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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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On May 14, 6:55*am, "F.O.A.D." wrote:
On 5/14/13 7:46 AM, Tim wrote: On May 14, 6:43 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 7:19 AM, Eisboch wrote: "F.O.A.D." *wrote in message news:lfKdnX7RluMNiw_MnZ2dnUVZ_rGdnZ2d@earthlink .com... On 5/14/13 5:32 AM, Wayne B wrote: On Mon, 13 May 2013 19:51:26 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: You can depend upon a bankster not giving a **** about the greed that cost more than 1000 lives. No one said the factory shouldn't make a profit, by the way. === It's good to see you once again searching for the moral high ground. Hopefully you'll find it some day but I'm not holding my breath. Just as an FYI, I'd argue that incompetence was probably a bigger culprit than greed in the case of the building collapse. *When things are designed and built correctly, they don't fall down. What a wonderfully self-delusional way to look at corporate excess. The guy who expanded the building illegally in Bangladesh was simply incompetent and didn't know what he was doing would lead to disaster. The companies who contract for the lowest price manufacturing facility didn't know the companies they retained had their workers laboring for **** wages in such a facility. It's never greed, because the free market system, why, it demands that structures and systems are designed, built, and operated correctly. Yup, so anything horrific that happens, why it is never the fault of cost-cutting or greed. --------------------------------------- Wow. *Harry, you really have become cynical to an excess over the years. *Starting to think GOM syndrome is setting in. http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2013/02/28/1226587/474989-statle... Greed is the driving force in the economy. It's the driving force of any economy. * ie to gain more So, you are an acolyte of Gordon Gekko, and believe that unrestrained greed is good? Mighty shaky ground for a devout and believing Christian, eh? * ![]() No Harry, you are. I was agreeing with your statement. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On 5/14/13 8:28 AM, Tim wrote:
On May 14, 6:55 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 7:46 AM, Tim wrote: On May 14, 6:43 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 7:19 AM, Eisboch wrote: "F.O.A.D." wrote in message m... On 5/14/13 5:32 AM, Wayne B wrote: On Mon, 13 May 2013 19:51:26 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: You can depend upon a bankster not giving a **** about the greed that cost more than 1000 lives. No one said the factory shouldn't make a profit, by the way. === It's good to see you once again searching for the moral high ground. Hopefully you'll find it some day but I'm not holding my breath. Just as an FYI, I'd argue that incompetence was probably a bigger culprit than greed in the case of the building collapse. When things are designed and built correctly, they don't fall down. What a wonderfully self-delusional way to look at corporate excess. The guy who expanded the building illegally in Bangladesh was simply incompetent and didn't know what he was doing would lead to disaster. The companies who contract for the lowest price manufacturing facility didn't know the companies they retained had their workers laboring for **** wages in such a facility. It's never greed, because the free market system, why, it demands that structures and systems are designed, built, and operated correctly. Yup, so anything horrific that happens, why it is never the fault of cost-cutting or greed. --------------------------------------- Wow. Harry, you really have become cynical to an excess over the years. Starting to think GOM syndrome is setting in. http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2013/02/28/1226587/474989-statle... Greed is the driving force in the economy. It's the driving force of any economy. ie to gain more So, you are an acolyte of Gordon Gekko, and believe that unrestrained greed is good? Mighty shaky ground for a devout and believing Christian, eh? ![]() No Harry, you are. I was agreeing with your statement. There's a difference between making a profit, which a business has to do to survive and grow, and greed. Profit and greed are not synonyms. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On May 14, 7:29*am, "F.O.A.D." wrote:
On 5/14/13 8:28 AM, Tim wrote: On May 14, 6:55 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 7:46 AM, Tim wrote: On May 14, 6:43 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 7:19 AM, Eisboch wrote: "F.O.A.D." *wrote in message news:lfKdnX7RluMNiw_MnZ2dnUVZ_rGdnZ2d@earthli nk.com... On 5/14/13 5:32 AM, Wayne B wrote: On Mon, 13 May 2013 19:51:26 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: You can depend upon a bankster not giving a **** about the greed that cost more than 1000 lives. No one said the factory shouldn't make a profit, by the way. === It's good to see you once again searching for the moral high ground. Hopefully you'll find it some day but I'm not holding my breath. Just as an FYI, I'd argue that incompetence was probably a bigger culprit than greed in the case of the building collapse. *When things are designed and built correctly, they don't fall down. What a wonderfully self-delusional way to look at corporate excess. The guy who expanded the building illegally in Bangladesh was simply incompetent and didn't know what he was doing would lead to disaster. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On 5/14/13 8:34 AM, Tim wrote:
