Monday, December 8, 2008

misc.consumers.frugal-living - 25 new messages in 7 topics - digest

misc.consumers.frugal-living
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living?hl=en

misc.consumers.frugal-living@googlegroups.com

Today's topics:

* Is keeping a car 50 years frugal? - 3 messages, 3 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/973c7ade053ebb0f?hl=en
* Folks, this is a real depression, protect your assets - 4 messages, 2
authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/cb1cc803cf7130ab?hl=en
* Why not a holiday from auto buying? - 3 messages, 3 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/9e36c73bdf3daf50?hl=en
* 533,000 Jobs Lost While Feds Import 140,000 Foreign Workers! - 12 messages,
4 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/a1526898a9ebc1d2?hl=en
* Tax Fraud, cancer, and the IRS - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/78b4d9d9aca35c0e?hl=en
* Miss Manners on credit cards and protective clerks/managers - 1 messages, 1
author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/d050e2dac2223a44?hl=en
* How Odin Became Santa Claus: Symbolism and Pagan Origins of a Gift-Giving
Saint - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/915677537a9d5af4?hl=en

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Is keeping a car 50 years frugal?
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/973c7ade053ebb0f?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 12:06 pm
From: Jeff


Vic Smith wrote:
> On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 08:54:25 -0800, The Real Bev
> <bashley101+M@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Daniel T. wrote:
>>> "h" <tmclone@searchmachine.com> wrote:
>>>> "Daniel T." <daniel_t@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>>>> "'nam vet." <georgewkspam@humboldt1.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> It's going on 47 next year. should I keep it? What if I buy a
>>>>>> ford and they go under. warrantee, parts service?
>>>>> How much does your 47 year old car cost you over the next year?
>>>>> Over the next 5 years? Over the next 10 years? Compare that to the
>>>>> cost of a new car...
>>>> Assuming the OP isn't trolling, I'll bet the 47 year old car was
>>>> built to last and might very well be worth keeping on the road until
>>>> it dies.
>>> What does "dies" mean in this context?
>> Something essential that can't be replaced breaks. Case in point: leaf
>> springs for a 1960 Ford station wagon. The ones in the wrecking yard
>> are just as rotten as the ones you have and you can't find any new ones
>> no matter how hard you look.
>
> Just not looking in the right place.
> You can get a leaf spring set up in many spring shops for just about
> any car. Won't be as cheap as bone yard springs, but not very
> expensive either. One of my kids works in such a shop, oddly enough
> called Spring Align.

I agree. I've got a shop right in my neighborhood that does nothing
but make leaf springs.

Must be a lot of them around.


> Frame rot is the only real killer for most cars.
> But when too much cancer hits the body, it might be more frugal to
> replace the car.

If you love the car, you can keep it alive for a long time. If you
don't, a bad tranny or an engine rebuild or a bad fender will finish it off.

Jeff


>
> --Vic
>


== 2 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 12:20 pm
From: Vic Smith


On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 15:06:41 -0500, Jeff <jeff@spam_me_not.com> wrote:


>
> If you love the car, you can keep it alive for a long time. If you
>don't, a bad tranny or an engine rebuild or a bad fender will finish it off.
>
Had an '88 Celebrity I loved. Junked it in 2002 because of body rot.
190k miles. If the rest was good I would have gladly popped $3-4k
for a new engine or tranny if it needed it.
But the body work would cost at least that.
Still ran well, but everything was old, and where do you stop?
Sometimes you just have to let go.

--Vic


== 3 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 1:09 pm
From: OldRoads


On Dec 8, 3:20 pm, Vic Smith <thismailautodele...@comcast.net> wrote:
> On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 15:06:41 -0500, Jeff <jeff@spam_me_not.com> wrote:
>
> >   If you love the car, you can keep it alive for a long time. If you
> >don't, a bad tranny or an engine rebuild or a bad fender will finish it off.
>
> Had an '88 Celebrity I loved.  Junked it in 2002 because of body rot.
> 190k miles.  If the rest was good I would have gladly popped $3-4k
> for a new engine or tranny if it needed it.
> But the body work would cost at least that.
> Still ran well, but everything was old, and where do you stop?
> Sometimes you just have to let go.
>
> --Vic

Up until a couple years ago our shop truck was a 1946. We used it for
a couple decades and it didn't cost much in repairs, parts were still
available and it was great advertising.
Safety was the big problem: drum brakes, vaccum wipers, no defroster,
etc.
I was cheap to run, though.

