![]() |
Not Bob pushes that rock up the hill, part 327.
Quote:
There was and will always be a need to run to the court to redress gross improprieties like child labor. But when the pendulum shifts to the point that we have people suing over predatory lending on the theory a person intelligent enough to attend a closing is too stupid to understand what he's signing, we've certainly come too far in the other direction. We're at an extreme pendulum shift where the notion of utilizing the govt - by both business and those who'd seek to have it give thm others' wealth - is overtaking the notion of finding away to do it yourself. Hyper-regulation is part of that universe. Think of it like a basketball game with hair trigger refs. It's shitty, right? Everybody's always at the line. That's what people are like these days. Suing, or running to get a rule somewhere to shove in someone's face, or calling a lobbyist to get some law passed for you, is too much an accepted instrument. That shit should be safe, legal and rare. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
eta: Here's one view:
Ron Rosenbaum |
Quote:
That thing has given me an indication of how Simon Cowell must feel early in the AI process. Is that person Coherence Challenged or was that a joke gone terribly sideways? The Nabokov quote was priceless, or is "precious" a better description? Both seem to work. I truly hope that man's cat is ok, but I'd probably feel a lot less upset than I should if the author were poisoned with something precluding him from fingering a keyboard. I'm sure the heartless immorality on the part of pet food executives was strictly due to greed, and in no part contributed to by cost increases occasioned by the unionized labor that are no doubt involved in some part of the process of getting the product from rendering plant to store shelf. Greed belongs exclsuively to the golfing, polo and child eating set. |
Quote:
And the problem is that unregulated Chinese companies dump melamine (as in furniture) as a filler in pet food to make it appear to have more protein. They then sell it here. Because these business activities are essentially unregulated, there or here, there is melamine-laced pet food killing pets all over the country. Doubtless you'll try again to blame this on unions, instead of the predictable combination of greed and the lack of appropriate regulation. |
It's a dog-eat-dog world, and I'm wearing Milkbone underwear.
Quote:
Sebby, I think that you can blame cost overruns on the Big Dig and the pension surcharge for American cars on the unions, but poisoned pet food from China? Dude. *or whoever |
More on poisoned pet food, except that I don't see the part about how the unions are to blame. I also don't see the part about how the FDA is over-regulating this market, but maybe Sebby can explain that.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Oh, and Teddy Roosevelt was not busting trusts in the 19th Century. :D Not Bob has my proxy on that stuff. *sorry to be vague - if Hank finds out I used to be a janitor in the Western District of Arkansas my cover will be well and truly blown. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Lawyers, Wonderful, Blessed Lawyers
Er, I meant, judges...
http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/Story?id=3119381&page=1 This story quotes Philip Howard, the lawyer who wrote "The Death of Common Sense," possibly the greatest anti-abusurd-regulation book in history. You can call me a crank all you like, but please read this man's book. It is simply fucking amazing, and very evenhanded. |
Quote:
Have you any experience with firing a federal empoloyee? You can sooner cleave barnacles from a hull with a plastic picnic knife. Or are you suggesting we just pay everyone in the govt a whole lot more. That would surely make it more efficient, wouldn't it? I'm obtuse? You're absurd. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Re Teddy, ha. Nice catch. I was off by a few years. |
| All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:41 PM. |
Powered by: vBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.
Hosted By: URLJet.com