On May 14, 7:29 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 8:28 AM, Tim wrote: On May 14, 6:55 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 7:46 AM, Tim wrote: On May 14, 6:43 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 7:19 AM, Eisboch wrote: "F.O.A.D." wrote in message m... On 5/14/13 5:32 AM, Wayne B wrote: On Mon, 13 May 2013 19:51:26 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: You can depend upon a bankster not giving a **** about the greed that cost more than 1000 lives. No one said the factory shouldn't make a profit, by the way. === It's good to see you once again searching for the moral high ground. Hopefully you'll find it some day but I'm not holding my breath. Just as an FYI, I'd argue that incompetence was probably a bigger culprit than greed in the case of the building collapse. When things are designed and built correctly, they don't fall down. What a wonderfully self-delusional way to look at corporate excess. The guy who expanded the building illegally in Bangladesh was simply incompetent and didn't know what he was doing would lead to disaster. The companies who contract for the lowest price manufacturing facility didn't know the companies they retained had their workers laboring for **** wages in such a facility. It's never greed, because the free market system, why, it demands that structures and systems are designed, built, and operated correctly. Yup, so anything horrific that happens, why it is never the fault of cost-cutting or greed. --------------------------------------- Wow. Harry, you really have become cynical to an excess over the years. Starting to think GOM syndrome is setting in. http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2013/02/28/1226587/474989-statle... Greed is the driving force in the economy. It's the driving force of any economy. ie to gain more So, you are an acolyte of Gordon Gekko, and believe that unrestrained greed is good? Mighty shaky ground for a devout and believing Christian, eh? ![]() No Harry, you are. I was agreeing with your statement. There's a difference between making a profit, which a business has to do to survive and grow, and greed. Profit and greed are not synonyms. You said: "Greed is the driving force in the economy." I said: "It's the driving force of any economy. ie to gain more" I was agreeing with your statement, saying nothing of my approval. Don't know where you got that. And questioning my faith because I agreed with your line? Nice spin. I'm finding more and more that there are those who will grab for any straw when they find they have no foundation to stand on. So, you've figured out the underpinnings of the GOP, eh? ![]() I don't equate a business making a reasonable profit with "greed." Apparently you do. Greed incorporates either the pursuit of or the making of an unreasonable profit. What's an unreasonable profit? Depends. Banks are paying about 2% on savings these days, and, assuming your deposits are under the FDIC insurance limites, those deposits are pretty much risk free. So, what is a reasonable profit if you are putting your money at risk? Five times the insured savings rate? Ten times? Fifty times? |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On 5/14/2013 8:40 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 5/14/13 8:34 AM, Tim wrote: On May 14, 7:29 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 8:28 AM, Tim wrote: On May 14, 6:55 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 7:46 AM, Tim wrote: On May 14, 6:43 am, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 5/14/13 7:19 AM, Eisboch wrote: "F.O.A.D." wrote in message m... On 5/14/13 5:32 AM, Wayne B wrote: On Mon, 13 May 2013 19:51:26 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: You can depend upon a bankster not giving a **** about the greed that cost more than 1000 lives. No one said the factory shouldn't make a profit, by the way. === It's good to see you once again searching for the moral high ground. Hopefully you'll find it some day but I'm not holding my breath. Just as an FYI, I'd argue that incompetence was probably a bigger culprit than greed in the case of the building collapse. When things are designed and built correctly, they don't fall down. What a wonderfully self-delusional way to look at corporate excess. The guy who expanded the building illegally in Bangladesh was simply incompetent and didn't know what he was doing would lead to disaster. The companies who contract for the lowest price manufacturing facility didn't know the companies they retained had their workers laboring for **** wages in such a facility. It's never greed, because the free market system, why, it demands that structures and systems are designed, built, and operated correctly. Yup, so anything horrific that happens, why it is never the