Vin - Menotomy Vintage Bicycles
http://OldRoads.com

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Folks, this is a real depression, protect your assets
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/cb1cc803cf7130ab?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 4 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 12:25 pm
From: "Dave"

>
>> Great. When unemployment goes over 50%, who is going to need roads and
>> bridges to get to boarded-up factories and office parks?
>
> You assume facts not in evidence. If indeed, unemployment goes over 50%,
> there will be huge problems.

Expect huge problems. Current unemployment is about 17% (and misreported as
close to 7%). Forecasts are for unemployment to go much higher. 50% is not
out of reach. I will be shocked if we don't shatter 25% unemployment in the
U.S. before 2010 (even though it will probably be misreported as 12-13%),
and mildly surprised if we can avoid 50% before 2011.

> If that is your only response, then you are
> not really worth the time it takes to read your posts.

You'd rather bury your head in the sand and hope for the best? Hey, my
viewpoint is optimistic. Sorry if it scares you.


> Your response seems to be the same: Hiring people to build infrastructure
> will not lessen unemployment.

Ummmm...how to say this gently? It is also a pyramid scheme. We can't
artificially create jobs (like government improving infrastructure), because
we need EMPLOYED people to pay taxes to do so!!! This is so obvious, it
shouldn't even need to be pointed out to someone who can THINK.


>> > What if the rail systems were
>> > modernized?
>
>> A rail system is a vacuum which sucks up all the commuters' money to
>> subsidize cheap tickets for the very few people who want to use it.
>
> I was thinking of rail for transport of goods.

Not a bad idea, if we had thousands of trillions of dollars to maintain
current lines and build new ones. I saw an estimate somewhere on how much
money we'd have to spend just to MAINTAIN current rail lines which are
(currently) near peak capacity. I don't remember the exact figure, but it
had a lot of zeros. Basically, to improve the rail system, we'd have to
throw more money at the rail system than we've thrown at the fiasco in Iraq.


> If you look at reality, the Bosotn MBTA has had record ridership since gas
> prices soared. The increase has abated, but has not gone down to
> pre-increase levels.

And outside of urban areas like Boston? There are a few urban areas where
light rail almost (but doesn't) makes sense. Even in THOSE few areas,
ticket prices do not begin to reflect operating costs. If the riders of
light rail had to pay to maintain the light rail (reflected in MUCH higher
ticket costs), light rail would die a gruesome death, literally overnight.
And that would be true with gasoline at $10/gallon. Most of the cost of
operating light rail is paid by people who never go near the light rail
system.

>
> If you haven't noticed, the vast majority of busiesses have stayed in
> business.

Oh yeah, the ones that aren't planning chapter 11 soon are slashing jobs to
avoid filing chapter 11. I guess if you only need to lay off 70% of your
workforce, you are "still in business" though. :)


>> There is nothing "wrong" with improving infrastructure. But that, by
>> itself, won't increase employment.
>
> By itself? Why do you conceive things in a vacuum?
>

Ask Obama. IT'S HIS PLAN. -Dave

== 2 of 4 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 12:42 pm
From: EskWIRED@spamblock.panix.com


In misc.survivalism Dave <noway@nohow.not> wrote:

> >
> >> Great. When unemployment goes over 50%, who is going to need roads and
> >> bridges to get to boarded-up factories and office parks?
> >
> > You assume facts not in evidence. If indeed, unemployment goes over 50%,
> > there will be huge problems.

> Expect huge problems. Current unemployment is about 17% (and misreported as
> close to 7%). Forecasts are for unemployment to go much higher. 50% is not
> out of reach. I will be shocked if we don't shatter 25% unemployment in the
> U.S. before 2010 (even though it will probably be misreported as 12-13%),
> and mildly surprised if we can avoid 50% before 2011.

> > If that is your only response, then you are
> > not really worth the time it takes to read your posts.

> You'd rather bury your head in the sand and hope for the best? Hey, my
> viewpoint is optimistic. Sorry if it scares you.

No. I'd rather hear about why an economic stimulus program which
increases future profitabilty of America's business is doomed to failure.
That is your position. But you haven't explained your viewpoint.


