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The Off Topic Topic

Started by Korea, March 10, 2009, 06:24:26 AM

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Sheilbh

Let's bomb Russia!

viper37

An airplane struck a light pole landing at Newark airport.  That lightpole struck a bakery truck.

That poor driver sustained minor injuries apparently.

Newspiece

I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.

Crazy_Ivan80


crazy canuck

Orcas made swam into Deep Cove in North Vancouver, thrilling some kayakers who took the video.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DX5JZ5ghqxV/?igsh=NmF3bTVjMTNucm9t
Awarded 17 Zoupa points

In several surveys, the overwhelming first choice for what makes Canada unique is multiculturalism. This, in a world collapsing into stupid, impoverishing hatreds, is the distinctly Canadian national project.

crazy canuck

And here is the pod swimming under the Lions Gate bridge on their way to the Cove

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DX5v_qrJwi6/?igsh=M3ZiZHc4d3ZuMnli
Awarded 17 Zoupa points

In several surveys, the overwhelming first choice for what makes Canada unique is multiculturalism. This, in a world collapsing into stupid, impoverishing hatreds, is the distinctly Canadian national project.

Syt

https://www.wsj.com/opinion/free-expression/billionaires-rock-1005195e

QuoteBillionaires Rock
We ought to build statues of them, not chase them from state to state.

Before Amazon came along, ordering anything by mail ordinarily meant waiting six to eight weeks for delivery. Today, for a trivial fee, not only will Amazon bring virtually anything to you with astonishing alacrity, but the final cost of the goods is comparable to, sometimes even less than, the best price you can find at a retailer near your home. During the pandemic, when we were all afraid of crowds, it kept us all going with anything we needed. Thanks, Jeff Bezos.

Before Google, searching for something on the internet was like trying to shop in an unlit supermarket that shelved its products in random order. Thanks, Sergey Brin and Larry Page.

Before Tesla, the electric car barely existed. Thanks, Elon Musk. And thanks again for turning Twitter into a place where we can share opinions that don't conform to progressive orthodoxy, or accurate information about Hunter Biden.

Denounced, despised and disrespected, there is a class of people who keep devising new ways to make life better, yet in the Upside Down where our intelligentsia and also Elizabeth Warren live, the mobs are lighting their torches and giving their snarl muscles a workout. Our greatest billionaires ought to have statues placed in public squares. Their stories ought to be taught to children as parables of inspiration.

Billionaires rock. They're great even when you don't calculate what they contribute to the public weal, which is a lot. Add up the tax and the philanthropy, and the citizenry gets 59% of what billionaires earn, or 73% if you follow their fortunes into death. Estimates that billionaires pay lower tax rates than everyone else rest on distortions, tricks and lies. Merely living amid billionaires has pretty dazzling effects when you're in a place like New York or Los Angeles, where plutocratic munificence builds beautiful things such as museums and performing-arts centers.

It's a quirk of American political thought that we revere rich athletes and entertainers, whose talents are on very public display and can hardly be dismissed. Yet when it comes to billionaires, whose skills are often exercised in invisible ways, many of us grow beady-eyed and wary. The big difference between LeBron James and Bill Gates is apparent, though: Mr. James never did anything for you except be entertaining. Mr. Gates, whose operating system made the consumer-friendly desktop a staple of the American home and office, measurably improved your life.

From coast to coast, the most successful Americans are under attack. New York's Mayor Zohran Mamdani is crowing about an unspecified "pied-à-terre tax" targeting the folks who own high-end property here but don't even consume the normal amount of public services because they live elsewhere. California progressives are trying to push through a cash grab of 5% of billionaires' net worth.

Billionaire discourse often becomes a Trojan horse for going after much less wealthy Americans. Maine just upped its income tax from 7.15% to 9.15% for earnings above $1 million (or $1.5 million for joint filers). Massachusetts passed a 4% surtax on million-dollar earners. Washington State is now taxing incomes over $1 million at 9.9%.

In the other Washington, the minions of Sen. Warren now number around 50 lawmakers backing her chuckleheaded "ultramillionaire tax," which is a nakedly unconstitutional seizure of wealth. We're getting near the point where wealthy people are going to get chased around the country like 19th-century Mormons.

A swath of the public reacts with cross-eyed rage to billionaires' mere existence, fulminating that they cheated or that they're "hoarding" wealth. The first charge hardly ever intersects with reality and the second is preposterous fantasy.

