http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/24/idUS264245887020111024
10/24/2011 12:20:28 PM
Fuckin Township trying to tell ME where to place my mailbox
10/24/2011 12:24:39 PM
Are you comparing a town government to a world government? How foolish could you be? ...oh.
10/24/2011 12:32:01 PM
This town IS my world
10/24/2011 12:34:46 PM
Those catholics are always so forward thinking.
10/24/2011 12:37:12 PM
I feel an OAR song in here somehow.
10/24/2011 12:39:05 PM
10/24/2011 12:48:29 PM
lettuce pray . . . . . for maximum employment and stable prices[Edited on October 24, 2011 at 12:52 PM. Reason : inB4 pedo jokes]
10/24/2011 12:51:47 PM
10/24/2011 12:56:52 PM
10/24/2011 1:00:14 PM
Ahahaha...you think our government is democratic? Are you talking about...the government of the United States? Governments might start out as democracies, but they don't stay that way for long. Eventually, conflicts of interest form, groups realize they can steal from other groups, and it all goes to shit. Pure democracy only exists for the initial "mob rule" phase.
10/24/2011 1:03:01 PM
10/24/2011 1:04:58 PM
Dan Brown's next book just wrote itself.
10/24/2011 1:06:26 PM
^^^Ok, now follow that line of thinking to it's logical conclusion, and explain why "socialism" is so bad, at least when compared to what we have now.[Edited on October 24, 2011 at 1:06 PM. Reason : :]
10/24/2011 1:06:36 PM
Oh wait, lol, you probably think welfare recipients are the ones 'stealing from other groups'ahahahahahaaaaahaha
10/24/2011 1:06:39 PM
10/24/2011 1:34:33 PM
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10/24/2011 6:39:03 PM
I for one welcome our new Overlords.
10/24/2011 7:48:46 PM
10/24/2011 8:54:03 PM
10/26/2011 9:38:03 AM
The larger firm won't necessarily fall, but it will lose customers to smaller competitors. Larger firms come with their own set of problems. They have "bloated bureaucracy" of their own, they have necessarily more rigid policies, and are less likely to be able to adapt to evolving customer needs. The best way to get a monopoly is to have the government give you one. Monopolies simply don't exist in a free market since most or all barriers to entry today are artificial.By having the state take over some function that you think needs to happen, you're essentially saying, "Fuck it. We're going to have a monopoly anyway, so we might as well give it to the guys with the biggest guns. I'm sure they'll do what's good for the people." Problem is that there's no proof monopolies are sustainable in a free market; globalization makes the forming of monopolies less likely....unless, of course, we have some sort of world government that creates a monopoly.
10/26/2011 10:06:22 AM
Large firms fall to smaller firms all the time. Better product, leaner business model, cheaper product, etc. Look how poorly GM has done over the last 30 years compared to upstarts like Toyota, Honda, Nissan, etc. Due partly to the excellence of the products, partly to the piss poor quality of GM by comparison, partly to bad business management by GM, etc.Target is another example. Started off as a small Minnesota store and is now one of the largest retailers on the planet mostly because of a strong brand identity and well defined corporate vision.Ben and Jerry's, an example of a niche product that developed through branding, quality of product, and innovation.There are lots of examples, it doesn't take much time to start ticking off examples when you think about it.If you want an example of a large firm adapting when it looked like it was going to become irrelevant and then prospering take a look at GE's history. For an example of the opposite look at say...US Steel.
