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Can you give us any examples?Of course. The idea is to regulate that which is provably necessary using facts only. Most regulations that are problematic come from emotional or rhetorical twisting, those are the ones that must go.
Of course. The idea is to regulate that which is provably necessary using facts only. Most regulations that are problematic come from emotional or rhetorical twisting, those are the ones that must go.
Completely false. Micromanaging in financials for example; The only things that really need to be regulated are fraud, and other illicit behaviors. However just about every form you fill out to make a transaction comes from an unnecessary regulatory expansion. These things range from acceptable legality in loan rates, grace periods, mandatory coverages, and other onerous regulations. None of which reign in corporate activity or do the consumer a service.Most regulations exist because of the practices of big corporations and the financial sector, and those were put into place after it was proven necessary to do so. In my opinion, there still aren't enough regulations in regards to those players in our economy.
The regulations due to public hysteria or the practices of smaller business are fewer by comparison.
You cannot solve corporatism with more unnecessary regulatory expansion.....only insure it.If America wants to move closer towards the free market and further away from crony capitalism, corruption, and mega corporate control over government, then big business will need to be controled. I know that seems oxymoronic, but it would only involve limiting a relatively small number of players in order to enhance the business freedoms of many, many other businesses.
Completely false. Micromanaging in financials for example; The only things that really need to be regulated are fraud, and other illicit behaviors. However just about every form you fill out to make a transaction comes from an unnecessary regulatory expansion. These things range from acceptable legality in loan rates, grace periods, mandatory coverages, and other onerous regulations. None of which reign in corporate activity or do the consumer a service.
You cannot solve corporatism with more unnecessary regulatory expansion.....only insure it.
Well, you do have some good points on undue influence from corporations, can't argue against that. What I can say as my caviotte is that people should add "some" when they speak of corporate influence as there are many different corporations, corporate models etc. For instance an s.corp won't have the influence of a larger entity and even then large umbrellas may have cancerous holdings that are responsible for most of the malicious behaviors. As well, overregulation tends to favor corporations as they have the infrastructure and size to absorb the additional costs further pushing smaller competitors out of the marketplace which ultimately hurts the average consumer.We'll have to agree to disagree then. I'm not a libertarian so I don't share these views on governance.
It would be hard to focus because of the numerous regs for every industry but I'd be happy to give it a shot. For instance provide me with a couple of industries and I'll try to remember the more sinister ones I can think of. I'll say....think to the auto industry; Cars have to pass minimum safety requirements which I have no problem with, afterall people should have a reasonable expectation of safety but it is contradicted by CAFE standards, we want power, are mandated safety(tends to come with weight), but certain people also want all vehicles to have a target minimum consumption limit and we can't have things all ways; realistically these three factors get in the way of each other more often than not.Can you give us any examples?
Agreed, however I havent seen any auto standards requirements that are impossible to meet. In fact many of them have already been met and surpassed by other car manufacturers, many of which (I am given the impression) have far more strict standards.It would be hard to focus because of the numerous regs for every industry but I'd be happy to give it a shot. For instance provide me with a couple of industries and I'll try to remember the more sinister ones I can think of. I'll say....think to the auto industry; Cars have to pass minimum safety requirements which I have no problem with, afterall people should have a reasonable expectation of safety but it is contradicted by CAFE standards, we want power, are mandated safety(tends to come with weight), but certain people also want all vehicles to have a target minimum consumption limit and we can't have things all ways; realistically these three factors get in the way of each other more often than not.
Note I'm not saying these things are impossible to meet, where they come to be problems are when there is no reasonable time frame in which they would be attainable. For instance there are constantly improvements in auto tech that allow for more power with less fuel, this will allow for more weight to an extent which leads to a safer frame, but it can only go so far. As well, many of the things that become mandatory equipment such as the soon to be implemented CPU controlled throttle spring have their own drawbacks as we have seen in the Toyota case. Basically the regulations are an unnatural way of facilitating things that the market will swing to eventually anyway.Agreed, however I havent seen any auto standards requirements that are impossible to meet. In fact many of them have already been met and surpassed by other car manufacturers, many of which (I am given the impression) have far more strict standards.
IIRC, the 2018 target is to have every car commercially available to get 35mpg or better. I dont see how that's an unreasonable timeframe, again considering that this is standard operating procedure elsewhere.Note I'm not saying these things are impossible to meet, where they come to be problems are when there is no reasonable time frame in which they would be attainable.
