Sunday, August 21, 2016

“Don’t like it? Move!”/ Regulations / State’s rights / Privatization.



This blog is going to be about four things I want to write about.  I have decided to combine the four topics into one so it’s a decent length rather than writing four small blogs. 

Without further adieu…..

1. “Don’t like it, move!” 
 
After one of my rants on Facebook about Municipal Broadband (If a city/town wants to offer its own internet due to poor or no service from a private ISP they should be able to!), I received this private message from someone I don’t know that is going to remain nameless:

“Will you please put a sock in it about municipal broadband?  You should not be asking your local government to provide internet for you!  If you move into an area where the choices in internet are crappy, that’s all on you!  Don’t like it?  Move!”

See, I have a big issue with people telling others to “move” if they don’t like a current situation and call for change in something.  It’s basically saying, “The status quo is fine where it is, it doesn’t need to change, if you don’t like it, fuck off.”   

There are many versions of “If you don’t like it, move.”  As I wrote above, it’s basically telling someone that they just need to accept the way things are, even if the “way things are” is totally wrong.  I’m not just talking about internet here, by the way.

A little over a year ago I wrote this blog: http://samsnonpcpage.blogspot.com/2015/06/subjects-that-are-now-politically.html.  In one of the parts I basically asked “why can’t members of the LGBT community just go to another business if one refuses to serve them rather than suing said business?”
Fast forward to today.  I’m not going to re-write an over year old blog, but someone told me this when I told him the above opinion on the subject:

“I get what you’re saying, the issue is that when you decide to just go to another bakery or whatever, you are letting discrimination win over what is right.  By suing, or at the very least leaving a bad yelp review or taking your story to the media, you are standing up for what is right.”

Look at it this way.  What if Rosa Parks was told, “Don’t like being told you need to sit in the back of the bus?  Just take a taxi or buy a car!”  What if she actually did that, instead of refusing to sit in the back of the bus and standing up for what is right?  

Sometimes, you need to stand up for what you believe in, because if you “move,” you have officially given up on for what is actually right.

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2. Regulations.

Regulations are a hot topic among political shows.  The way I look at it, is that regulations are like “ground rules” that companies needs to adhere to.

The reason why regulations are needed is that without them, companies all over would screw over both employees and customers in pursuit of high profit margins or in quests to please their shareholders!  

The problem is, we honestly have regulation in areas where it’s not really needed, and no regulation for things that should have them.  

I’ll give an example, and yes it’s cars.  Let’s say I wanted to buy a Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat.  The dealer local to me has one exactly like I would order…. If I was willing to pay $30,000 over MSRP for a “market value adjustment.”  

Yeah, I could go to a well-respected dealer in Ohio and get one for MSRP, but that would entail having to get plane tickets and a hotel stay, not to mention paying shipping fees to deliver the car back to Florida.  

Now, there should be regulation in place that outlaws these stupid markups.  Maybe allow up to 10% over MSRP but nothing more.  It’s called making sure the business doesn’t gouge the customer, the most important part of said business. 

Regulation doesn’t even have to come from government.  Look at consumer electronics.  Wonder why the price of current-model TVs are the same whether you buy it at a brick and mortar store or online?  It’s because manufacturers have what’s known as a “unilateral pricing policy” or UPPs, and retailers (That includes online retailers) that sell those manufacturers’ sets have to sell it at MSRP and cannot jack up the price.  They also have to get permission from the manufacturers to lower the price if they intend to run a sale on it.  If the retailer breaks the UPP rules, they might lose the license to sell the product.

FYI: UPPs exist so that online retailers can’t undercut brick and mortar stores on price to the point where the B&M stores might “throw in the towel” and stop selling TVs due to losing business to online retailers.  After all, when it comes to a TV, you want to see its picture quality first-hand.  It’s pretty hard to judge a TV’s picture quality by looking at a stock photo on an online retailer.

It’s not just about products.  Why are we - the USA - the only developed country that does not mandate that businesses over a certain amount of employees give a minimum amount of vacation days?  It’s been proven over and over that people work better when they are given a chance to recharge their batteries, so to speak.  Yet thanks to no regulation in this area, there are places that give maybe a week’s worth of vacation time all year and that’s it.  To make matters worse, many times when these employees take their vacations, they are seen as not as valuable compared to one that stays at work.  The USA is ranked at or near the top for work-sourced stress related illnesses.  Again, it all comes down to the fact that people work better when they are given proper time off! 
There are some people who will read this blog and think, “Why should the government tell me how to run my business?”  I’ll say it again: So that businesses don’t screw over their employees and customers, their two most important assets!

