Most of the people who shop at Whole Foods, for example, are middle to upper-middle class working professionals with healthy salaries. These are not stupid people. Even well educated people can and oftentimes do fall for the naturalist fallacy.
As a developer, it's always fun when I have to submit a ticket to get a simple Visual Studio plugin installed, wait a month, get signoffs from my manager, IT, the desktop testing lab, and finally get it installed by someone in India that doesn't know how to install it. He then proceeds to close the ticket even though it's not configured right and I can't configure it without admin rights.
We need a better system.
And they paid the price when they failed. That's the free market at work. Company takes a big risk and loses? It goes out of business.
The problem we have in the US is that the government then bailed out the banks with our tax money. There's nothing free market about that.
Ah, no. As a lot of Libertarians have pointed out, there are piss poor countries that are rich in resources and wealthy nations with no natural resources.
It boils down to economic freedom.
HOAs are voluntary. They're nutty, but people voluntary enter into those agreements. This has nothing to do with Libertarianism except in that it's free people acting freely with one another. No one's forcing you to buy a home that's part of one. I wouldn't.
Someone's been reading Atlas Shrugged.
Using government to tie up your competitors with burdensome rules to protect established interests even pre-dates Rand.
simplify the process so you don't have all these special conditions and it isn't that hard to provide service.
Good luck with that. If your business allows for it then great. Too many people get hung on process for process sake. However, those processes might not allow for change. Ever deal with government regulations? You can't just say "well, we'll streamline our processes to simplify IT upgrades by ignoring all those pesky government regulations. HIPAA? More like NoThankYa!"
Sorry to hear that. At my undergrad CS program, it was actually the other way around. It was VERY HEAVY on the CS, and we were expected to learn the software engineering and programming as a matter of course on the side.
That's not always the case. Look at workplaces that fall under HIPAA regulations. That last thing IT wants is for developers to start up their own app projects in the cloud, whereby their apps start accessing PHI/PII. The moment that PHI goes from the local intranet and those bits go onto a 3rd party cloud service, the company will shit a brick because the developer's just violated regulations. There's a reason IT and security requires oversite of app development.
A lot of health insurance companies will reimburse you for your gym membership. Look into what your health plan covers. With cheaper gyms it can be a wash, so you get a gym membership for free.
Even the teenagers at my local range can outshoot any local cop by leaps and bounds. Factor in the usual self defense scenario, and the local guys have more and better training shooting under duress than most cops.
I would strongly encourage you to talk to your local police about the effectiveness of pepper spray. It's not something you bet your life on, and doesn't work on some people. It's a good tool in the toolkit, but you need a backup plan if that doesn't stop them. Or just look at the armed defense literature or take a local defense class. Pepper spray is great and has it's use, but not as your only armed option.
Yeah, I bolt it all down. Amazes me to see small safes in peoples' homes that aren't bolted. A burglar doesn't need to break the safe, just take it away to break later. Someone this is over peoples' heads. haha
People miss under the stress of a life or death situation. The LAPD fired 120 rounds into that truck recently and missed all of them. Remember the Empire State building? They fired plenty of rounds and all they hit were bystanders. Same goes for most police shootings. People miss when shooting under stress. Why would you bet your life on not making a common mistake? It's negligent.
Low resolution is what makes so many cheap security systems worthless. The much pricier commercial systems are very high res, and have the accompanying hardware to process and store it. Those $300 systems at Costco aren't worth it for a burglary. If you just want to prove that the neighbor's kid keeps swimming in your pool while you're at work, then it'll suffice.
I have renter's insurance and for $200/year you get practically nothing. None of your high value items will be covered, you'll have little overall coverage, and your liability protection will be low. If you're 20 in an apartment with nothing of value beyond a laptop, it's ok. But if you have a few nice things like jewelry, watches, AV equipment, computers, etc. then you'll be paying closer to $500/year and above.
Because in countries where they enacted a gun registery, it lead to confiscation. First the government asked for an accounting of who had what. Then they knew who to target and what remove. Easy as pie.
And when you're on a corporate machine or server where you can't use Dropbox? Keepass is not LastPass. They both have their strengths.
Isn't Dr. Phil more of a counselor? That seems ok. Dr. Oz is the one peddling anti-vaccine thinking and homeopathy. That's a whole 'nother mess.
Most of the people who shop at Whole Foods, for example, are middle to upper-middle class working professionals with healthy salaries. These are not stupid people. Even well educated people can and oftentimes do fall for the naturalist fallacy.