Part of that problem is the market is only WILLING to do so much and when it MUST respond to a situation, it is unwilling to do so. In the case of vehicles, I'm sure most companies are twenty years ahead of what they're selling on the market. Companies would rather be one step ahead of the competition for twenty years rather than twenty steps ahead one year. Yes, the market WILL get there, but by the time it does the cost of fuel will be so high due to scarcity that no one will buy vehicles anyways.For instance there are constantly improvements in auto tech that allow for more power with less fuel, this will allow for more weight to an extent which leads to a safer frame, but it can only go so far. As well, many of the things that become mandatory equipment such as the soon to be implemented CPU controlled throttle spring have their own drawbacks as we have seen in the Toyota case. Basically the regulations are an unnatural way of facilitating things that the market will swing to eventually anyway.
Physics, technology, and demand. Americans tend to demand heavier cars as they hug the road better, as well the additional size when paired with the right materials like steel or carbon fiber add weight, however in a crash they are much safer than your typical light cars. 35mpg therefore would necessarily lead to lighter materials which may not be of much use in a collision.IIRC, the 2018 target is to have every car commercially available to get 35mpg or better. I dont see how that's an unreasonable timeframe, again considering that this is standard operating procedure elsewhere.
Then we should wait for the market to get there and allow the companies to research in the meantime, we do not need politicians mandating things far out of their scope of power and with little working knowledge of anything beyond how to get elected.Part of that problem is the market is only WILLING to do so much and when it MUST respond to a situation, it is unwilling to do so. In the case of vehicles, I'm sure most companies are twenty years ahead of what they're selling on the market. Companies would rather be one step ahead of the competition for twenty years rather than twenty steps ahead one year. Yes, the market WILL get there, but by the time it does the cost of fuel will be so high due to scarcity that no one will buy vehicles anyways.
Lighter cars actually tend to do BETTER in your average collision because they dont crush in, they tend to "bounce" (for lack of a better term) the car is totaled but the driver and passengers are usually ok. Also, your average consumer doesnt need a car that hugs the road, freeways are not NASCAR.Physics, technology, and demand. Americans tend to demand heavier cars as they hug the road better, as well the additional size when paired with the right materials like steel or carbon fiber add weight, however in a crash they are much safer than your typical light cars. 35mpg therefore would necessarily lead to lighter materials which may not be of much use in a collision.
The problem is by the time the market gets there, it may already be too late. IE: Rushing the testing and approval process for epidemic vaccines. Yes the process was circumvented but there was seen to be a greater need to have a product in hand that could help people.Then we should wait for the market to get there and allow the companies to research in the meantime, we do not need politicians mandating things far out of their scope of power and with little working knowledge of anything beyond how to get elected.
It would be hard to focus because of the numerous regs for every industry but I'd be happy to give it a shot. For instance provide me with a couple of industries and I'll try to remember the more sinister ones I can think of. I'll say....think to the auto industry; Cars have to pass minimum safety requirements which I have no problem with, afterall people should have a reasonable expectation of safety but it is contradicted by CAFE standards, we want power, are mandated safety(tends to come with weight), but certain people also want all vehicles to have a target minimum consumption limit and we can't have things all ways; realistically these three factors get in the way of each other more often than not.
Lighter cars actually tend to do BETTER in your average collision because they dont crush in, they tend to "bounce" (for lack of a better term) the car is totaled but the driver and passengers are usually ok.
Honda's are dependable, still I like something with a little more room and much more power.I drive a 2007 Honda Civic and it might very well be the greatest car built by man.
No, lighter cars tend to crush in more, so they have built in zones to channel inertia but that does not help when hit by a bigger vehicle like a semi, a truck, or even something immobile like a telephone pole or wall. Heavier always wins. For example, would you rather trust your life to a Smart car or a Humvee? As well "hugging the road" is not just preferable in high speed situations, it helps during less than optimal driving conditions, unexpected changes in speed such as emergency braking or lane shift due to a cut off, curvy roads, etc. Control is always a nice thing.Lighter cars actually tend to do BETTER in your average collision because they dont crush in, they tend to "bounce" (for lack of a better term) the car is totaled but the driver and passengers are usually ok. Also, your average consumer doesnt need a car that hugs the road, freeways are not NASCAR.