> Ummmm...how to say this gently? It is also a pyramid scheme. We can't
> artificially create jobs (like government improving infrastructure), because
> we need EMPLOYED people to pay taxes to do so!!! This is so obvious, it
> shouldn't even need to be pointed out to someone who can THINK.

You ignore the temporal dimension. Generally, the idea is to hire people
NOW, builing infrastructure, who will have money to spend at businesses
which will employ even more people, and who will employ even more in the
future, once the infrastructure icreases their profitability.


--
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so
certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts.
-- Bertrand Russel

== 3 of 4 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 1:32 pm
From: EskWIRED@spamblock.panix.com


In misc.survivalism Dave <noway1@noway2.not> wrote:

> <EskWIRED@spamblock.panix.com> wrote in message
> news:ghbclh$4b0$3@reader1.panix.com...
> > In misc.survivalism Dave <noway1@noway2.not> wrote:
> >
> > > With a budget imbalance of trillions, how do you propose increasing
> spending
> > > without increasing taxes? Just print more money?
> >
> > Generally, spending is increased without increasing income by borrowing
> > money.
> >

> OK. I'll be gentle here, and assume that you just haven't done the math.
> You speak about borrowing money like it's OK.

I said nothing about the relative merits of borrowing vs. any other
method.


--
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so
certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts.
-- Bertrand Russel

== 4 of 4 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 4:17 pm
From: "Dave"


>> Ummmm...how to say this gently? It is also a pyramid scheme. We can't
>> artificially create jobs (like government improving infrastructure),
>> because
>> we need EMPLOYED people to pay taxes to do so!!! This is so obvious, it
>> shouldn't even need to be pointed out to someone who can THINK.
>
> You ignore the temporal dimension.

Oh I see... we are discussing the U.S. as it exists in an alternate
dimension. I feel so much better now, I thought I was the only intelligent
being left. Turns out, I AM the only one left in this dimension, but I can
live with that.

> Generally, the idea is to hire people
> NOW, builing infrastructure, who will have money to spend at businesses
> which will employ even more people, and who will employ even more in the
> future, once the infrastructure icreases their profitability.

Well in an alternate dimension, it just might work. Ummm, nope, I don't
think it will work, not even in your alternate dimension. Again, it is a
pyramid scheme. You can't tax the people ENOUGH to support it. Eventually,
the tax rate would need to be something in excess of 100% as you'd get to
the point where you have (more people unemployed and working for the
government) than you have employed by private companies.

In other words, if your gross wages are $2,000 per week, we'll have to tax
you $4,000 per week to make your infrastructure improvements. That sound
like a good idea to you? -Dave


==============================================================================
TOPIC: Why not a holiday from auto buying?
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/9e36c73bdf3daf50?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 12:30 pm
From: Dennis


On Sun, 07 Dec 2008 17:26:21 -0500, George <george@nospam.invalid>
wrote:

>I hoped someone would mention that. You just have to laugh when people
>who drink either red or blue kool-aid get upset about the -other- party
>when the reality is all of the politicians are owned by the fat cats and
>special interests. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act is a perfect example of
>that. The red congress created it and the blue president supported and
>signed it. And it met the intended result. The fat cats were free to do
>almost anything they wanted generating remarkably similar results to the
>great depression.

I agree 100%. There are a few mcfl regulars who insist on framing
everything as "My Party Good -- Your Party Evil", when the truth is
that most all politicians are in the pocket of the same masters.

Dennis (evil)
--
An inherent weakness of a pure democracy is that half
the voters are below average intelligence.


== 2 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 1:15 pm
From: OldRoads


On Dec 7, 4:48 pm, denni...@dennism3.invalid (Dennis M) wrote:

>
> I ran across a GM infocommercial for Buick/Pontiac/GMC this morning, never
> seen them do that before.


Yeah, GM is already spending the bailout money we shouldn't give them.
Every GM car I've owned has been junk.
Instead of spending money on R&D and making a better vehicle, they
spend it on advertising and selling silly stuff like their "OnStar"
emergency monitoring.