As a developer, it's always fun when I have to submit a ticket to get a simple Visual Studio plugin installed, wait a month, get signoffs from my manager, IT, the desktop testing lab, and finally get it installed by someone in India that doesn't know how to install it. He then proceeds to close the ticket even though it's not configured right and I can't configure it without admin rights. We need a better system.
And they paid the price when they failed. That's the free market at work. Company takes a big risk and loses? It goes out of business. The problem we have in the US is that the government then bailed out the banks with our tax money. There's nothing free market about that.
unexploited resources
Ah, no. As a lot of Libertarians have pointed out, there are piss poor countries that are rich in resources and wealthy nations with no natural resources. It boils down to economic freedom.
HOAs are voluntary. They're nutty, but people voluntary enter into those agreements. This has nothing to do with Libertarianism except in that it's free people acting freely with one another. No one's forcing you to buy a home that's part of one. I wouldn't.
Sssshhh! You're going against the "I've never run a business, but know that corporates are evil, maaaaaan." mantra
Someone's been reading Atlas Shrugged. Using government to tie up your competitors with burdensome rules to protect established interests even pre-dates Rand.
simplify the process so you don't have all these special conditions and it isn't that hard to provide service.
Good luck with that. If your business allows for it then great. Too many people get hung on process for process sake. However, those processes might not allow for change. Ever deal with government regulations? You can't just say "well, we'll streamline our processes to simplify IT upgrades by ignoring all those pesky government regulations. HIPAA? More like NoThankYa!"
Sorry to hear that. At my undergrad CS program, it was actually the other way around. It was VERY HEAVY on the CS, and we were expected to learn the software engineering and programming as a matter of course on the side.
That's not always the case. Look at workplaces that fall under HIPAA regulations. That last thing IT wants is for developers to start up their own app projects in the cloud, whereby their apps start accessing PHI/PII. The moment that PHI goes from the local intranet and those bits go onto a 3rd party cloud service, the company will shit a brick because the developer's just violated regulations. There's a reason IT and security requires oversite of app development.
I agree. It's about increasing the layers of abstraction.
You must be fun at parties...
A lot of health insurance companies will reimburse you for your gym membership. Look into what your health plan covers. With cheaper gyms it can be a wash, so you get a gym membership for free.
Even the teenagers at my local range can outshoot any local cop by leaps and bounds. Factor in the usual self defense scenario, and the local guys have more and better training shooting under duress than most cops.
I would strongly encourage you to talk to your local police about the effectiveness of pepper spray. It's not something you bet your life on, and doesn't work on some people. It's a good tool in the toolkit, but you need a backup plan if that doesn't stop them. Or just look at the armed defense literature or take a local defense class. Pepper spray is great and has it's use, but not as your only armed option. Yeah, I bolt it all down. Amazes me to see small safes in peoples' homes that aren't bolted. A burglar doesn't need to break the safe, just take it away to break later. Someone this is over peoples' heads. haha
Points to you, good sir!
You said guns are a prime target of thieves. That's true. It's why us gun owners keep them in big heavy safes. The one's that don't are negligent.
Pepper spray as your home defense option? *eye roll*
Tell that to this mother: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1-Kz3vU5DY
People miss under the stress of a life or death situation. The LAPD fired 120 rounds into that truck recently and missed all of them. Remember the Empire State building? They fired plenty of rounds and all they hit were bystanders. Same goes for most police shootings. People miss when shooting under stress. Why would you bet your life on not making a common mistake? It's negligent.
And training. Why oh why do so many people forget that part?
Low resolution is what makes so many cheap security systems worthless. The much pricier commercial systems are very high res, and have the accompanying hardware to process and store it. Those $300 systems at Costco aren't worth it for a burglary. If you just want to prove that the neighbor's kid keeps swimming in your pool while you're at work, then it'll suffice.
I have renter's insurance and for $200/year you get practically nothing. None of your high value items will be covered, you'll have little overall coverage, and your liability protection will be low. If you're 20 in an apartment with nothing of value beyond a laptop, it's ok. But if you have a few nice things like jewelry, watches, AV equipment, computers, etc. then you'll be paying closer to $500/year and above.
And what about safes? Kinda undermines the whole argument doesn't it.
Because in countries where they enacted a gun registery, it lead to confiscation. First the government asked for an accounting of who had what. Then they knew who to target and what remove. Easy as pie.