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OT: Current Affairs and Politics

Messages
17,631
I've told this story before about unions.

When I was in the Anzac bridge project we needed to shut power off for a day which effected 60+ workers. We happily agreed to do it on the RDO. Being a contractor I didn't mind. They also offered us compensation to do it which wasn't really necessary but a nice gesture.
Then the union rep got wind. Made a few calls and it was cancelled.
Instead 60 guys basicaly sat in the lunch shed all day while 2 or 3 of us contractors did the shut down.

At a guess of approx $500 per workers that's 30k of taxpayers money.(government job)
Could of donated that to a charity or homeless person.
Some counters:

Let’s look at the corporate thieves, companies not paying tax, behold bank bosses earning $4m a year.

Let’s think about scum sucking insurers denying valid claims. I’ve met at 2 lawyers whose conscience kicked in and they left.

Oh I see the kindly Mr High Rise developer, bending over nice suburbs and turning them into slums with no infrastructure.

Your working person is the backbone of this country son. More than deserved of a couple of breaks in the cut and thrust of a long, hard, brutal and underpaid and undervalued working life.

 
Messages
17,631
Give all the long term unemployed a job and incentives to bring them back into the economy.

Take housing out of being a means of making a huge profit for venture capitalists and instead meet demand through government and public/private enterprises.

Make work from home the employees choice if appropriate. Employers to show cause.

Slow down immigration until infrastructure catches up and we can manage it better.

Put drinking age up to 20.

Take minor drug offences out of courts and into health areas.

Adult child rapists (after a fair appeals process) to get mandatory terms of 25 years to life.

Big breweries to be taxed for alcohol related crime.

Ban casinos, limit pokies to $1 a spin, max $100 per day.

Introduce restrictions on big tech and their spyware.

You Tube not allowed to increase volume for ads and limit ads during videos.

Enable low level road rule violators to work off fines and get a 1 point good behaviour bond for a year, except for bad breaches.

Reasonable limits on pet ownership in residential neighbourhood ( grandfather clauses).

Strike review on dodgy Local Council budgets.

Inheritance taxes $20m and over.

I got plenty.
 
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Messages
17,631
Well it’s obvious @JokerEel that dear Gronkys ideas of what is left wing is conflated and confused.

He could really dine out on Marx. Would be totally life changing and he could find his inner @Gronk.


They didn’t have wokeys back in his day and my guess is that Marx would treat them all with the privileged lentil loving contempt they deserve.
 

JokerEel

Coach
Messages
14,059
Well it’s obvious @JokerEel that dear Gronkys ideas of what is left wing is conflated and confused.

He could really dine out on Marx. Would be totally life changing and he could find his inner @Gronk.


They didn’t have wokeys back in his day and my guess is that Marx would treat them all with the privileged lentil loving contempt they deserve.


Yeah, his definitions seem a bit all over the place. Marx probably wouldn't have much patience for the modern 'wokeys'...he was more about material conditions than Twitter discourse.
 
Messages
17,631
Yeah, his definitions seem a bit all over the place. Marx probably wouldn't have much patience for the modern 'wokeys'...he was more about material conditions than Twitter discourse.
He certainly was.

He should publish his philosophical manuscript.

I was listening to a critique of the US tariffs today.

The argument was that Trump should carve out and reduce tariffs for goods bought from overseas that are needed for American companies buying this stuff who are competing with overseas

If these US export companies are forced to buy more expensive US sourced goods, they won’t be able to compete with companies based overseas who are buying their stuff from the source, cheaper than the American exporters can.

So you have a well intended Tariff for the short term, but down the line you might be sacrificing more US jobs than you are saving.

But I guess that doesn’t apply to domestic sales in the US market.

The Toyota company, their US made cars never meet the standard of the Japanese made cars. A source of frustration as they’ve worked so hard on it.

I think US made products are ok, but I rarely need to use them ( that i know about). Their cars look like garbage, but probably better than the Europeans.
 

JokerEel

Coach
Messages
14,059
He certainly was.

He should publish his philosophical manuscript.

I was listening to a critique of the US tariffs today.

The argument was that Trump should carve out and reduce tariffs for goods bought from overseas that are needed for American companies buying this stuff who are competing with overseas

If these US export companies are forced to buy more expensive US sourced goods, they won’t be able to compete with companies based overseas who are buying their stuff from the source, cheaper than the American exporters can.

So you have a well intended Tariff for the short term, but down the line you might be sacrificing more US jobs than you are saving.

But I guess that doesn’t apply to domestic sales in the US market.

The Toyota company, their US made cars never meet the standard of the Japanese made cars. A source of frustration as they’ve worked so hard on it.

I think US made products are ok, but I rarely need to use them ( that i know about). Their cars look like garbage, but probably better than the Europeans.


Yeah, that’s the classic tariff paradox protecting domestic industries short term but potentially making them in competitive long term. The input costs argument makes sense, especially for exporters.

And agreed on Toyota..Japanese made ones seem to have that extra edge. US cars might not be pretty, but at least they’re not as finicky as some European ones.
 
Messages
17,631
Yeah, that’s the classic tariff paradox protecting domestic industries short term but potentially making them in competitive long term. The input costs argument makes sense, especially for exporters.

And agreed on Toyota..Japanese made ones seem to have that extra edge. US cars might not be pretty, but at least they’re not as finicky as some European ones.

Yeah, I’ve looked at videos of the Camry factories in the US and Japan and everyone looks focused and precise.

My family members who have European cars, they seem to have the most car problems. Known defects.

Its curious to me that the Europeans can design beautiful and robust interiors but ruin engines with cheap brittle plastics and faulty pumps etc. Stuff we were getting correct here in Australia more than 50 years ago.

And I like the Tesla, enjoy the tech…except it’s electric lol. It would be much better with a v6.
 

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