Post #55,425
10/8/02 12:17:29 AM
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If you are content to see your local shopping area
consist in 3? 5? years of, about 5 logos - owned, run, 'responding' to customers from some Mega-Corp Office whose fone answerers are in Bangladesh - by all means ignore your local stores. Save x%. Lose -?- Whatever.
Reminds me of a cartoon ~ last year, Sunday Paper (about the last vestiges of any wry commentary, in Big meeja) For Better or Worse - a long running kinda soap.
One character was talking over the fence to a neighbor. Neighbor had remarked about the nice new Big bookstore where she'd driven a ways, purchased some books that day. Then she noted the hour midweek and asked the character, "hey, hows come you're home this afternoon?"
She replied, well, I go in Tues and Thurs now - where I work at the local bookstore. Not enough business.
(Yeah it's those messy workers people again - they do so get in the way of Overall Efficiency and homogenization of resources!)
Ashton
Oh about the food: eaten a tomato lately, ie the chemically-red but way-green and tasteless substitute in your local supermarket? Cheap was it? yeah. Good to eat.. guess it depends upon if you've ever eaten a Real one. I haven't bought one in many years. Some local folks grow real ones though. So yes: we may need a lot more / and smaller groups of / people growing real food. Hmmm maybe nutrition could account for the growing dumbth.. naaah. This way is Way-more Efficient. For accounting purposes and, to some.
(We won't even talk about single-crop effects upon the soil, and how long you can fake it with chemicals. That'd be a book (which my neighbor could write; is, in fact - with proof from his experimental fields.))
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Post #55,432
10/8/02 12:40:12 AM
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not moi iffen ya dont count protein
ignore the glowing beef. Maters are local, run to plant city in one more month for strawberry flats at 3.5 dollars. Fight the local fruit rats for the grapefruit in the Backyard. Told em straight out save me half or the traps go out, oranges in 1 month. Mellums galore. thanx, bill
will work for cash and other incentives [link|http://home.tampabay.rr.com/boxley/resume/Resume.html|skill set]
qui mori didicit servire dedidicit
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Post #55,673
10/9/02 2:16:24 AM
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Tomato(e)s, rant away. Books, those dont change much
If you are content to see your local shopping area consist in 3? 5? years of, about 5 logos - owned, run, 'responding' to customers from some Mega-Corp Office whose fone answerers are in Bangladesh - by all means ignore your local stores. Save x%. Lose -?- Whatever. Fill in that last question mark and we can have a discussion. Otherwise, it's just pontification, and you know how us young 'uns hate pontification.
Many fears are born of stupidity and ignorance - Which you should be feeding with rumour and generalisation. BOfH, 2002 "Episode" 10
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Post #55,744
10/9/02 11:08:46 AM
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Reason I Brought It Up
We have - had - two viable, privately owned bookstores here. One is now a Borders. The other is struggling to stay alive, but I know the owner and he resolutely refuses to be bought out. So if he gets extra cash from me, it's a good thing. As for having to wait, there are usually several special orders in the pipeline so I get my fix on schedule.
I predict Amazon will open brick and mortar stores within the year and crush Borders and Barnes/Noble. The Wal-Mart of media. Yucko.
-drl
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Post #55,745
10/9/02 11:14:50 AM
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Around here Border's IS a local store.
They started in Ann Arbor, and are still headquartered there. And their policies are nothing like Walmart's.
Regards,
-scott anderson
"Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson..."
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Post #55,748
10/9/02 11:28:56 AM
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Scott should like this one from the Daily Show
Jon Stewart was talking about Bush's latest speech. Showed the clip of him saying (roughly) that there was no threat we face that Iraq isn't also perpetrating. Stewart said, "Wow, the Wal-Mart of evil. Wait ... Wal-Mart is the Wal-Mart of evil."
=== Microsoft offers them the one thing most business people will pay any price for - the ability to say "we had no choice - everyone's doing it that way." -- [link|http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?contentid=38978|Andrew Grygus]
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Post #55,769
10/9/02 12:34:56 PM
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I *do* like that one.
Regards,
-scott anderson
"Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson..."
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Post #55,801
10/9/02 3:34:53 PM
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Actually I Like Borders
It's Amazon B&M that will be like Wal-Mart.
(BTW Amazon stock is a good buy.)
-drl
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Post #55,803
10/9/02 3:38:40 PM
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What, got some stock you want to offload? ;-)
End of world rescheduled for day after tomorrow. Something should probably be done. Please advise.
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Post #55,807
10/9/02 3:48:24 PM
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Thinking of Buying
-drl
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Post #55,770
10/9/02 12:35:12 PM
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I understand that DR
It just sounds like clinging to the old faith to me. It's not that the new is intrinsically better, I just fight the idea that older means better. In my experience, you end up trading old evils for new ones anyway. I'm sorry your friend didn't prepare for change. Capitalism's a bitch.
Many fears are born of stupidity and ignorance - Which you should be feeding with rumour and generalisation. BOfH, 2002 "Episode" 10
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Post #55,860
10/9/02 9:11:36 PM
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Yes - when regulation fails to curb its guaranteed excesses.
Did I hear a Rant-call within the noise? OK
In those whose allegiance is to abstract theories, as are employed to obfuscate limitless greed - clearly humans are Nothing if they don't fit a variable in the equation. And these ones are humans' lawful prey. The Bitch Goddess Speaks
:-\ufffd
Assurons-nous bien du fait avant que de nous inqui\ufffdter de la cause -- Fontenelle (Michel Merlin) [cackle] (Let us make sure of the facts before being concerned with the cause)
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