Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
A Usenet persona calling itself Michael Daly wrote:
On 12-Feb-2005, Scott Weiser wrote: If you twits would quit letting terrorists in, we might not have to. None of the Sept 11 terrorists came from Canada. The claim that Canada lets in terrorists is absurd. Hardly. It's one of our major concerns. Your lefty-liberal "open border" and "political refugee" policies are very scary, and it's been proven several times that terrorists and other criminals have entered North America via Canada. The 9-11 terrorists are hardly the only concerns here. We may not have utterly unguarded borders with Canada or Mexico, but not only CAN you travel freely from state to state in the US, you have an absolute constitutional right to do so, regardless of what any particular state may say. You don't seem to know the difference between countries and states. Bizarre. Well, let's see...the "countries" in the EU are now pretty much "states" like those in the US, aren't they? You do know that an alternative term for an independent nation is "state," don't you? Where do you think the EU got the idea? From us. Which is fine, except that socialized medicine has been proven to be a death sentence for the seriously ill because underpaid, overworked doctors have no reason to extend themselves and because health care is free, people with minor complaints feel free to clog the system with petty complaints. Total bull****, seen from my position as a person living in a country with government provided health care. Uh huh. Do you have heart disease? Diabetes? Cancer? fund public transit. So do we. What Americans call public transit is a joke in the rest of the world. It's a big country, and we like cars. Big deal. When you give subsidies to companies to help them succeed, excel and become larger, the immediate return is more jobs that the poor can take, thus becoming productive and self-sufficient members of society rather than leeches. But the inevitable outcome is actually a transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich. True. So what? If the poor want to buy consumer products, why shouldn't the producer of those products make a profit? That's why he produces the products. Corporate subsidies prop up ineffective and obsolete companies. Sometimes. It's true that the programs have to be carefully assessed and monitored, but the occasional abuse of the programs doesn't impeach the overall benefits. US steel companies are a perfect example. They saw the competition as the offshore companies and got government support. Steel is a strategic resource. It's what caused Japan to go to war with us. Instead of modernizing and competing, the share holders got rich from the subsidies and the companies wallowed in inefficiency. Yup, many old-school steel mills did just that, then went out of business. Some steel producers, however, adopted the efficiencies of automated steel-making and excelled, becoming great companies. Now it turns out that those American steel companies that were not subsidized are the real threat to the subsidized ones. Indeed. Capitalistic innovation triumphs. BUt the old companies still can't compete because they are more obsolete than ever. Full analysis in The Economist (www.economist.com) 'coupla years ago. Very true. And many of the old-line steel companies no longer exist because the subsidies were not enough to compensate for the technical innovation of companies like Nucor. Still, the fact that subsidies could not overcome the burden of inefficient technology (and bad management-- read "Good to Great by Jim Collins" for a discussion of the steel mill issue.) does not mean that protectionist subsidies are not necessary or useful. Fortunately, Nucor decided that by adopting Japanese steel-mill technology, and then improving it (they pioneered continuous thin slab casting) they could undercut imports because of the costs of transportation. What government should be doing is paying subsidies to US steel companies for the purposes of upgrading their technology to the current Nucor model. Once accomplished, the companies would be extremely competitive and the subsidies could be eliminated, while building a necessary strategic resource capacity. -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Crimes Against Nature-- RFK, Jr. Interview | General |