The usually evidence-free grumbling about "cheating" is linked to both our contemporary cynical attitude that the real story must always be much more sordid than what we've been taught and the kindergarten-Marxist suspicion that if laborers sweat more than factory owners, something must be wrong if the owners are the ones getting rich. "Behind every great fortune there is a crime," a phrase attributed to Balzac but popularized by Mario Puzo (who streamlined the much wordier original remark) when he used it at the outset of his novel "The Godfather," is supposedly the savvier take. What crime underlies the success of Microsoft, or for that matter, Tesla? Obtaining federal subsidies (as Tesla did) may be distasteful rent-seeking, but every business is entitled to jawbone the government to seek advantage; blame the lawmakers who fall for the pitch.

"Hoarding," a favorite term among lefty pundits who obsess over the "share of wealth" that is "controlled" by the rich, is a conceptual error that positions lucre as a sort of Aladdin's cave to which lucky people somehow finagled access. But Mark Zuckerberg didn't find his wealth; he created it, by making a product people loved to use. In the process, he made many others wealthy—employees, investors, shareholders—and has pledged to spend 99% of his lifetime fortune on public benefits such as curing diseases.

Wealth creators such as Mr. Zuckerberg have, in effect, built rather than discovered Aladdin's cave, many times over, and allowed a lot of others to come in. Elizabeth Warren shouldn't only stop raging about him; she should volunteer to clean his sneakers and iron his hoodies.
We are born dying, but we are compelled to fancy our chances.
- hbomberguy

Proud owner of 42 Zoupa Points.

crazy canuck

Stopped reading after the first sentence. It never took 6 to 8 weeks for something to arrive before Amazon.

There was a thriving mail order business with actual competition.

These are dark days when somebody completely lie or make things up to justify monopoly.

Awarded 17 Zoupa points

In several surveys, the overwhelming first choice for what makes Canada unique is multiculturalism. This, in a world collapsing into stupid, impoverishing hatreds, is the distinctly Canadian national project.

HisMajestyBOB

Ok Ayn Rand.

Hey, let's test this theory: let's send all the billionaires to a deserted island and see if our society collapses.
Three lovely Prada points for HoI2 help

garbon

It is the WSJ, of course they will be all over rich cocks.
"I've never been quite sure what the point of a eunuch is, if truth be told. It seems to me they're only men with the useful bits cut off."
I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

Valmy

Sure way back in the order from catalog days it might take 6-8 weeks but Amazon didn't invent the internet. Dell, to just give one example, was doing build to order computers in just a few days well before Amazon showed up. Sort of like how Zuckerberg never produced a single original product or service or did anything really than just have the social media platform everybody decided to use...the only original thing he tried to do was the Metaverse which was an obviously horrible idea he blew 80 billion dollars on.

I have a hard time coming up with anything critical any of these mediocrities ever did that justifies their almost complete power in our society. And the idea they are being chased from state to state is absurd. They can live anywhere they want. It is the 90% of the country who are sinking into poverty who have the places they can live being steadily limited.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

crazy canuck

Valmy, stop repeating the lie.  Either you are too young to remember ordering from a catalog, or you're too old and your memory has faded.

It took a couple of weeks tops.  But more importantly, everybody's buying into the cultural norm of instant gratification.  Why is it a social good to be able to receive something the same day you order it?

Awarded 17 Zoupa points

In several surveys, the overwhelming first choice for what makes Canada unique is multiculturalism. This, in a world collapsing into stupid, impoverishing hatreds, is the distinctly Canadian national project.

HVC

For what its worth it remember ordering things form the canadian tire catalog when I lived out in the country and it taking more then a month to arrive. This was in the late 90s.

That's not to say amazon invented fast delivery, nor that it's model hasn't been a overall detriment.
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.

DGuller

I think it should be possible to both acknowledge that billionaires often did a lot of useful things on the way to getting their billions, and that sustainability of democracy requires keeping their power in check.  The bashing of them as a class in our political dialogue is unseemly, and sets a lot of bad precedents.

Grey Fox

Like what? Billionaires are not heroes, they exploits.
Getting ready to make IEDs against American Occupation Forces.

"But I didn't vote for him"; they cried.

Duque de Bragança

Quote from: HVC on May 05, 2026, 10:58:26 AMFor what its worth it remember ordering things form the canadian tire catalog when I lived out in the country and it taking more then a month to arrive. This was in the late 90s.

That's not to say amazon invented fast delivery, nor that it's model hasn't been a overall detriment.

Ordering by phone also existed, by the way.  :P Reasonably fast.
Trying to order a metal cd was fun sometimes. Sehnsucht ? what? How do you spell it? Or even pronounce it.  :D