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42885   Bigsby   2014 Feb 15, 5:05pm  

The 'state of gestapo Connecticut.' What a complete and utter idiot you are.

And if I was one of the families concerned and someone like you actually did come up to me and asked me the sort of moronic things you say on here (which you are far too chicken shit to actually do face-to-face), then yes, I would consider it harassment. You, of course, are such an imbecile that you think they are legitimate questions. I'd love to see how legitimate you thought they were if your kid had been murdered.

And was that not an official report that I linked to? The one that you claimed was 'classified' by the FBI.

42886   carrieon   2014 Feb 15, 5:59pm  

The other 86% live with their Ont. It pays more from social services as a foster parent.

42887   bob2356   2014 Feb 15, 9:20pm  

“Our youth now love luxury. They have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show disrespect for their elders and love chatter in place of exercise; they no longer rise when elders enter the room; they contradict their parents, chatter before company; gobble up their food and tyrannize their teachers.”
attributed to Socrates dialogue on education in Plato's book IV

I see no hope for the future of our people if they are dependent on the frivolous youth of today, for certainly all youth are reckless beyond words. When I was a boy, we were taught to be discrete and respectful of elders, but the present youth are exceedingly wise and impatient of restraint.
attributed to Hesiod (8th century B.C.)

Youth have been considered spoiled and indulgent for 3000 years by people misremembering their own youth. With today's economy, the huge cost of rent relative to wages, intense competition for jobs, and the obscene burden of student loans on the average college graduate I'm surprised only 14% live with their parents.

Today's generation is being crushed by the burdens placed on them the self indulgent baby boomers (ashamed to say my generation). Pretty amazing the baby boomers that went to college for free or a couple hundred dollars a semester, the ones that drove real estate and rents to astronomical levels to heloc their toys, the ones who drove tax burdens through the roof to pay for big balls macho military, the ones who sent all the decent jobs offshore to jack their stock portfolios are complaining about the work ethic of the people stuck with the bills.

When I got of of school minimum wage was 3.35 an hour and a decent apartment was $250 a month. Now it's 7.25 and the exact same apartment (I'm using the apartment complex my mother has owned since I was in high school for this comparison) is $1100. Sales tax 0-3% vs 7-9%. Only a few states had income tax and it was low. I bought a brand new VW rabbit (Golf) for $5100, same car today is 20k. My first house was 22k, the same size house in the same town is 120k right now. Taxes on said house were $400 now $3000. In the early 80's I was making 35k as a programmer and that was about average. Today median is 56k.. People I knew made $20 an hour on assembly lines with high school education At best salaries have doubled (and many blue collar jobs have either lower wages or have disappeared completely) in the last 30 years while the cost of living has tripled or quadrupled.

I'm sorry, but people in college and in their 20's have a lot less opportunities and are facing a much lower standard living than when I was that age. All the people bitching just don't want to admit it, they like to believe they were better people or harder workers.

42888   bob2356   2014 Feb 15, 9:25pm  

bgamall4 says

bob2356 says

If it's impossible to confirm it's true then it's impossible to confirm it's not true so your supernovae theory is in the shitcan.

I just gave you a link above showing they are lucky to find 100 supernovae remains in a year. That small number makes no sense if the universe is 10 billion years old. There should be over 300 million supernovae and there simply are not that many.

Nice deletion feces for brains.

42889   bob2356   2014 Feb 15, 9:27pm  

The man is an optimist.

42890   🎂 tatupu70   2014 Feb 15, 9:56pm  

Facebooksux says

I would LOVE some deflation.

Who doesn't want a new Porsche 911 for $20,000, or a mansion in New York or Beverly Hills for $100,000?

It won't much matter because you'll be unemployed and broke.

42891   🎂 tatupu70   2014 Feb 15, 10:01pm  

Homeboy says

No, I only see that using unadjusted dollars is wrong. That doesn't prove using percentages is right.

Look harder. The gain in the stock market isn't solely due to inflation.

Regardless, the point has nothing to do with inflation:

DJIA is at 16,154
S&P 500 is at 1,839

If both went down 100 points, would it affect investors the same?

42892   Facebooksux   2014 Feb 15, 11:36pm  

No. I called her a dumb cunt and a RE shill for promoting Oakland when SHIT LIKE THIS HAPPENS THERE ON A REGULAR BASIS:

http://news.kron4.com/features/people-that-endanger-other-people-in-oakland-behave-badly/

Let's not hijack this thread though, pal.

