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Regulation as corruption, i would disagree with u there. One powerful word is needed to proclaim the need for strong regulation..ENRON. If u saw the Enron movie, the one thing these crooks like Ken Lay mentioned as their sort of buzzword (and they're recorded saying these things) is de-regulation. They got rich off it. They cut off half of California's power supply to up electricity prices and de-regulation let it happen.So it would be strange to say we need less regulation. Regulation is definitely needed, else people,who are inherintly sneaky, make millions off unfair business practices. People are are supposed to trust the law. The regulators are the law, and people have to work at capitalism to reach fairness..not assume regulation, or the law, has a vested interest. That's misplacing the original intent. The original intent is to keep businesses from illegalities. Wal-mart seems to be a good example of a co. that seems to get tons of strange perks that do not apply to other businesses. We mentioned one already, the state, which is ultimately us, covering workers health care. Regulation is definitely needed, which should be in essence, a level playing field for all. With co. like Enron, Haliburton, and Wal-Mart, we need more regulation. |
Ricechex, I'm not sure that your argument totally supports regulation. I take it as meaning there need to be laws in place that strictly enforce anti-collusion so that something like what happened in California would be less likely to happen.
If laws like these are enforced, government regulation is not necessary, as it is in the interest of competing businesses to "regulate" each other. De-regulation is what gives you as the consumer the option of choosing more than one service provider. Now, I can see where people might like just one provider of a certain service because they don't want to have to make a decision. However, as long as collusion laws are enforced, de-regulation means more competition and thus lower prices. True de-regulation, a true free market, would create enough competition that a company like Enron would not have the ability to cut off half of the power supply to California. Enron was corrupt plain and simple, but it wasn't the fact that they used de-regulation and the free market to "take advantage" of people. They broke the law. I have recently started to wonder if, in a true free market economy, corporations as we know them would actually exist. In a theoretical world with minimal government, and no government interference in the market, it seems that corporations could not exist because right now they receive certain benefits from government such as limited liability and so on. |
Well in the case of consumer's needing another cable service provider i.e,which is a hot topic nowadays, it is more about the one cable co. that is overpowering the freedom to choose another, b/c of the laws that r out there. I think it's regulation, or the law, that is needed to make it possible that that choice is out there to pick another. The one large cable co. has benefitted from LESS regulatory practices,inhibitting the other cable co. to get in on it.
I think we should both agree regulation is needed, but to what extent it is needed. In the case of Enron, they kind of make the case for more regulation by stating deregulation is what is making them get around loopholes. No one knew what the hell they were doing, coming up with hypotheticals for future non-traceable energy value. This took like 6-7 years for the govt to finally figure out what was really going on. |
Just because one company benefits under de-regulation, it does not follow that other companies are inhibited to enter that market. Freedom of competition does not mean freedom to copy another company and expect profit. Competition means offering something that would get consumers to switch to those other cable companies. It is actually probably certain regulations that give a cable company a geographic monopoly like the one you mentioned. I think I'm going to have to fundamentally disagree with you on this point.
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No, i hear u. i think we differ on the defintion of regulation, perhaps..something. haha. but we may want the same results. The defintion of regulation to me is creating fairness.. before businesses can even start to compete. Regulation is like the ground rules and fundamental. I feel there is a reason big ass corps r screaming for less of it..and think of their influence over law, connections, and wealth.
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Yes I do think that we differ in what we were considering regulation. The kind of regulation you talk about is what I would call the creation of legal institutions. Fairness then would be no privileges to certain companies and no legally institutionalized barriers to entry into an industry.
I think we are somewhat on the same page, although I feel I would advocate a lot less government involvement in business affairs than you would. |
The people for one I hate them stupid ass fucks that walk in to ya and then look at you like you did something wrong. Or when they cut in front of ya and just stop. Don't ya just wanna put them face first in to the ground?
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eh....thats seems like a complaint for every store....not just walmart
people in all stores are stupid ....and walmart isnt just for rednecks (wow, i see stereotyping is big with you guys..although you seem to be agaisnt it when its a group of people you support ..hypocrisy??) i know PLENTY of middle upper class people who shop at wal-mart and ill never demonize a store that lets poor low income families exist and live you should all be ashamed of yourselves |
haha..:D thank u Wal-Mart for letting the poor folks live and exist. bow down to the wal-mart, ungrateful bastards!
Wal-Mart is GOD and they are the wealthiest of all But u MAY live, poor people. Amen! |
yeah, helping poor people be able to afford things is sooooooooooo evil
what was i thinking??? |
I have no idea. Wal-Mart is GOD!
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the simpleton strikes again i see ![]() http://www.walmartmovie.com/ THE CRITICS ARE GLOWING! "An engrossing, muckraking documentary ... but if you're expecting an angry diatribe, you're going to be disappointed." -LA Times "By the final credits you may want to picket Sam Walton's grave." -Boston Globe "'The High Cost of Low Price' makes its case with breathtaking force." -New York Times An "investigative outcry driven by stringent reporting rather than attitude." -Entertainment Weekly "The free market functions effectively only when consumers have all the facts. A brilliant new film by Robert Greenwald tells the real story of the corrosive effects that Wal-Mart wreaks upon the communities in which it operates and the men and women it employs." -Rob Reiner |
yeah, helping poor people is such a simple idea
again...what was i thinking? |
you're a real prick for acting so daft & being so disagreeable on purpose; either that or you really are incredibly stupid.
Your thoroughly witless "fun & games" have come to an end & you've been placed on my ignore list, Lethrneck4. A note concerning my post previous to this one: My definition of "simpleton" is definitely inclusive of persons that have an outdated (& overall Cartesian) worldview & who, in their disavowal of existential truth & utter ignorance through a gross lack of self-awareness, refuse to acknowledge the interconnectedness of all things. |
,.,.,.,.,.,.,
fhdshhhhhhhhethhhd
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I work there, so I am justified in hating it.
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I have nothing bad to say about Wal-mart.
Let me know when there's a K-mart thread. Haha! |
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so . . . anyone who isn't buddhist? |
With the reverence Buddhism puts on suffering, you would think shopping at Wal Mart would be a required activity for personal growth.
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qp, haha
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so why does atsonicpark hate it? since he works there it would be interesting to hear his 2 cents. atsonic?
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Hey Laila, here's a drawing that goes pretty well w/ this thread.
![]() (drawing by Ed Templeton) |
is that a poor kid?
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I don't know. He'd have to be if he's wearing a Wal-Mart t-shirt.
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so what is that poor little kid supposed to be blinded by? his desire to be able to play with the same toys as other kids, is he blinded by his poor parents "ignorance" (lol) to shop at a store where they can afford things...or is this kid himself a so called (not my words) redneck hick who only shops at walmart cause hes selfish and hates democrats?
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now all the kid needs is some handcuffs on em in that drawing..
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Wal-mart is so BIG, and hicks think its cool!
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Why do I hate Wal-Mart?
Because they slash prices... and I'm no fan of slashing, no matter how it's used. |
i'm lucky to live here in chile...we don't have walmarts...they wanted to be here in chile because of our competitive retail market...
i know argentina have walmarts... |
Frontline did a report on Wal-Mart a while ago, and you can watch it online on the PBS site ->>>> http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontl.../walmart/view/
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Yeah, Frontline's website is awesome. I've watched half of their programs online. Country Boys is really good.
You can also watch NOVA programs online. God bless PBS. |
WalMart is fine. Don't shop there, but it is fine.
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