I spent last month in Nicaragua, and still have a house there. I was born and raised in America. What you are describing is capialism. Most people in Nicaragua wake up without a job every day and go out and get one or their family does not eat. The average person live on 2 dollars per day. That...
I am OK with them charging me for band width but not telling me which web sites I can go to. Band width is worth paying for and that is why I use Comcast.
...quarter do businesses serve the? needs of Americans anymore. They do not give Americans jobs any more. They produce less but make more money for it. Do we need a business model that works for Americans, or is this it...
First let me explain that the internet is in the public domain. It is like a national park. Your internet provider whom you pay for access just charges for what they call the last mile to your house.
How many people think it is:
A. when the government forces Internet Service providers...
...or do they have to keep? pushing body on frame trucks so that they can make a bigger profit. Another way to say it, does their cost of production still have so much legacy cost in it that they cannot make small cars fo good quality?
...the top 2%? That is does the middle class grow when the tax rates are low or when the tax rates hight on the top 2%. I guess we would need to know the periods where the middle class grows and what the tax rates were then.
Clearly it is not working to publish science in journals that are not even free to the public to read. Ideologically driven web sites will win every time. Scientists not being political types to begin with will not be much more convincing I bet...
...that we cannot buy from them? any more. We are all mostly unemployed. Does China have to start making stuff for their people? Do we start to get a chance to work then? Or do just 10 people in the world have everything then?
compete with 64 cent an hour? employees in China?
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_50/b3912051_mz011.htm
Her estimate? The cost of Chinese factory labor is a paltry 64 cents an hour. Although that figure is rough, since it's pieced together from sketchy statistics, it's still...
the election we just had? http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/mood_of_america/congressional_favorability_ratings
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/