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State’s rights.

Republicans and conservatives always tout “State’s Rights.”  The way I see it, states should not have unlimited rights or at least the magnitude of “rights” they do now.

Just the fact that 21 states let private ISPs like AT&T and Time Warner “ghost write” bills that block municipal broadband then signed them into law is proof of that.

Better yet, here is a scene from the movie Tropic Thunder that explains it best:


If you don’t want to watch the video, here is a meme:


That’s really it.  It’s not just states signing laws to stifle competition in the broadband space.  It’s a lot of fucked up, moronic, imbecilic things they do.  In other words, they manage to go full retard!  

Here is what I am talking about:

1. Look at how many states have signed “religious freedom” laws that basically allow businesses to discriminate against the LGBT community.

2. States that have repealed motorcycle helmet laws under the guise of “personal freedom.”   Sorry, but this is just dumb. 

3. States that force private business to allow people to open carry not just handguns, but rifles into their establishments.  RIFLES.  Yep, in these states a person can legally sling an AR-15 on their backs into say a restaurant and the owner cannot throw him/her out.

4. States that compel public universities into letting students conceal carry guns on campus.  I am waiting for the news story of a professor that got shot because he delivered a flunking grade to a student that was packing.

5. States that block abortion if a fetal defect like down syndrome is listed as the reason, while at the same time cutting any sort of assistance that a woman might need to help with raising such a child. 

6. States that refuse to make pay equal between both genders, in the form a vetoing bills that would make it law to pay women equally.  

I’m going to give a hypothetical situation here.  A republican friend of mine thinks that seatbelt laws should be repealed at the federal level and left up to the states.  

Okay, let’s say that happens.  I’ll name-drop one state.  Alabama.  Now, I’m not going to completely hate on Alabama because my car was made there.  But let’s face it, Alabama is a state where it’s socially unacceptable to be LGBT but it’s okay for your cousin – 1st cousin – to be your girlfriend.  Knowing that, you can bet your lunch money that Alabama would probably be one of the first states to repeal their seatbelt laws if it ever became up to the states.

So what would happen?  First, I would feel bad for all the first responders who have to respond to all the fatal accidents that would not have been fatal if the people in the car just wore their seatbelt.  Next, morgues would have to expand in size for all the dead bodies that would come in, and more funeral homes would have to open for all the funerals that they would have to commence.

That is why you don’t want to give a state unlimited “rights,” because, as Robert Downey Jr’s character said, they go full retard…. And you never want to go full retard.  

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Privatization.

I’m pretty sure everyone knows what Privatization is, so I’m not going to explain it.  What I want to touch on is that simply put, there are certain things that need to remain in control of the government.

The issue is that when you let a private industry get ahold of something, it’s going to want to make a profit off of it.  That, in itself is not a bad thing.  But when bad things happen due to wanting to make a profit, that is, well…. Bad.

The worst example is private prisons.  The more inmates they have, the more money they make.  As such, corruption ensues such as judges intentionally throwing people in their jails in exchange for payoffs.  

Last year, the private prison companies donated huge sums of money to keep Cannabis illegal in the remaining 46 states.   It’s not secret why they want to keep it illegal: If people can consume cannabis freely without fear of getting arrested and thrown in jail, the prisons will not make as much money and therefore their profits will suffer.  

Another example is water.  You know, the stuff we need to live.  Michigan felt it was going the public a favor by handing over control of the drinking water to private industry.  A private industry that is also concerned about making profits.  That worked out well for Flint, didn’t it?  New Jersey also wanted to turn over its drinking water to private companies, but last I heard it was scrapped.  Thank goodness!

A long time ago, someone told me that a county should try turning its police force over to the private sector.  Yeah, I can just imagine how that would turn out!  If you think your local police force is corrupt now, wait until one is privatized!

There is still discussion that the US Post Office should be privatized.  Yeah, some people want this done for one reason only – to get rid of the union that is protecting the labor force.  Plus, if the Post Office was privatized, you can bet that cost of postage would rise to ridiculous levels.  You think the cost of a book of stamps is “too high” now?  Just imagine if it was private….

The point is, not everything needs to be privatized.  Some stuff, whether you like it or not, needs to remain in government control.

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That’s it!

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