Vin - Menotomy Vintage Bicycles
http://OldRoads.com


== 3 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 1:31 pm
From: Galen Hekhuis


On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 13:15:58 -0800 (PST), OldRoads
<oldroads@hotmail.com> wrote:

>On Dec 7, 4:48 pm, denni...@dennism3.invalid (Dennis M) wrote:
>
>>
>> I ran across a GM infocommercial for Buick/Pontiac/GMC this morning, never
>> seen them do that before.
>
>
>Yeah, GM is already spending the bailout money we shouldn't give them.
>Every GM car I've owned has been junk.
>Instead of spending money on R&D and making a better vehicle, they
>spend it on advertising and selling silly stuff like their "OnStar"
>emergency monitoring.
>
>Vin - Menotomy Vintage Bicycles
>http://OldRoads.com

Makes it pretty obvious the problem is with the managers, not the
workers.

==============================================================================
TOPIC: 533,000 Jobs Lost While Feds Import 140,000 Foreign Workers!
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/a1526898a9ebc1d2?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 12:47 pm
From: RickH


On Dec 7, 9:59 pm, Mike <M...@localdoman.localhost> wrote:
> On Sun, 07 Dec 2008 17:45:38 -0600, HeyBub wrote:
> > Mike wrote:
>
> >> the decline in the value of computer programming careers was the
> >> natural result of the rise of microsoft because the smart programmers
> >> refused to be caged by the lame ass windows environment and went off to
> >> find greener pastures elsewhere.  another reason is that venture
> >> capitalists don't like funding software projects for which, on the off
> >> chance one actually becomes highly successful, the profits will all
> >> wind up in the hands of a highly predatory monopolistic law firm that
> >> specializes in violating antitrust (ie. msft).
>
> > Quite possibly. Programmers are like dentists - technically oriented,
> > scientifically trained, but also artists. Every sterotype of the beatnik
> > living in a garret in Greenwich Village holds for (most) programmers,
> > even if they wear three-piece suits in a commercial environment.
>
> > I've seen programs that didn't work, wouldn't work, and couldn't be made
> > to work, but were revered because of the style, elegance, and cleverness
> > of the author.
>
> > On the other hand, what's a "smart" programmer? The programmers who
> > started with Microsoft in the early years, and stuck it out, are
> > multimillionaires. Of course they were not true to their own natures,
> > sinned against the basic beauty of the machine-man interaction, and
> > degenerated into venal slugs - but they retired at age 30 on a 60-foot
> > yacht.
>
> > They had no shame.
>
> there's very little evidence that msft ever had any good programmers
> judging by product quality which is as bad as it gets. sure they
> eventually developed an os that doesn't crash every 10 minutes but that
> was written by what, one or two programmers?  how many tens of $billions
> of monopoly profits obtained by highly predatory monopolistic antitrust
> violating activities did it take for that to happen? not to mention how
> many decades behind the technology curve they were in implementing the
> core of a stable system (ie. memory management), twenty years at least
> behind what was standard in computer science, not to mention the plethora
> of systems already using the technology.  no, msft's millionaires didn't
> come from technology, it came from sales/marketing and a whole lot of
> antitrust violating "innovation". now that's not to say that there
> weren't any msft millionaires that had the title of "programmer", but
> their success is more properly attributed to being in the right place at
> the right time (under the astronomically huge waterfall of antitrust
> violating monopoly profits) because in the real world (outside of the
> fiction created within the walls of msft) applications like talking
> paperclips & "microsoft bob" just don't cut it. so the point being that
> all the programmers that didn't happen to be working for msft could see
> the writing on the wall, and the smart ones reacted accordingly...- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -


My original post was in reference to general-purpose-computers being
programmed for corporate applications. It is irrelavent if those
computers are Microsoft, IBM, Apple, Linux, Unix, etc based. Large
companies for the most part have moved much of the application
development work offshore. Leaving IT professionals in the US no
longer writing code, but instead integrating and testing code received
from India. These jobs are low-skilled compared to those who write
code and must keep up with technology. The next wave of IT outsorcing
will be in the areas of hardware and network management. Eventually
systems analysis and business analysis work will also be outsourced.
Microsoft, IBM, Sun have nothing to do with the offshoring of work as
a direct result of law suits, they too are doing it for cheap highly-
skilled labor. If anything IBM has been far more guilty than
Microsoft of offshoring the IT industry, the US is on the decline in
Information Technology. Even the large US consulting firms like
Accenture and CSC offshore the work when they land a large contract
with a big US company. The "Microsoft writes bad code argument" holds
no water as Microsoft is getting blown offshore by the same economic
forces blowing all the IT work offshore.