42893   🎂 tatupu70   2014 Feb 16, 12:08am  

Facebooksux says

No. I called her a dumb cunt and a RE shill for promoting Oakland when SHIT LIKE THIS HAPPENS THERE ON A REGULAR BASIS:

Interesting. So what would that make me after I called Chicago a nice city?

42894   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 16, 12:12am  

bgamall4 says

Tarpley must be listened to.

he he he Karl Roves famous last words.

42895   Rin   2014 Feb 16, 12:25am  

Call it Crazy says

Rin says

If you recall the 1980 Lake Placid Hockey team, the idea any group of upstarts, if motivated, could beat the world champion USSR team, a.k.a. *Miracle On Ice*, is no longer a part of our culture.

You can't use a small subset as an example. There will always be a small minority group that will rise to the top. They are the exceptions, not the rule.

Culturally speaking, coach Brooks & that Lake Placid team inspired millions around the country. Now granted, they were clearly a minority subset, however, the fact of the matter is that they symbolized what a dedicated group of Americans could do. Without such role models, as a part of the general mythos, ppl will not rise up to the challenge in the years ahead.

In the world of engineering, the closest thing to that would be along the lines of the Navy Nuclear program, where intelligence, discipline, hard work, and team work are a part of the credo. Fortunately, this program is still around today & thus, there's a place for engineers to go, outside of corporate America & its world of outsourcing R&D.

And despite my current jaded feelings about corporate America, I still admire those who'd gone through the Navy Nuclear program and have served in it, as a career. Thus, I still have some role models out there.

Call it Crazy says

You've said you don't have kids, until you've been in the trenches dealing with them 24/7, you have no idea how tough the job is

I have a niece and I know what my sister and her husband go through, however, I don't see great things coming out of the young one. Despite my sister, not having achieved her dreams during her late 20s, at least she had some aspirations as a teenager, growing up. My niece, however, just wants to be liked and belong to something.

42896   Bigsby   2014 Feb 16, 12:39am  

bgamall4 says

That would be absolutely true if the parents were not shown to be actors. But since they were actors, your analysis does not apply.

Would that be actors like the two women you said were one and the same but obviously weren't?

Try a bit of actual real proof before making such idiotic baseless assertions. And no, someone reading from notes and nervously laughing isn't evidence. Prove all the parents and relatives of every one of those 26 people are actors. Do it or just STFU.

42897   Bigsby   2014 Feb 16, 12:51am  

That's your 'proof.' That's all you've got, isn't it? Dear, oh, dear.

Right. Simple question for you. Roughly how many people do you and your family know?

42898   Bigsby   2014 Feb 16, 12:53am  

Roughly how many people do you and your family know?

42899   Bigsby   2014 Feb 16, 12:57am  

bgamall4 says

Bigsby says

Roughly how many people do you and your family know?

Roughly how stupid can you stoop to be? Infinitely stupid?

Just answer the question, or are you so stupid as to fail to see the point?

42900   Bigsby   2014 Feb 16, 1:10am  

bgamall4 says

Bigsby says

bgamall4 says

Bigsby says

Roughly how many people do you and your family know?

Roughly how stupid can you stoop to be? Infinitely stupid?

Just answer the question, or are you so stupid as to fail to see the point?

I know them through their fake acting. I didn't personally know Liz Taylor, but I knew she was a great actress because she cried real tears. You continue to be an idiot. There were NO TEARS at Sandy Hook.

Following your logic then, it wouldn't make any difference if you saw 'real tears' or not - you'd still call them actors, wouldn't you? And how many people do you and your family know or do I need to spell it out to you why I'm asking?

42901   New Renter   2014 Feb 16, 1:45am  

bob2356 says

I bought a brand new VW rabbit (Golf) for $5100, same car today is 20k.

Not really. That $5100 VW Rabbit could not be sold as a new car today. The Rabbits of yesteryear are unreliable, cheaply built deathtraps, the "same car" to the Rabbits of today in name only.

In contrast the Rabbits of today are bigger, heavier and far more complicated yet also safer, cleaner, more fuel efficient, far more refined and reliable. If you were to take the Rabbit of today into a time machine and offer it without the VW brand in the 1970s I think it would sell in the same market niche as Mercedes if not be marketed as a Mercedes killer.

Think of it this way, as a buyer in 1976 with $18k in your pocket which would you have preferred:

This 1976 Merc 280 for an MSRP of $14296:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercedes-Benz_W114

Or this 2014 Jetta for an MSRP of $16895:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen_Jetta

42902   New Renter   2014 Feb 16, 1:51am  

Call it Crazy says

bob2356 says

I'm sorry, but people in college and in their 20's have a lot less opportunities and are facing a much lower standard living than when I was that age. All the people bitching just don't want to admit it,

The opportunities are there... They don't want to work for them. They feel they should be "given" to them because they "deserve" them... You know, the "everyone gets a trophy" generation....

