offering mass transit options because any attempt to compete against them is often illegal and always suppressed. If you hop a plane to Europe, however, you will find lots of private mass transit options, usually buses, but even some private passenger railroads. Go to Hong Kong and they are all private. [Edited on August 23, 2010 at 12:55 PM. Reason : .,.]
8/23/2010 12:52:17 PM
8/24/2010 12:03:40 AM
Kris, are you suggesting they don't have government in Europe? I sure didn't. At no point did I make any suggestion as to why different governments treat mass transit differently. My guess is that in Europe lower car ownership gives voters an incentive to care about the quality and efficiency of mass transit, which only private industry is capable of providing. Meanwhile, in America where only the poor ride mass transit but don't vote, mass transit is treated not as a means of transporting citizens, but as a public works project. Such begs the question of why New Yorkers, which own fewer cars than even Europeans, so poorly manage their mass transit. I suspect it may be the same reason New York so poorly manages everything. Not all forms of government are effective, particularly for a region dominated by an electorate eager to serve perverse entrenched interests (Democrats). [Edited on August 24, 2010 at 1:18 AM. Reason : .,.]
8/24/2010 1:08:57 AM
could be the other two things
8/24/2010 1:14:33 AM
I was going to say culture, but I couldn't figure out how to phrase it. Europeans just accept private ownership of things and place that Americans would never understand. Privatization of the airwaves, the post office, rivers and lakes, mass transit. Europe is just more culturally accepting of capitalism than America. I guess it is a product of their history, as public ownership has historically killed far more people in Europe than in America.
8/24/2010 1:22:54 AM
The fact that they live closer to where they work, the fact that their cities are geared towards public transportation, the fact that more live in the metro area, nothing obvious has any bearing when it comes to your supercapitalist rhetoric.If you're so sure it will be successful, why hasn't anyone started a private bus company here in charlotte? We don't have one, and you seem certain it can provide a better and cheaper service.
8/24/2010 1:30:36 AM
Hahahaha this thread is perfect Really illustrates the "thought process" of a fucking prison guard
8/24/2010 1:47:17 AM
8/24/2010 7:57:48 AM
8/24/2010 8:46:54 AM
8/24/2010 9:17:20 AM
8/24/2010 2:29:38 PM
there are laws against stopping in a bus zone. it's not exactly top enforcement priority, but legally speaking you can not even stop your car at a bus stop and let someone in or out. much less have a for profit bus service and plan on using city stops.I'm in a vanpool, operated by the same county metro authority that runs the buses. the van has the county metro symbol painted on it. Vanpool drivers are not even allowed to use the bus stops. you people in Raleigh with your little CAT bus don't think much about it, but just try driving your car in a bus lane in a dense urban setting. you will get the beat down.
8/24/2010 2:52:56 PM
^ It's a good point but it's one that had occurred to me. Public-private partnerships are worked out all the time. Use of the public stops could be coordinated between public and private entities if those entities were motivated to do so.[Edited on August 24, 2010 at 3:01 PM. Reason : See the NCLTG, which is public money that incentivizes students to attend private colleges. ]
8/24/2010 2:58:57 PM
8/24/2010 3:04:58 PM
8/24/2010 6:19:27 PM
^ Sweet Jesus. Have you ever heard of Centennial Campus at North Carolina State University? [Edited on August 24, 2010 at 6:40 PM. Reason : Hell, even hot dog vendors often operate on public property. ]
8/24/2010 6:32:04 PM
8/24/2010 6:35:00 PM
8/24/2010 7:05:46 PM
8/25/2010 1:16:45 AM
^^ So, this. . .
8/25/2010 1:31:52 AM
8/25/2010 10:05:46 AM
8/25/2010 11:56:51 AM
but again, you're not looking at the service they provide, we're back at square 1you're only looking at half the equation. In all likelyhood the poor would be underserviced by public transportation if you privatized it.also you cant assume things in europe will apply here[Edited on August 25, 2010 at 1:20 PM. Reason : ]
8/25/2010 1:20:13 PM
And you can't assume they won't work here. Also, the evidence is against you. The poor want expanded bus service. When Britain privatized its bus system, the number of routes and frequency of service increased. Can you really suggest the poor would be unhappy if bus service went more places more frequently? By my reasoning, the poor are most likely to be served in a private system, because while the poor lack political influence, and thus consideration in a public bus system, they do tend to both live in denser areas and are less likely to drive, making them far cheaper to service, causing competition between bus lines to focus in these areas.This is why we have illegal minibus service in New York. The government refuses to offer bus service to an area because it is populated by poor immigrants with insufficient political power to lobby for service. As such, even under threat of arrest, private minibus service is fulfilling the poor's need for transportation. Political allocation of service allocates service to those with political power, which the poor do not have. Do you dispute this? [Edited on August 25, 2010 at 2:50 PM. Reason : .,.]
8/25/2010 2:45:04 PM
8/25/2010 4:13:00 PM
8/25/2010 4:31:45 PM
8/25/2010 5:08:29 PM
8/25/2010 5:21:20 PM
8/25/2010 6:23:02 PM
Well I just got done listening to the podcast.He keeps asking "why don't they want to go back to the private system??"I think Munger might be being a little disingenuous on how great the private system was:[link]http://intrahttp://www.ing.puc.cl/siding/datos/public_files/profes/jcm_BCPZSCNSWHHCCXZ/Fare-Det-JEF-JCM-JTEP-REVISED-ENERO-06.pdf[/link]
8/25/2010 8:08:01 PM
yeah, I don't this.a similar thread would be something like, "Birds like shiny shit. . more at 11!"usually, I at least expect ol' hooksaw to post something at least temporally relevant or current.Not your best work, fella.
8/25/2010 10:38:56 PM