Yet we all still lose.MrAngryFace said:Musashi Wins!
Yet we all still lose.MrAngryFace said:Musashi Wins!
Musashi Wins! said:Buddy we're there. We have the worst economy in the country and the highest unemployment besides. I'm in real estate and it's been slowing and probably about to crash. Of course, the bubble is probably coming for everywhere.
I love all the jealous young idiots from other countries and their pre-school sociological debates that start in every thread about the US. Your teenage socialism and angst besides, you don't know shit. You have nothing, you know nothing and your wisdom about the economy and world is just more tin plated bullshit. Get a job a family and a house and come back and tell me about your war against suburbia.
Musashi Wins! said:Buddy we're there. We have the worst economy in the country and the highest unemployment besides. I'm in real estate and it's been slowing and probably about to crash. Of course, the bubble is probably coming for everywhere.
I love all the jealous young idiots from other countries and their pre-school sociological debates that start in every thread about the US. Your teenage socialism and angst besides, you don't know shit. You have nothing, you know nothing and your wisdom about the economy and world is just more tin plated bullshit. Get a job a family and a house and come back and tell me about your war against suburbia.
Musashi Wins! said:Buddy we're there. We have the worst economy in the country and the highest unemployment besides. I'm in real estate and it's been slowing and probably about to crash. Of course, the bubble is probably coming for everywhere.
I love all the jealous young idiots from other countries and their pre-school sociological debates that start in every thread about the US. Your teenage socialism and angst besides, you don't know shit. You have nothing, you know nothing and your wisdom about the economy and world is just more tin plated bullshit. Get a job a family and a house and come back and tell me about your war against suburbia.
DarienA said:Sometimes a post is so good it just needs to be quoted...
and....
and again....
Raoul Duke said:Ok Suburbia lovers, I have a challenge for you. Explain to my socialism addled brain exactly how suburbia is not a waste of resources.
chaostrophy said:Biodiesel is great, right now it's a better solution for fuel shortages than hydrogen for several reasons:
-It can be used in current-tech, proven reliable diesel engines with little to no modifications
-It can be distributed with our current infrastructure of tankers and gas stations
-It's a good use for America's currently unused agricultural capacity, may make farms less dependent on subsidies
Raoul Duke said:Ok Suburbia lovers, I have a challenge for you. Explain to my socialism addled brain exactly how suburbia is not a waste of resources.
Instigator said:The problem is Musashi hasn't really argued anything. He's just saying he knows best and the others are just children.
It's a pretty weak argument.
If everyone from Pittsburgh tried moving near or into the city -- well, they couldn't. Surrounding apartment buildings and the like would not be able to support it. It's too small of a city. Furthermore city life is indeed expensive - parking and rent especially. If you can make a good living (and by that I mean, like $50,000-70,000+/yr), then good for you, live in the city. Most of us could never afford to. And, like I said, even if we COULD there wouldn't be enough room for it. The city was never built for it. And the same story applies to so many other cities.Instigator said:You move closer to where you work. Problem solved. If you really have to live 50 miles from where you work, something is wrong. There should be somewhere in between where you can move to. Might not be as nice, might not be where you grew up, but it's a compromize you make to be closer.
where the fuck else are we supposed to live?Raoul Duke said:Ok Suburbia lovers, I have a challenge for you. Explain to my socialism addled brain exactly how suburbia is not a waste of resources.
Diablos said:If everyone from Pittsburgh tried moving near or into the city -- well, they couldn't. Surrounding apartment buildings and the like would not be able to support it. It's too small of a city. Furthermore city life is indeed expensive - parking and rent especially. If you can make a good living (and by that I mean, like $50,000-70,000+/yr), then good for you, live in the city. Most of us could never afford to. And, like I said, even if we COULD there wouldn't be enough room for it. The city was never built for it. And the same story applies to so many other cities.
WedgeX said:And most people don't want to move back to the cities. That's what happened with Detroit. The city could easily hold another 1.5 million people, if not more. It would empty half of the suburbs. But the way that the city portrays and acts to the suburbs, there's no way even a tenth of the suburbs would even consider moving any closer to Detroit than they have to
East Clintwood said:Please shut up, ok? Americans are the biggest wasters of naturals resources, they should start paying at least the same prices the rest of the world is.
Boogie said:I believe Canada has the highest energy consumption per capita in the world. Or at least, higher than the USA.
Instigator said:No, they seem to be in 4 or 5th place.
http://earthtrends.wri.org/text/energy-resources/variable-351.html
demon said:Just checked online and the highest price for regular gas around Madison WI is $3.25. Fucking. Insane. I think I'll be riding my bike around a little bit more, but what the fuck am I going to do in the winter?
Cocky, not funny.Cubsfan23 said:
aoi tsuki said:On a semi-related note, do any Michiganders remember shortly after 9/11 when gas prices jumped two or three dollars (IIRC ~$4/gallon) in a matter of hours due to the rumor that Saddam was destroying oil fields? It's surreal to think that those are the prices we're paying now.
the problem is that NON-Exxon and Mobil chains don't have nearly enough gas to supply an area. So they will eventually get business from those who are left with no alternative. Even worse, this then encourages a supply/demand fiasco where no one else has gas so those chains can raise prices even further. They then raise prices and the other chains see people paying this so those chains raise prices as well.studio810 said:An email I just received -
poorly thought out chain letter ensues
No, i moved to North Carolina almost three years ago. i used to live in Detroit. Across the street was Dearborn. God i miss living there. ;(Musashi Wins! said:yes. a lot of those same people still own gas stations, too. Does this mean you live in MI, aoi? Are you engaging in sexual deviance with MI women?
To think I passed on filling up my tank last night because it was $2.87
aoi tsuki said:No, i moved to North Carolina almost three years ago. i used to live in Detroit. Across the street was Dearborn. God i miss living there. ;(
Cubsfan is giving subliminal dating advice!demon said:Cocky, not funny.
RonaldoSan said:Try ~6 bucks for a gallon. That's what we are paying in denmark right now.
This is the day that we can prove that german car engineers are much smarter than american ones. You think an american car ever would do 70 miles on a gallon? Heck what about 50?
Musashi Wins! said:Buddy we're there. We have the worst economy in the country and the highest unemployment besides. I'm in real estate and it's been slowing and probably about to crash. Of course, the bubble is probably coming for everywhere.
I love all the jealous young idiots from other countries and their pre-school sociological debates that start in every thread about the US. Your teenage socialism and angst besides, you don't know shit. You have nothing, you know nothing and your wisdom about the economy and world is just more tin plated bullshit. Get a job a family and a house and come back and tell me about your war against suburbia.
RonaldoSan said:Try ~6 bucks for a gallon. That's what we are paying in denmark right now.
This is the day that we can prove that german car engineers are much smarter than american ones. You think an american car ever would do 70 miles on a gallon? Heck what about 50?
Pimped out Lupo ftw!
tedtropy said:Your average American wouldn't get caught dead driving a car that looked like that. As Steve said, our markets are (or at least were) distinctly different.
Yeha, I remember. Luckily, Granholm brought the hammer down on most of those gas stations for trying that crap. We won't be so lucky this time.aoi tsuki said:On a semi-related note, do any Michiganders remember shortly after 9/11 when gas prices jumped two or three dollars (IIRC ~$4/gallon) in a matter of hours due to the rumor that Saddam was destroying oil fields? It's surreal to think that those are the prices we're paying now.
RonaldoSan said:You think an american car ever would do 70 miles on a gallon? Heck what about 50?