My favorite example of this celebration of mediocrity are the bumper stickers which proudly exclaim "My Child was Recognized at xxxx School!

Hey look everyone, its Timmy!

Give that kid a bumpersticker!

Call it Crazy says

bob2356 says

Today's generation is being crushed by the burdens placed on them the self indulgent baby boomers (ashamed to say my generation).

Nope, today's generation is too lazy to step up and take personal responsibility for their actions and future.... To them, it's always some else's fault.....

I blame Republicans and FOXnews for that.

42903   Ceffer   2014 Feb 16, 2:15am  

When they go into "blame withdrawal", their eyes glaze over, they stare blankly at the horizon and they go into a catatonic freeze condition known as "personal responsibility".

Without blame and guilt trips, there is nothing, no reason to live.

42904   Rin   2014 Feb 16, 3:26am  

New Renter says

My favorite example of this celebration of mediocrity are the bumper stickers which proudly exclaim "My Child was Recognized at xxxx School!

Hey look everyone, its Timmy!

Give that kid a bumpersticker!

What about the 'My kid beat up your honors student' decals?

42905   Homeboy   2014 Feb 16, 4:30am  

tatupu70 says

Look harder. The gain in the stock market isn't solely due to inflation.

No, YOU look harder. If growth is already "built in" to the DOW, that's all the more reason to consider that any movement will be only at the top half. So, for the third time, I will ask you the question that you have yet to answer: If movement in the DOW in this century only occurs above the 5,000 level, how would it make sense to consider it as a percentage of the ENTIRE range, all the way from zero, when zero is a virtual impossibility?

Let me put it this way: Say you are standing on top of Mount Everest, and you jump in the air. It wouldn't make sense to say that you jumped 29,000 feet. You only jumped a couple of feet, because you were ALREADY 29,000 feet up when you started. Any of this sinking in yet?

I'm not saying you're necessarily wrong, but I'm saying you have yet to address the issue. You have not demonstrated that percentage change is a good measure.

tatupu70 says

Regardless, the point has nothing to do with inflation:

False. The value of the index is based on the monetary value of the stocks represented, so to say it has NOTHING to do with inflation is complete bullshit.

tatupu70 says

DJIA is at 16,154

S&P 500 is at 1,839

If both went down 100 points, would it affect investors the same?

That's just stupid. The DOW and the S&P aren't measuring the same thing. On a typical day where the DOW changed by 100 points, the S&P would likely change by a much smaller amount. The scenario you describe, both indices dropping exactly 100 points at the same time, would never happen, barring an extremely unlikely freak coincidence.

42906   Homeboy   2014 Feb 16, 4:36am  

See, here's your problem, Tatapu: You keep discrediting the use of absolute values in analyzing index movement, as though that somehow PROVES that using percentages is valid, by default. But it DOESN'T prove that. Saying "X is bad" doesn't prove that Y is good. Capiche?

42907   🎂 tatupu70   2014 Feb 16, 4:40am  

Homeboy says

No, YOU look harder. If growth is already "built in" to the DOW, that's all the more reason to consider that any movement will be only at the top half. So, for the third time, I will ask you the question that you have yet to answer: If movement in the DOW in this century only occurs above the 5,000 level, how would it make sense to consider it as a percentage of the ENTIRE range, all the way from zero, when zero is a virtual impossibility?

I don't accept that it's an impossibility any more than it would be an impossibility for the Dow to go to zero when it's at 250. The odds of both happening are (basically) the same. All the companies on the index would have to go bankrupt in both cases.

By that logic, when the Dow is at 500, you should only consider the percentage above 250.

Homeboy says

tatupu70 says

Regardless, the point has nothing to do with inflation:

False. The value of the index is based on the monetary value of the stocks represented, so to say it has NOTHING to do with inflation is complete bullshit.

Well, it's a good thing that's not what I was saying then. I'm saying the purpose of using percentages doesn't depend on inflation. It's a basic concept.

Homeboy says

That's just stupid. The DOW and the S&P aren't measuring the same thing. On a typical day where the DOW changed by 100 points, the S&P would likely change by a much smaller amount. The scenario you describe, both indices dropping exactly 100 points at the same time, would never happen, barring an extremely unlikely freak coincidence.

It's not stupid--it's illustrating a point that you are clearly doing your best not to understand.