I would think that medical work like MRI reading, etc will also go
offshore as the data can be quickly turned around.

== 2 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 12:51 pm
From: RickH


On Dec 7, 11:12 pm, patmpow...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Dec 8, 7:45 am, "HeyBub" <hey...@NOSPAMgmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > I've seen programs that didn't work, wouldn't work, and couldn't be made to
> > work, but were revered because of the style, elegance, and cleverness of the
> > author.
>
> That I have never seen.

Same here. I've been in the field 30 years and I've never seen that
either, maybe in academia, but in the real world programs that abend
are garbage, despised and never revered. The cleverness of their
authors is more often a source of giggle and managers who say "lets
make this guy our QA testing guy, just dont let him code anymore".

== 3 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 1:20 pm
From: "HeyBub"


RickH wrote:
> On Dec 7, 11:12 pm, patmpow...@gmail.com wrote:
>> On Dec 8, 7:45 am, "HeyBub" <hey...@NOSPAMgmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>> I've seen programs that didn't work, wouldn't work, and couldn't be
>>> made to work, but were revered because of the style, elegance, and
>>> cleverness of the author.
>>
>> That I have never seen.
>
> Same here. I've been in the field 30 years and I've never seen that
> either, maybe in academia, but in the real world programs that abend
> are garbage, despised and never revered. The cleverness of their
> authors is more often a source of giggle and managers who say "lets
> make this guy our QA testing guy, just dont let him code anymore".

My last job as a contract programmer was to create a report. They gave me
the file layout.

"In what order are the data," I naively asked.
"Oh, it depends on what we did to it last," was the answer.
"(!!!) Uh, you mean you sort the master file?" asked I.
"Sure," said they.

That's not the only example of how stupid they* were. They paid me so much
money I had to have a dump truck to carry it to the bank.

---
* A division of A.C. Nielson (the TV-rating people).


== 4 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 1:46 pm
From: clams_casino


suds macheath wrote:

> clams_casino wrote:
>
>> suds macheath wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Why haven't you jumped on the gravy train, if it's such a cushy job?
>>> Can't cut it?
>>
>>
>>
>> Never considered it when I was younger. It would be a serious
>> consideration if I was entering college today.
>>
>> My brother switched to a teaching career when he was about forty.
>> He thoroughly enjoys those 12 week summer vacations
>
>
> ---except for the fact you don't get paid for the "summer
> vacations"....teachers are paid for 10 months....
>
> as well as the extra
>
>> holiday and mid winter breaks. He admits the job has its ups and
>> downs, but it's primarily the administration rather than the kids
>> that are the problem. Nevertheless, he has claims to have no
>> regrets dumping the 40+ hr corporate job. If nothing else, his job
>> will never be out source,
>
>
> ----If the tax base falls it will....
>
> plus the health and retirement benefits are outstanding.
>
> -----Really? He started at forty, he'll get full retirement at 70?


Of course it won't be a full pension, but considering how few companies
even have pensions anymore (or have significantly reduced them), it's a
moot point..


== 5 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 1:50 pm
From: clams_casino


BobR wrote:

>On Dec 8, 8:15 am, "hall...@aol.com" <hall...@aol.com> wrote:
>
>
>>locally teachers with 10 years experience are making just under a 100
>>grand ......
>>
>>way more than the average pay of residents
>>
>>looks like national unemployment will go to over 10%
>>
>>bushes legacy costs are going to be killers
>>
>>
>
>That may be true where you live but that is far from the case
>elsewhere. Where I live, teachers with 10 years experience are lucky
>to make $40k per year.
>
>

Here, they typically receive $100k with benefits. An average of $60k
in wages.


== 6 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 2:02 pm
From: clams_casino


suds macheath wrote:

> clams_casino wrote:
>
>> suds macheath wrote:
>>
>>>>
>>>> In PA the union teachers have an ultra deluxe Blue Cross health
>>>> plan that was crafted especially just for them. There is zero
>>>> possibility for out of pocket expense.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ---They don't pay premiums for their families?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Not much around here. Full family coverage was 100% covered until
>> recent years, but now they are paying about 5%.
>
>
> ----I find that hard to believe....I have the same plan as the
> teachers and my premium's around $650 month....plus deductibles for
> any hospital stays...


