There comes a time when after youve done the school and the books, you need the cliff-notes, the reference data, the meat-and-potatoes, on a particular subject at a particular time. Computers help get you that one fact, so that you can get to the next thing. You could even give up books entirely if you have a career, because, meh, you'll read an interesting few later. Git er done, because your body is on its way to degrading permanently or youre gonna be kilt tomorrow. Do as thou will.
Nobody will tell anybody to shove-it. Who asks for clear Pepsi? No one, sir. People call it the "market," CEOs say they're "giving" people what they want, but that isn't so. They only say that they're "giving" people what they want, as if to sound charitable and wholesome, but it's after-the-fact it has been bought and now becomes a stably-selling product. Popularity has nothing to do with the product's... say... goodness, or healthiness, or efficiency -- overall, a prodcut's goodness is based on it's success... Let us face it, there are 261,354,653+ people in America who are going to buy that one thing once, maybe twice, maybe more... and that's real money.
People buy what they're selling. People don't ask to be made new and interesting things to consume. People are consumers, and petro-dollars, and telephone-answerers.
For example: Every electronics firm -- in the forthcoming context -- does this: Manufactures, say, a high-end home-audio receiver... then strips quality from various classes of its functionality to make FIVE cheaper models.
I like small, medium and large. Even more, I like small and large... if we got rid of medium, didn't stock medium anymore, didn't let medium ship, didn't sell medium, didn't package and label and administer the many mediums, didn't manufacture medium, and didn't bother researching the possible good-many-pronged happiness that medium would bring to our lives... small would go up a little in price, and large would come down... and in the end, it would all balance-out anyways -- both in the amount you've spent doing the business of consumption the previous way and in the new way.
For everyone: the less stuff, the less bullshit. You get what you pay for, so save-up for it.
http://wariscrime.com/new/the-moon-is-a-spacecraft/
Moonsanto
http://humansarefree.com/2015/03/is-moon-artificial-alien-base.html
There comes a time when after youve done the school and the books, you need the cliff-notes, the reference data, the meat-and-potatoes, on a particular subject at a particular time. Computers help get you that one fact, so that you can get to the next thing. You could even give up books entirely if you have a career, because, meh, you'll read an interesting few later. Git er done, because your body is on its way to degrading permanently or youre gonna be kilt tomorrow. Do as thou will.
It can be ingested regularly, and in about a year, total male sterility.
Its the same spermicidal lubricant used on condoms.
Nobody will tell anybody to shove-it. Who asks for clear Pepsi? No one, sir. People call it the "market," CEOs say they're "giving" people what they want, but that isn't so. They only say that they're "giving" people what they want, as if to sound charitable and wholesome, but it's after-the-fact it has been bought and now becomes a stably-selling product. Popularity has nothing to do with the product's... say... goodness, or healthiness, or efficiency -- overall, a prodcut's goodness is based on it's success... Let us face it, there are 261,354,653+ people in America who are going to buy that one thing once, maybe twice, maybe more... and that's real money.
People buy what they're selling. People don't ask to be made new and interesting things to consume. People are consumers, and petro-dollars, and telephone-answerers.
For example: Every electronics firm -- in the forthcoming context -- does this: Manufactures, say, a high-end home-audio receiver... then strips quality from various classes of its functionality to make FIVE cheaper models.
I like small, medium and large. Even more, I like small and large... if we got rid of medium, didn't stock medium anymore, didn't let medium ship, didn't sell medium, didn't package and label and administer the many mediums, didn't manufacture medium, and didn't bother researching the possible good-many-pronged happiness that medium would bring to our lives... small would go up a little in price, and large would come down... and in the end, it would all balance-out anyways -- both in the amount you've spent doing the business of consumption the previous way and in the new way.
For everyone: the less stuff, the less bullshit. You get what you pay for, so save-up for it.