An arbitrator costs about $3000. How many people do you think want to pay $3000 to settle their $1.50/month for 6 months overbilling dispute? Also, the cost of filing an arbitration claim is $125 (with AT&T).
The opposite side of that coin is that if someone pays you (employs you) for digging that hole, that means they have to stop paying someone else instead. Consequently, a net of 0 jobs are created. Which is the point of the OP (it's a classic economics fallacy example).
An arbitrator costs about $3000. How many people do you think want to pay $3000 to settle their $1.50/month for 6 months overbilling dispute? Also, the cost of filing an arbitration claim is $125 (with AT&T).
I believe "prevent costly hospitalizations" means "prevent us from paying for costly hospitalizations."
People aren't typically convicted based solely on the admission of a single piece of polygraph evidence.
The opposite side of that coin is that if someone pays you (employs you) for digging that hole, that means they have to stop paying someone else instead. Consequently, a net of 0 jobs are created. Which is the point of the OP (it's a classic economics fallacy example).