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Comment Outsourcing (Score 3, Insightful) 598

Much more destructive than the recent outsourcing to China and India has been the much bigger outsourcing to a place called Technologyville.

Outsourcing to Technologoville has been going on for close to 300 years now and has destroyed countless jobs, not to other poor people, but to machines. Clearly, CEOs, accountants and other must see the job-destroying evilness that is technology and stop all "outsourcing" to Technologyville immediately.

Value addition, cheaper goods accessible to more people and an increase in living standards are no reasons to continue this brain dead policy.

Comment Re:Could Someone Help Me Out With This? (Score 1) 844

"So if you're trying to balance a budget"

Who is the "you" in that sentence? The system of government in most countries rewards a politician for giving free stuff and penalizes him for taking away things given to people.

So, the issue here is not basic math, but basic economics - give it a try sometimes.

Comment Re:If you "own" intellectual property (Score 2, Interesting) 214

"joe six pack wants more cheap plastic crap at walmart"

We all want cheap things (or rather, things made more affordable) - that is how wealth is created.
Insisting that all things be produced by 'ourselves' (whether as a family, city, county, state or nation) make us poorer - think of all the things you are using now and think about how hard it would be for all of it to be made by yourself. Or your family. Or with just people in your town. Or with just people in your state.

Division of labour is what creates wealth.The borders of a city or state or country do not change this fundamental fact.

Comment Re:Some businesses will buck any change... (Score 2, Insightful) 420

"What's likely to make people anxious about changes to the ADA is uncertainty over what those changes will involve."

Not to mention the possibility of large fines when my (commercial) websites aren't compliant with some obscure requirement in the new guidelines. And the cost involved in me dropping the 10 other things I'm doing to read the guidelines, check all my websites, make sure they're compliant or if they're not, spend time and money to fix them.

So, no, my anxiety is not just about "uncertainty over what those changes will involve".
(And people wonder why small businesses are not hiring!!)

Comment Re:This is America (Score 1) 2058

Randian utopia of rugged individualists who have given up on treating each other as human beings.

First of all, this was a local government agency, not a private company.
Secondly, have you seen the size of the Federal Register? To claim that this country is a "Randian utopia", when the size of government has grown so much is ridiculous.
Thirdly, are you so naive as to think that one individual can change the culture of 300 million people? In 2 years?

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 482

Seriously, why? If people want to invest in gold, they're generally going to buy it in larger lots than this.

They could. Most people would. But, the companies rolling out these ATMs are betting that *some* people will use these. They've been around for a couple of years now. And, since they're investing millions in this venture, I'm assuming they would have done some market research.
I doubt the people commentating about the wisdom of this venture on slashdot would have done any market research.

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 482

to a fear based environment.

I've been buying gold since it was at $600/ounce. You could be correct that the rise in prices is due to fear.
My theory has always been that the debt levels of nations are unsustainable and will lead to default and later, inflation. So far, I've been proved right. That does not mean I will be correct in the future.

But, the difference between people who buy gold and the people who ridicule them is that the people buying gold are putting their money where their mouth is. The people ridiculing them could do the same by shorting the gold market. The ones I've met in person seem reluctant to do this.

Comment Re:brilliant (Score 1, Insightful) 696

Uh, it was. Frightened, angry people. Were they polite about it? Yes, and good for them. But their politics is a politics of fear, whether it be fear of the Big Bad Government, fear of muslims, fear of gays, fear of latinos...

Can't you say the same thing about the left? Angry, frightened people - angry and frightened about corporations and rich people?

Whether left or right, the question is, is their anger and fear justified? I think the anger and fear that govt. has grown is correct. The anger and fear of gays and immigrants is baseless. The anger and fear that corporations will take over is silly.

Comment Re:he's not a modern day Henry Ford (Score 5, Informative) 384

Ford wanted his workers to have a living wage, to be able to afford the products they made.

From http://cafehayek.com/2010/08/fording-the-gorge-between-fiction-and-fact.html:

Ford raised workers’ wages for two reasons, neither of which had anything to do with raising consumer demand for his automobiles. The first reason was to reduce worker turnover. In 1913, the year before the $5 wage was announced in January 1914, the average Ford employee quit after less than four months on the job. A workforce so unstable and inexperienced prevented Ford’s factories from achieving peak efficiency.

Second, because the $5 wage was conditioned upon Ford’s workers learning English, as well as their steering clear of alcohol and gambling – conditions monitored by Ford executives visiting workers’ homes! – the higher wage was an incentive for workers to be more reliable and productive while on the job.

In short, Ford was something of an early supply-sider. He understood (at least in 1914) that the key to economic growth is not in giving people stronger incentives to spend but, rather, in giving people stronger incentives to produce.

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