Again, this is a proclamation based on opinion and emotion, where is the demonstrable factual need. And remember "we want now" is not fact, especially when the "we" is a small percentage of the market.The problem is by the time the market gets there, it may already be too late. IE: Rushing the testing and approval process for epidemic vaccines. Yes the process was circumvented but there was seen to be a greater need to have a product in hand that could help people.
What I can say as my caviotte is that people should add "some" when they speak of corporate influence as there are many different corporations, corporate models etc. For instance an s.corp won't have the influence of a larger entity and even then large umbrellas may have cancerous holdings that are responsible for most of the malicious behaviors. As well, overregulation tends to favor corporations as they have the infrastructure and size to absorb the additional costs further pushing smaller competitors out of the marketplace which ultimately hurts the average consumer.
Smart car gets highest score in crash tests - Autos- msnbc.com It depends on the accident.No, lighter cars tend to crush in more, so they have built in zones to channel inertia but that does not help when hit by a bigger vehicle like a semi, a truck, or even something immobile like a telephone pole or wall. Heavier always wins. For example, would you rather trust your life to a Smart car or a Humvee?
Snow tires/chains plus safe driving will reduce your risk factor for accident by a serious margin. And it would seem that a heavier car on slicker roads would cause more problems due to inertia.As well "hugging the road" is not just preferable in high speed situations, it helps during less than optimal driving conditions, unexpected changes in speed such as emergency braking or lane shift due to a cut off, curvy roads, etc. Control is always a nice thing.
I have already demonstrated examples where market forces were rushed to meet the needs of a problematic situationAgain, this is a proclamation based on opinion and emotion, where is the demonstrable factual need. And remember "we want now" is not fact, especially when the "we" is a small percentage of the market.
What the American left want is to import the European style socialist model to America.
What is causing the catastrophic levels of debt in Greece, Spain and Italy, or for that
matter in California? Is it greedy capitalists? Or is it greedy government?
The socialist idea apparently is to give capitalists a new name "public servants", and monopoly control of the tax system, so they can now operate for the "common good," and make life "fairer" for all of us. It has failed in practice everywhere it has been tried. The "progressive" in reality should be called "regressive."
What the American left want is to import the European style socialist model to America.
What is causing the catastrophic levels of debt in Greece, Spain and Italy, or for that
matter in California? Is it greedy capitalists? Or is it greedy government?
The socialist idea apparently is to give capitalists a new name "public servants", and monopoly control of the tax system, so they can now operate for the "common good," and make life "fairer" for all of us. It has failed in practice everywhere it has been tried. The "progressive" in reality should be called "regressive."
Corporate social welfare gets an easy pass through congress. It's called socializing the risk, but privatizing the profits.
Greedy business with its hands in government pockets is to blame.
I would argue that such a rule is crucial to functioning of capitalism, but is being undermined in the current day. Activities like day trading or the entire credit-swap debacle don't provide any useful value at all, yet still command huge sums of money. Long term investment in solid products has been replaced my sacrificing everything in order to make the quarterly reports. CEO's can run a company into the ground and still make a huge personal profit for failure. Manufacturing is outsourced, and degrees in engineering are being replaced by business majors. People have figured out how to game the system to get money beyond the value they add to the system. The point isn't to claim that capitalism is some evil way to screw people, but point out mistakes so they can be fixed and the system be improved.
My main beef with capitalism right now is corporate monopolies, corporate lobbying of government in the millions of dollars, and corporate personhood. If those three things could be rectified, then I think we'd make huge progress.
I guess if a smart car and go-cart or econo-box got into an accident you'd have a point. But anything heavier than a golf cart will go right through a Smart car. As well, yes heavier cars build more inertia, but if you factor in torque and bigger displacement when driving the drag from a bigger engine can slow you down nicely.Smart car gets highest score in crash tests - Autos- msnbc.com It depends on the accident.
Snow tires/chains plus safe driving will reduce your risk factor for accident by a serious margin. And it would seem that a heavier car on slicker roads would cause more problems due to inertia.
No you haven't, all you have done is given your opinion that "market forces may not be quick enough" to do what you personally see is a problem without saying what the problem is or proving that any problem exists with real data, proclaiming an opinion is your right but asking for laws to be improperly implemented because of an opinion is not.I have already demonstrated examples where market forces were rushed to meet the needs of a problematic situation
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