fault of cost-cutting or greed. --------------------------------------- Wow. Harry, you really have become cynical to an excess over the years. Starting to think GOM syndrome is setting in. http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2013/02/28/1226587/474989-statle... Greed is the driving force in the economy. It's the driving force of any economy. ie to gain more So, you are an acolyte of Gordon Gekko, and believe that unrestrained greed is good? Mighty shaky ground for a devout and believing Christian, eh? ![]() No Harry, you are. I was agreeing with your statement. There's a difference between making a profit, which a business has to do to survive and grow, and greed. Profit and greed are not synonyms. You said: "Greed is the driving force in the economy." I said: "It's the driving force of any economy. ie to gain more" I was agreeing with your statement, saying nothing of my approval. Don't know where you got that. And questioning my faith because I agreed with your line? Nice spin. I'm finding more and more that there are those who will grab for any straw when they find they have no foundation to stand on. So, you've figured out the underpinnings of the GOP, eh? ![]() I don't equate a business making a reasonable profit with "greed." Apparently you do. Greed incorporates either the pursuit of or the making of an unreasonable profit. What's an unreasonable profit? Depends. Banks are paying about 2% on savings these days, and, assuming your deposits are under the FDIC insurance limites, those deposits are pretty much risk free. So, what is a reasonable profit if you are putting your money at risk? Five times the insured savings rate? Ten times? Fifty times? If you made an arms length loan, what would be your expected rate of return? You can answer your own question. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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#7
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posted to rec.boats
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F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 5/14/13 9:59 AM, wrote: On Tue, 14 May 2013 08:40:46 -0400, "F.O.A.D." wrote: I don't equate a business making a reasonable profit with "greed." Apparently you do. Greed incorporates either the pursuit of or the making of an unreasonable profit. What's an unreasonable profit? Depends. Banks are paying about 2% on savings these days, and, assuming your deposits are under the FDIC insurance limites, those deposits are pretty much risk free. So, what is a reasonable profit if you are putting your money at risk? Five times the insured savings rate? Ten times? Fifty times? Do you think you could live on 2% of your savings? (pension plan or whatever) "Profit" is also return on investment. That is where your pension comes from. Do you want to take a pay cut on that generous union pension? I bet not, so you WANT a greedy corporate leader who is generating big dividends to fund your lifestyle. They not only need that money to send to you, they also have to pay the fund manager and the union leaders who make plenty of money, just to administer your account and recruit more union members (bribe government officials etc). Your pension was funded, based on a 10% return PLUS administration and other fees. The only place you can get that kind of money is by investing in the most greedy corporations. 1. Could I live on 2% of my savings? No. But that wasn't the question. The question was, what multiple of the current savings interest rate, which is paid on money not really at risk, is reasonable as a rate of profit. The answer is the best they can do in a competitive marketplace. Percentages mean very little. The size of the business and the industry they are in are significant. 2. Two of the many funds my pension fund invests in average between 8 and 10% a year return to their investors, after expenses, and did so during the recent recession. These are not huge funds, and they run their ships pretty tight. I follow both of these funds for reasons other than my pension. I don't pay attention to my pension fund's other investments. Which funds? Sounds like bull**** to me. Go Google some up - it will take you a while. You are an imbecile if you truly ignore the other investments. 3. I don't personally know any international union leaders who "make plenty of money." I do know some whose salaries are in the $150,000 to $300,000 range, and a couple of retired international union presidents who did a little better. Again, these are people who I know personally. I don't consider salaries in that range for highly responsible jobs as paying "plenty." You do, or don't, personally know them? Which is it (I already know the answer)? More BS. 4. If a corporation based in the United States and employing mostly U.S. workers is earning a 10 to 12% profit, and isn't exploiting its workforce, then that seems reasonable to me. I would, of course, exclude the monopolistic companies from that, and the book-cooking companies, too. A company can make a net 1% profit while it's management makes millions in salary. That's not cooking the books, either, it's an expense resulting in a lower bottom line. |
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