Moderator: Dictators in Training
Maeya wrote:And then your head just aches from having your hair pulled so tight for so long...
Russian Prime Minister Vladamir Putin has said the US should take a lesson from the pages of Russian history and not exercise “excessive intervention in economic activity and blind faith in the state’s omnipotence”.
“In the 20th century, the Soviet Union made the state’s role absolute,” Putin said during a speech at the opening ceremony of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. “In the long run, this made the Soviet economy totally uncompetitive. This lesson cost us dearly. I am sure nobody wants to see it repeated.”
Sounding more like Barry Goldwater than the former head of the KGB, Putin said, “Nor should we turn a blind eye to the fact that the spirit of free enterprise, including the principle of personal responsibility of businesspeople, investors, and shareholders for their decisions, is being eroded in the last few months. There is no reason to believe that we can achieve better results by shifting responsibility onto the state.”
KaiineTN wrote:
Less central government stimulates growth because it makes doing business easier and more profitable.
KaiineTN wrote:I certainly don't claim to be particularly knowledgeable when it comes to economics. I just try to take what I know and slap some good old fashioned common sense on it.
I see nothing wrong with outsourcing. I've hired outsourced research assistants for projects with great results. I've looked into potentially outsourcing manufacturing as well.
It's a globally competitive economy, and if we can't compete, the Government can't really help. All it can do is make things more expensive for consumers and businesses than they need to be. How will that help anything? I can only see it causing harm, slowing growth, and putting some out of business. A country's wealth comes from production and exports. Our primary export is the dollar, and that wont last forever.
And yet again I say that no monopoly can exist without the help of Government, whether directly or indirectly.
KaiineTN wrote:
And yet again I say that no monopoly can exist without the help of Government, whether directly or indirectly.
And yet again I say that no monopoly can exist without the help of Government, whether directly or indirectly.
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Records show peanut plant president complained about delays caused by contamination reports
By Lyndsey Layton
Washington Post
Posted: 02/11/2009 06:02:25 PM PST
WASHINGTON — As salmonella illness began spreading across the country in the fall, the owner of a Georgia peanut company that was causing the outbreak railed against the cost and delays that the contamination was causing his businesses, according to internal company documents obtained by Congress.
Stewart Parnell, president of the Peanut Corporation of America, also pressed federal regulators to allow him to continue using peanuts from the tainted plant and shipped products to customers with a homemade certificate that falsely attested to their purity, according to e-mails and memos made public Wednesday at a hearing of the House Commerce and Energy Committee.
Parnell, whose company is at the center of a massive food contamination scandal and federal criminal investigation, was compelled by subpoena to appear but refused to answer questions.
The e-mails and records also showed how Parnell repeatedly tried to get around internal tests that showed contamination by sending the samples to a different lab for new tests. When confronted with a reading for salmonella in October, instead of destroying the product — a standard response — Parnell sent it to a new lab and then complained about the delay.
"The time lapse, besides the cost is costing us huge $$$$$," Parnell wrote in an October e-mail to plant manager Sammy Lightsey. In another e-mail, Lightsey said samples taken Aug. 11 tested positive but had been sent to another lab and received a negative result. "Okay, let's turn them loose then," Parnell wrote.
Federal regulators at the hearing called Parnell's actions "unconscionable"; several lawmakers called them criminal.
Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., held up a large jar filled with some of the 1,900 peanut products that have been recalled so far: "I'm going to ask Mr. Parnell if he'd like to open this and sample some of the products that he thought it was OK for others to eat."
The death toll rose to nine Wednesday as officials linked the death of an Ohio woman to the outbreak that has sickened at least 600 people since September.
For two hours, lawmakers heard from victims. Jeff Almer said his 72-year-old mother, Shirley, survived two bouts with cancer only to die in December after being served peanut butter on toast in a Minnesota nursing home.
"Cancer couldn't claim her but peanut butter did," Almer said.
Maeya wrote:And then your head just aches from having your hair pulled so tight for so long...
ClakarEQ wrote:I assume he said no to the question of wanting to snack on those peanuts.
Serously this guy and anyone in his chain of command from the shop floor dude to the chairperson, that knew they shipped tainted product, 2nd degree murder / manslaughter type charges should be put up on them.
Naethyn wrote:The primary duty of government is to protect it's people and it's people's rights. Capitalism has nothing to do with this. Laissez-faire does not equal capitalism. There is a huge difference between government regulation and the government buying out the private sector to keep it afloat.
We are living beyond our means. Spending more money does not correct this situation. We have to cut expenses and bring our budget back into balance. We cannot sustain this mind set of spending more to avoid certainty.
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