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Encouraging news from the Seattle Boat Show
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Encouraging news from the Seattle Boat Show
On Jan 30, 3:11�am, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 20:58:04 -0800 (PST), Chuck Gould wrote: If this economic indicator is worth anything, the national news may be overstating the certainty of a recession, at least in the Pacific North Wet. I think the boats you are talking about are out of the range of your average Joe Six-Pack. Absolutely. I will do a little informal polling among some of my contacts selling aluminum fihsing boats, etc and see if the market is as strong in that sector. |
Encouraging news from the Seattle Boat Show
On Jan 30, 6:42�am, "JimH" wrote:
Gee, I wonder why ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN and CNBC are trying their hardest to make sure we dump into a recession. � Bad news outsells good news. Some might think, "They're trying to throw the election to the D's!" I disagree. They just want to create enough uncertainty in the market that more folks will tune in every day to "see how bad things are getting", thereby increasing ratings and creating some justification for raising ad rates. Also, the companies that survive economic downturn often do so by *increasing* their advertising, particularly for consumer goods. |
Encouraging news from the Seattle Boat Show
Chuck Gould wrote:
On Jan 30, 6:42�am, "JimH" wrote: Gee, I wonder why ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN and CNBC are trying their hardest to make sure we dump into a recession. � Bad news outsells good news. Some might think, "They're trying to throw the election to the D's!" I disagree. They just want to create enough uncertainty in the market that more folks will tune in every day to "see how bad things are getting", thereby increasing ratings and creating some justification for raising ad rates. Also, the companies that survive economic downturn often do so by *increasing* their advertising, particularly for consumer goods. You can't be serious. Either that, or you are totally disconnected from the harsh reality facing many millions of your fellow citizens who are jobless, homeless, losing their homes, health-insurance-less, and without much hope for the future. How are social services doing in Seattle these days? Still pretty miserable for those in need? |
Encouraging news from the Seattle Boat Show
On Wed, 30 Jan 2008 08:39:05 -0800 (PST), Chuck Gould
wrote: On Jan 30, 3:11?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 20:58:04 -0800 (PST), Chuck Gould wrote: If this economic indicator is worth anything, the national news may be overstating the certainty of a recession, at least in the Pacific North Wet. I think the boats you are talking about are out of the range of your average Joe Six-Pack. Absolutely. I will do a little informal polling among some of my contacts selling aluminum fihsing boats, etc and see if the market is as strong in that sector. I'll be interesting comparing the results from Boston and Hartford to yours. |
Encouraging news from the Seattle Boat Show
On Jan 30, 10:18*am, wrote:
On Jan 30, 10:15*am, HK wrote: wrote: On Jan 30, 9:50 am, "D-unit" cof42_AT_embarqmail.com wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in messagenews:kqm0q3564msbfq657ci5gethlbjnej3gls@4ax .com... On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 20:58:04 -0800 (PST), Chuck Gould wrote: If this economic indicator is worth anything, the national news may be overstating the certainty of a recession, at least in the Pacific North Wet. I think the boats you are talking about are out of the range of your average Joe Six-Pack. True dat but, maybe they won't have to lay off the guy/gal *building the seat cushions in the galley. *Maybe he/she can afford to buy that skiff....... since they won't be out looking for another job. Das good news indeed. db Indeed...;) And that is exactly the guy I am planning on putting back on the water, much to the shegrin of Harry and the other rich bottle boaters.;) See, now there is yet another example of your ignorance. *I* am the one here who has been railing against the "yachties," their overblown boats, their wasting of petrol, and the need for huge surtaxes on the amounts of fuel they burn.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I know... but it's still fun... *ok take your name out of the paragraph, and read it agian without the dig at you;)- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I wonder what the burn rate is for that lobster boat? Probably take a degree from Yale just to figure it out! |
Encouraging news from the Seattle Boat Show
On Jan 30, 8:51�am, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: On Wed, 30 Jan 2008 08:39:05 -0800 (PST), Chuck Gould wrote: On Jan 30, 3:11?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 20:58:04 -0800 (PST), Chuck Gould wrote: If this economic indicator is worth anything, the national news may be overstating the certainty of a recession, at least in the Pacific North Wet. I think the boats you are talking about are out of the range of your average Joe Six-Pack. Absolutely. I will do a little informal polling among some of my contacts selling aluminum fihsing boats, etc and see if the market is as strong in that sector. I'll be interesting comparing the results from Boston and Hartford to yours.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - In many ways, the Pacific North Wet is enjoying a bout of prosperity when compared to the rest of the country. Our governor just yesterday called for a $3-million apprenticeship program to train people for jobs in aircraft assembly. Boeing can't find enough qualified help, and the ripple effect from that is that wages are being driven up throughout the region. If we could turn off the national news, I think we'd probably have almost boom times in this particular region. |
Encouraging news from the Seattle Boat Show
On Jan 30, 8:47Â*am, HK wrote:
