Bird
Rest in Peace
[From my earliest recollection... a Depression is when money is tight or scarce...
The definitions I heard were that a recession was when you lose your job, and a depression was when I lose my job.
[From my earliest recollection... a Depression is when money is tight or scarce...
LMTC said:We/You ARE the government.
George, we still do/could have impact, but the problem (IMO) is what de Tocqueville described. Too many people like the public trough, too few have any understanding of critical/analytical thinking, and way way too many have little to no real understanding of free market economics. Folks want benefits without responsibilities or sacrifice, and for lo these many decades there is no lack of charlatans to promise that.N80 said:That's what we were taught in elementary school. I personally feel that in the last 75 years Washington is more of an oligarchy than a representative democracy. I'd love to see a poll of how many Americans feel that they have any impact on federal government policy. I'd love even more to hear how those who answered 'yes' think that they do so.
ihookem said:If gas goes back to 3 bucks we (short sighted Americans)will buy gas hogs. .
ihookem said:Original question- Are we going into a depression? No not at all! at least not nationally. Upstate New York on a small farm may be hurting. Small farms in S.E Wisconsin- doing fairly well. Here is why some are hurting and some failing. A small scale dairy farmer can't compete with a 1,000 cow milk farm. He has to find something that can't be mass produced. Goat milk is a start for cheese. Maybe you should try selling the milk more locally as milk? It depends on the locals whether it will work or not. There is a whole new customer that will pay a lot more for a better/ fresher food, if there is an upscale population close by it might work. It might work but New York is hurting bad. ( I have relatives in Utica, my mom grew up there) You have to sell things money can't buy in a megga grocery mart. Free range or pastured chickens that taste five times better than store bought. Farm fresh eggs, that taste fresher, turkeys, grass fed beef, maybe a pig or two, (but maybe not pigs) It sounds like you are sticking with one idea, a cheese maker 75 mi. away and may have to be more flexible. I see people all the time that can't "make it" . because they refuse to be flexible. As a self employed carpenter I see guys with very little work because they only want to finish or frame or just hang cabinets. I made it for four years because I do almost everything, am honest, polite, reasonable rates and dress so I don't offend customers in their own house. Many carpenters don't know enough to turn off satanic music when there is a cross on the homeowners front door, they don't do well. Anyway you are lucky, you have other income to get you by untill you can find out what will work and what won't. I believe a wise man can make it through anything and have prayed to God for wisdom a thousand times about such matters, I guess he gave me just enough to do well. This is more a pm than a post. Anyway, as crazy as this may sound I have decided times in general are very good. The media is very good at making things look much worse than they are especially when a republican is in the white house. If Obama gets in you will hear a much different story a few weeks after Obama livws there.I know I am going to get a lot of insults for this but I wish gas would go higher like 5-6 dollars a gallon. I know you've never heard anything like this but I've been saying it for a few years. It's The only thing that is going to get us off this dependence for foreign oil. It will bring new technology for electric cars and that's the future in all cases except tractors, semis and big trucks. Almost everyone could get by with an electric car. In reality an electric car should be cheap to make and cheaper to run (100 mi. on 3 dollars of electricity)with little maintenance. This will make fuel much cheaper for the guys like farmers, truck drivers,and guys who really need a diesel or big truck. World futures will go down and few would use oil stocks as a money bank against inflation, foreign countries will have much less leverage against us , we could drill most of the oil we use, and could easily put OPEC off their high horse. Air in the cities would be cleaner and quieter too. We need oil to stay high enough long enough for people to realize gas is never going to be cheap again, and electric cars are not only for wimps. By the way, GM can turn out an electric car in six months if they want to. We will forget about gas cars like we forgot about the horse and buggy but we have to have a reason, and that seems to only come with a national crisis cause we don't think long term like when Toyota came out with the Prius the year gas was .89 a gallon. (We were making SUV's) If gas goes back to 3 bucks we (short sighted Americans)will buy gas hogs. If it goes to 5 or 6 bucks for a long time we will get used to electric cars long enough to prefer them cause car makers will have made enough of them to make them cheaper and better. It's going to hurt but we will be better off in the long run. I also know companies can't find good young kids to work in factories so they go over seas.
ihookem said:Anyway, as crazy as this may sound I have decided times in general are very good. The media is very good at making things look much worse than they are especially when a republican is in the white house. If Obama gets in you will hear a much different story a few weeks after Obama livws there.
ihookem said:I know I am going to get a lot of insults for this but I wish gas would go higher like 5-6 dollars a gallon.
alchemysa said:Sure, but thats because the car makers don't give you much choice. Its amazing how fast most of the car makers revert to type as soon as gas prices drop. They roll out the big gas guzzlers like there will never be a fuel shortage again.
jcurtisB78 said:Car makers produce cars and trucks that people will buy. All manufacturers have produced small fuel-efficient cars for years, but when some urban cowboy goes to the Ford dealer and walks past a Focus to get to an F150 or Explorer, Ford's going to build more of those. I have friends that seem to have been in a "see who can get the biggest SUV" contest (when a small car would have met their needs just fine) then complain about gas prices.
jcurtisB78 said:A
Not from me, but I do think that this sudden surge in prices is tough on lower income people. I believe we are in a transitional period where technology (electric cars, fuel cells, solar, and wind) will take time to catch up. .
Another variation of the 'great conspiracy' theory. Right up there with the automakers suppressed the 100 mpg carburetor.alchemysa said:So guess what?. GM, Ford etc, are keeping the door shut and the public ignorant.
MikePA said:Another variation of the 'great conspiracy' theory. Right up there with the automakers suppressed the 100 mpg carburetor.It can't be as simple as there has to be a market for a product before someone will drop millions/billions into manufacturing them. Nah. Much easier to blame the 'black helicopters'.
And the up to date figure from concept to manufacturer is more like 18 - 24 months, not 5 years.
I fundamentally disagree with this. Companies put things on the market to make a profit. To make a profit, there has to be a market. There's a market, a big market, for these cars now. There wan't a big market until just recently.alchemysa said:Its not a theory. Its just basic business common sense that is on show every day. You don't put something onto the market that will cut your own profits to shreds.
MikePA said:I fundamentally disagree with this. Companies put things on the market to make a profit. To make a profit, there has to be a market. There's a market, a big market, for these cars now. There wan't a big market until just recently.
By the way, a few weeks ago, GM announced they will product the Volt, so you can add them to the list of people 'rushing to the party'.
Yes, we felt like we were living like kings on occasion, especially if we could afford a meal with meat once in a while. Your sarcasim towards my upgringing is not appreciated, but understandable.N80 said:Mossroad,
I'm sorry but that's a pretty narrow view of 'need' (and not entirely accurate either, since most of us metabolize oxygen). But, if that's all there is to it, then you guys were living like kings.
According to the 2006 US census, click here the average person in your home state lived within 23 minutes of their job. That means they either found new work within 23 minutes of their home when they changed jobs or they moved to be within 23 minutes of their next job.N80 said:In the end, though, I'm in agreement about bad financial decisions, unrealistic standards of living, and how soft we've gotten. But I'm still not going to suggest that everyone in this country could or should move their home to get closer to a job that may or may not be there next week just so they can save gas. That would be naive and beyond realistic. And highly unlikely to help.
You ever ask underprivileged people where they live? They reply "we stay at..." not "we live at...". For a lot of people, home means where they are currently staying. That's where they sleep.N80 said:For a lot of people 'home' means a lot more than just where they sleep between the hours of work.