10/26/2011 11:35:33 AM
10/26/2011 11:49:06 AM
I'm sorry, I should have specified cars. Yes, they've been making motors and motorcycles for forever, but their rise in the auto industry, especially the US, was pretty meteoric and sort of out of nowhere. GM was the world's largest auto producer for 77 years, now they aren't. Primarily because they've been outcompeted despite numerous attempts to tariff competition out of the market.What Honda, Toyota, etc. did from approx. 1980 on would be like if Harley Davidson suddenly went from a negligible % of US auto sales to 50% of the market.For a more impressive example, look at kia which went from not making a car to having 9% US market share. Yes, they're an established company, but they developed a completely new segment and now are a major player.[Edited on October 26, 2011 at 12:10 PM. Reason : afsdfsd]
10/26/2011 12:06:47 PM
10/26/2011 12:23:00 PM
Yeah. Considering the fact that they had virtually zero presence in the US auto market or the global auto market until the 70s. The success of the Japanese auto manufacturers was more predicated on the failures of the US auto industry to recognize changing trends and unwillingness or inability to adapt to change. Japanese firms identified the oil crisis as a game changer and started making small, fuel efficient vehicles. This gave them a foothold in the US market which they then grew. Look at Honda pre-1980 and tell me that they should have grown into the powerhouse they are now... it's pretty improbable. It's a company that didn't exist until 1947... jump forward 60 years and look where it's at. It's not like they started out as a huge multinational. They started making motorcycles in post WWII Japan, opened a single storefront in Los Angeles in 1959, and now are huge in several areas. How did this growth occur?Again, Kia is probably an even better example since they made bicycles, didn't even have a US dealership until the 1990s, and now have a 9% market share.
10/27/2011 12:38:05 AM
Would this mean that the chapters I'm covering right now on foreign currency derivatives, and hedging are no longer needed? I might be for that part of the proposal!
10/27/2011 12:54:52 AM
Wow it's almost as though large firms can instantly jump on any market they see an opportunity in! And they can take advantage of the global labor pool, global resources pool, and global consumer pool! It's okay though, eventually they will make a bad decision of some kind and then an upstart will take over!
10/27/2011 12:39:54 PM
Yes, because it's not like history is full of examples of companies going broke because they ventured into an unfamiliar business and lost their shirts.Again, we're not talking about massive companies here (compared to their competition) when the Japanese auto manufacturers broke into the US market. They were pretty small players on the international stage and not considered a threat to the US big 3. It was only when the big 3 failed to react to the oil crisis that they started bleeding market share.And while I know you'd prefer to think that under capitalism the little guy never wins because it's an inherently unfair system, but that's simply not the case. The biggest barriers to entry and competition almost always come from the government, frequently pushed for by the largest players in a given industry, but ultimately from the government. Things like tariffs, import taxes, and hugely expensive licensing and testing fees are what make competition so difficult. Is there any reason that florists should be licensed? Fuck no! And yet in some states they are and there are limits on the number of florists licenses that can be granted. Look at the absurdly expensive testing that was designed by Mattel and Hasbro to prevent competition from foreign toymakers following the lead paint scare a few years back.
10/27/2011 3:41:53 PM
10/27/2011 4:22:51 PM
Really. You think government is a bigger barrier to entry than "My competition is a global corporation with a factory in China, where steel is cheaper and labor costs pennies." or "My competition has the capital such that they can buy materials, energy, distribution, and labor in bulk and I have to sell at a loss just to meet their prices." Maybe, maybe 40 years ago you could make this case, when regulations were tighter, tax code more progressive, and commerce less global. Today, or any time in the past 30 years, it's just a fucking joke. Globalization in particular has solidified, without any help necessary from government, the dominance of already-large firms that can take advantage of the global labor and materials pools.And still, your only explanation for a larger firm being taken by a smaller firm is that there is a *chance* that they will fuck up at some point. Such as a bad investment decision or a poorly executed transition. Not that smaller firms have any inherent benefits, just that "everybody fucks up sooner or later, right?" and sooner or later a big firm will fuck up. Nevermind that in the time it takes for a large firm to actually make a critical error, 1,000 smaller firms will fuck up in relatively minor ways and go completely bankrupt.I mean, missing something so obvious and just firing off the standard libertarian mythology of "there was no monopolies until gubmint made them..." just indicates to me that you aren't thinking critically about this, instead just parroting what you've heard elsewhere.Also lol at "the lead paint scare" being in quotes, as though it's at all contestable that kids chewing on lead-coated toys is extremely fucking dangerous.[Edited on October 28, 2011 at 10:19 AM. Reason : .]
10/28/2011 10:07:25 AM
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10/31/2011 12:32:59 PM
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