Chuck Gould wrote: On Jan 30, 6:42�am, "JimH" wrote: Gee, I wonder why ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN and CNBC are trying their hardest to make sure we dump into a recession. � Bad news outsells good news. Some might think, "They're trying to throw the election to the D's!" I disagree. They just want to create enough uncertainty in the market that more folks will tune in every day to "see how bad things are getting", thereby increasing ratings and creating some justification for raising ad rates. Also, the companies that survive economic downturn often do so by *increasing* their advertising, particularly for consumer goods. You can't be serious. Either that, or you are totally disconnected from the harsh reality facing many millions of your fellow citizens who are jobless, homeless, losing their homes, health-insurance-less, and without much hope for the future. How are social services doing in Seattle these days? Still pretty miserable for those in need?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - About 1-2% of the homes in the US are in, or at risk of, foreclosure. Yet it's headline news in every paper and the subject of "specials" on radio and TV. In some of the worst hit communities, the number is as high as 5%, meaning that 950 out of every 1000 households in those worst hit communities have no reason to fear losing their home to the bank or mortgage company. The health insurance issue has nothing to do with economic cycling. We have had a broken health services delivery model in the country for at least 30 years. We have had booms and busts along the way, despite the fact that our health insurance system is designed first to make corporations wealthy, and only then to see about making people well. I don't really *get* joblessness, except in cases where people are physically unable to work. It's absolutely true that people may not be able to get work in a field where they prefer to work or where they have developed considerable (but possibly obsolete) expertise, but there is plenty of work available in other fields. When I opted to drop out of the educational system, many people remarked "You will never amount to anything in life without a college education!" I had the pleasure of hiring a few of them over the years to work for me. :-) Point being, accepting joblessness is accepting the role of "victim of circumstance", and that's a load of equine excrement. Most of us can determine, or at least materially influence, our circumstances. Homelessness; 30 years ago most of the chronically homeless would have been cared for in an institution. It's tragic that we leave these least able, very often mentally unstable, individuals to forage through garbage cans and sleep under cardboard boxes in the rain. There is no answer to all homelessness, but treating these addicts and alcoholics somewhere along the way would be less expensive than constantly sweeping up after the human train wrecks. If I am "disconnected" from folks who are jobless, homeless, and without hope it's because of choices I made along the way. Choices that were available to everybody else, by the way. No privilege in my background, at all. My heart (and no small amount of money as well as some volunteer time) goes out to relieve what suffering I can. As tragic as the situation may be for those on the most hopeless fringes of society- their situations are not typical nor should they define who and what we are as the American people. |
Encouraging news from the Seattle Boat Show
Chuck Gould wrote:
On Jan 30, 8:47 am, HK wrote: Chuck Gould wrote: On Jan 30, 6:42�am, "JimH" wrote: Gee, I wonder why ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN and CNBC are trying their hardest to make sure we dump into a recession. � Bad news outsells good news. Some might think, "They're trying to throw the election to the D's!" I disagree. They just want to create enough uncertainty in the market that more folks will tune in every day to "see how bad things are getting", thereby increasing ratings and creating some justification for raising ad rates. Also, the companies that survive economic downturn often do so by *increasing* their advertising, particularly for consumer goods. You can't be serious. Either that, or you are totally disconnected from the harsh reality facing many millions of your fellow citizens who are jobless, homeless, losing their homes, health-insurance-less, and without much hope for the future. How are social services doing in Seattle these days? Still pretty miserable for those in need?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - About 1-2% of the homes in the US are in, or at risk of, foreclosure. Yet it's headline news in every paper and the subject of "specials" on radio and TV. In some of the worst hit communities, the number is as high as 5%, meaning that 950 out of every 1000 households in those worst hit communities have no reason to fear losing their home to the bank or mortgage company. The health insurance issue has nothing to do with economic cycling. We have had a broken health services delivery model in the country for at least 30 years. We have had booms and busts along the way, despite the fact that our health insurance system is designed first to make corporations wealthy, and only then to see about making people well. There are somewhere between 30 and 40 million Americans living in poverty. Sleep tight. |
Encouraging news from the Seattle Boat Show
On Jan 30, 1:35Â*pm, HK wrote:
Chuck Gould wrote: On Jan 30, 8:47 am, HK wrote: Chuck Gould wrote: On Jan 30, 6:42�am, "JimH" wrote: Gee, I wonder why ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN and CNBC are trying their hardest to make sure we dump into a recession. � Bad news outsells good news. Some might think, "They're trying to throw the election to the D's!" I disagree. They just want to create enough uncertainty in the market that more folks will tune in every day to "see how bad things are getting", thereby increasing ratings and creating some justification for raising ad rates. Also, the companies that survive economic downturn often do so by *increasing* their advertising, particularly for consumer goods. You can't be serious. Either that, or you are totally disconnected from the harsh reality facing many millions of your fellow citizens who are jobless, homeless, losing their homes, health-insurance-less, and without much hope for the future. How are social services doing in Seattle these days? Still pretty miserable for those in need?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - About 1-2% of the homes in the US are in, or at risk of, foreclosure. Yet it's headline news in every paper and the subject of "specials" on radio and TV. In some of the worst hit communities, the number is as high as 5%, meaning that 950 out of every 1000 households in those worst hit communities have no reason to fear losing their home to the bank or mortgage company. The health insurance issue has nothing to do with economic cycling. We have had a broken health services delivery model in the country for at least 30 years. We have had booms and busts along the way, despite the fact that our health insurance system is designed first to make corporations wealthy, and only then to see about making people well. There are somewhere between 30 and 40 million Americans living in poverty. Sleep tight.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Harry, why don't you sell your lobster boat and auction off your Yale degree to help them out? Perhaps your Dr. wife could open up a free clinic..... |
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