42908   🎂 tatupu70   2014 Feb 16, 4:42am  

Homeboy says

See, here's your problem, Tatapu: You keep discrediting the use of absolute values in analyzing index movement, as though that somehow PROVES that using percentages is valid, by default. But it DOESN'T prove that. Saying "X is bad" doesn't prove that Y is good. Capiche?

No--that's not my problem at all. I've shown why percentages are valid, but you somehow can't understand it.

42909   New Renter   2014 Feb 16, 5:00am  

Rin says

New Renter says

My favorite example of this celebration of mediocrity are the bumper stickers which proudly exclaim "My Child was Recognized at xxxx School!

Hey look everyone, its Timmy!

Give that kid a bumpersticker!

What about the 'My kid beat up your honors student' decals?

Right up there with My Dachshund is smarter than your Stanford graduate.

42910   Buster   2014 Feb 16, 6:37am  

Wow, I am amazed at the lack of simple math skills on display. Some remedial education is clearly called for.

42912   bob2356   2014 Feb 16, 8:48am  

curious2 says

OK, let's start by clarifying "world" vs "1st world." I read a bit about the various definitions of 1st world countries, and the most neutral seemed to be countries with the biggest GDP. The top three are USA, China, and Japan.

Reasonable people define 1st world by GDP per capita not gross gdp. China doesn't qualify by that standard.

So by your definition places Luxembourg, San Marino, Norway, Vatican City, Iceland, New Zealand, Bermuda, Finland aren't first world because they have very small gdp's. I'm sure these countries will be very surprised to learn that..

42913   bob2356   2014 Feb 16, 9:26am  

curious2 says

The government regulates provider prices, and prohibits insurance companies from taking a profit on basic medical insurance. Everyone can buy insurance via either their employer or municipality. In theory, everyone is required to buy insurance, but there is no penalty for the 10% of individual persons who choose not to buy it.

Where did you get this 10% number from? The wiki article (that you so disparaged) says this, but the sources cited by wiki to back it up don't mention it at all.

42914   curious2   2014 Feb 16, 9:33am  

bob2356 says

Where did you get this 10% number from? The wiki article (that you so disparaged) says this....

Where did I "disparage" the Wikipedia article? I have said repeatedly, as Wikipedia says itself, that Wikipedia is not a source. Do you count that as disparagement?

Anyway the 10% number is in the WHO article that I linked to, in addition to the Wikipedia article that you accuse me of disparaging.

42915   bob2356   2014 Feb 16, 10:44am  

New Renter says

Not really. That $5100 VW Rabbit could not be sold as a new car today. The Rabbits of yesteryear are unreliable, cheaply built deathtraps, the "same car" to the Rabbits of today in name only.

What a load of horseshit. I bought the car in 1980 (not 1976) and drove it 300k. It was quiet comfortable and very reliable. It was very well built and wasn't substantially less strong than the modern version, look at the impact ratings. From your wiki aritcle "In crash tests conducted by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the Mark 1 received five out of five stars in a 56 km/h (35 mph) frontal crash test for both driver and passenger protection". Not exactly a deathtrap it seems.

Modern cars have gotten quieter as engineers used computer simulations to work on NVH (noise, vibration, harshness) and electronics have much improved mileage and driveability, but many things really haven't changed that much. Brakes, steering, suspensions, exhaust, basic body structure really aren't much different, just more refined with 30 years of ever more sophisticated computer aided design. I've done all my own repairs for 40 years now and have seen the changes up close and personal.

The modern rabbit/golf version is superior, but also considerably bigger over 5 inches longer and 1000 lbs heavier. You are right, today's Rabbit isn't in the same class, it's very much upscale. So if there were a downscale model to compare to what would it run 14-15k? That's still almost triple.

Check out oppositelock''s list of the best cars of the 80's. Number one is Volkswagon Rabbit GTi. http://oppositelock.jalopnik.com/the-10-best-cars-of-the-1980s-587587782 From the aritcle.

"The Golf GTI is the best car of the 1980’s because it’s built like a Panzer and combines the handling a golf-kart, the power of a sports car, the utility of a small wagon, and the operating costs of a moped. It was quite possibly one of the best-handling FWD cars of all time and had a very smooth, forgiving and durable manual transmission – which was great, since I learned to drive stick on a friend’s GTI, and so it was nice not to have to pitch in for a new clutch plate.

This was the hatch that launched a thousand ships: a classic formula that has been copied ever since. For North Americans, this was our first introduction to the hot hatch concept, and we’ve been buying them ever since. A major reason for this car’s popularity, then and now, is that it was economical to run, as it shared many parts and all of its body panels with its humbler Golf siblings, and its potent little four-banger was good on gas.

The one to have is the 1986-87 or later model with the 16-valve 2.0L engine from the Passat and Corrado. Double the amount of inlet valves as previous models, it was such a big deal that Volkswagen stuck a “16v” badge on the back of the car. Much like the BMW ‘M’ badge, lots of 8-valve GTI’s had this badge slapped on to compensate for their inferiority: buyer beware."

New Renter says

Or this 2014 Jetta for an MSRP of $16895:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen_Jetta

If I had 18k in my pocket then I would have bought a Porsche 944, and laughed at the jetta.

42916   New Renter   2014 Feb 16, 12:29pm  

bob2356 says

What a load of horseshit. I bought the car in 1980 (not 1976) and drove it 300k. It was quiet comfortable and very reliable. It was very well built and wasn't substantially less strong than the modern version, look at the impact ratings. From your wiki aritcle "In crash tests conducted by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the Mark 1 received five out of five stars in a 56 km/h (35 mph) frontal crash test for both driver and passenger protection". Not exactly a deathtrap it seems.

By 2014 standards it IS a deathtrap.

No Airbags
No ABS
No ESC
No Side impact beams
No "advanced high-strength steel"

http://www.worldautosteel.org/new-volkswagen-golf-lightens-up-with-high-ultra-high-strength-steel/

1980 tires (as OEM)

Take your 1980 VW Rabbit and a 2014 Jetta and ram them together at 60 MPH. Which would you prefer to be in?

As to reliability I had a mid 80's VW myself. Not bad mechanically but lots of vibration (GTI engine), exhaust noise, the seat cloth ripped easily, and it was plagued by electrical gremlins. I was glad to be rid of it at 180k

bob2356 says

If I had 18k in my pocket then I would have bought a Porsche 944, and laughed at the jetta.

To each his own I guess.

42917   Homeboy   2014 Feb 16, 12:40pm  

tatupu70 says

It's not stupid--it's illustrating a point that you are clearly doing your best not to understand.

God are you ever retarded. We understood your point that a 100 point change would be a different percentage if the total index value were different. Understood, commented on, and moved on, like about a year ago. Now, would you care to move on to the POINT?

42918   Homeboy   2014 Feb 16, 12:41pm  

tatupu70 says

I've shown why percentages are valid,

You have done nothing of the sort. And obviously you never will.

42919   Homeboy   2014 Feb 16, 12:56pm  

tatupu70 says

I don't accept that it's an impossibility any more than it would be an impossibility for the Dow to go to zero when it's at 250.

Well good thing I never said it was impossible, then.

The odds of both happening are (basically) the same. All the companies on the index would have to go bankrupt in both cases.

Not very likely.

tatupu70 says

By that logic, when the Dow is at 500, you should only consider the percentage above 250.

Well, no - I never advocated an arbitrary cutoff. I am merely asking you to explain how it makes sense to use the percentage of the ENTIRE index value, when the movement up or down only occurs at the upper reaches of that value. You still haven't explained it.

I guess there is no way of getting through to you. I am not advocating a system; I am suggesting that the system of percentages is not logical, and asking you to explain why that isn't true. But you continue to knock down straw men rather than address the issue.

42920   bob2356   2014 Feb 16, 1:27pm  

Call it Crazy says

bob2356 says

If I had 18k in my pocket then I would have bought a Porsche 944, and laughed at the jetta.

And this relates how to the OP??

Not at all, what's your point?

42921   bob2356   2014 Feb 16, 1:30pm  

New Renter says

No Airbags

No ABS

No ESC

No Side impact beams

No "advanced high-strength steel"

Learn to drive instead of relying on electronic nannies.

42922   epitaph   2014 Feb 16, 1:32pm  

This kind of speculation is ridiculous. I think I'd find better investment advice from tarot cards.

42923   bob2356   2014 Feb 16, 1:58pm  

New Renter says

Take your 1980 VW Rabbit and a 2014 Jetta and ram them together at 60 MPH. Which would you prefer to be in?

That's moronic. A 1900 lb car vs a 3100 lb car. Since 50% more weight doesn't matter then why don't we run my 4400 lb e32 750 deathtrap (no airbags, no esc, no side impact beams, no advanced high strength steel, does have abs but I would prefer it didn't) into your jetta and see how things work out.

42924   RentingForHalfTheCost   2014 Feb 16, 6:23pm  

tatupu70 says

Facebooksux says

I would LOVE some deflation.

Who doesn't want a new Porsche 911 for $20,000, or a mansion in New York or Beverly Hills for $100,000?

It won't much matter because you'll be unemployed and broke.

Like almost half of this country now? Interesting...

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