RI has 36 school districts- "33 of the state's 36 districts required
some form of cost sharing"

"In the 2006-2007 school year, three districts — East Providence, New
Shoreham and Pawtucket — still did not require teachers to pay a cent
toward their health premium, which cost taxpayers an average of $13,500
for a family plan and $5,200 for an individual plan statewide". "In
contrast, teachers in Barrington and Coventry paid 15 percent last year
— or about $2,000 a year for a family plan."

"Last year, teachers in 17 districts paid less than $1,000 a year toward
their family plan. Teachers in 20 districts paid $540 a year or less for
individual coverage."

== 7 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 3:01 pm
From: suds macheath


George wrote:
> suds macheath wrote:
>> clams_casino wrote:
>>> suds macheath wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Why haven't you jumped on the gravy train, if it's such a cushy job?
>>>> Can't cut it?
>>>
>>>
>>> Never considered it when I was younger. It would be a serious
>>> consideration if I was entering college today.
>>>
>>> My brother switched to a teaching career when he was about forty.
>>> He thoroughly enjoys those 12 week summer vacations
>>
>> ---except for the fact you don't get paid for the "summer
>> vacations"....teachers are paid for 10 months....
>
>
> Sure they do.

----No, they don't. They are 10 month employees. They get paid over the
summer months if they have their 10 month pay divided evenly over 12
months...the summer months are *not* paid vacation days.

It is a salaried position and the pay is quoted at an
> annual rate. They just happen to only need to actually show up for 40
> weeks/year. In our states public schools they can choose to be paid
> their salary/52 or salary/40 to reflect the time that they actually need
> to show up. The salary/40 payment method is from older days when people
> were paid with physical checks.

----Uh, until *very* recently (this year), they *were* paid with
physical checks. Teachers that had direct deposit had a plan with the
credit union that divided their pay evenly over 12 months.


== 8 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 3:03 pm
From: suds macheath


clams_casino wrote:
> suds macheath wrote:
>
>> clams_casino wrote:
>>
>>> suds macheath wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Why haven't you jumped on the gravy train, if it's such a cushy job?
>>>> Can't cut it?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Never considered it when I was younger. It would be a serious
>>> consideration if I was entering college today.

----But, you would be making considerably less than 60k a
year...probably about half that....

>>>
>>> My brother switched to a teaching career when he was about forty.
>>> He thoroughly enjoys those 12 week summer vacations
>>
>>
>> ---except for the fact you don't get paid for the "summer
>> vacations"....teachers are paid for 10 months....
>>
>> as well as the extra
>>
>>> holiday and mid winter breaks. He admits the job has its ups and
>>> downs, but it's primarily the administration rather than the kids
>>> that are the problem. Nevertheless, he has claims to have no
>>> regrets dumping the 40+ hr corporate job. If nothing else, his job
>>> will never be out source,
>>
>>
>> ----If the tax base falls it will....
>>
>> plus the health and retirement benefits are outstanding.
>>
>> -----Really? He started at forty, he'll get full retirement at 70?
>
>
> Of course it won't be a full pension, but considering how few companies
> even have pensions anymore (or have significantly reduced them), it's a
> moot point..

---There once was a fox, strolling through a vineyard......


== 9 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 3:06 pm
From: clams_casino


suds macheath wrote:

> George wrote:
>
>> suds macheath wrote:
>>
>>> clams_casino wrote:
>>>
>>>> suds macheath wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Why haven't you jumped on the gravy train, if it's such a cushy job?
>>>>> Can't cut it?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Never considered it when I was younger. It would be a serious
>>>> consideration if I was entering college today.
>>>>
>>>> My brother switched to a teaching career when he was about forty.
>>>> He thoroughly enjoys those 12 week summer vacations
>>>
>>>
>>> ---except for the fact you don't get paid for the "summer
>>> vacations"....teachers are paid for 10 months....
>>
>>
>>
>> Sure they do.
>
>
> ----No, they don't. They are 10 month employees. They get paid over
> the summer months if they have their 10 month pay divided evenly over
> 12 months...the summer months are *not* paid vacation days.


So how is that different from a 52 week salary with 5 weeks vacation?
(Other than an extra seven weeks off.)

== 10 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 3:09 pm
From: clams_casino


suds macheath wrote:

> clams_casino wrote:
>
>> suds macheath wrote:
>>
>>> clams_casino wrote:
>>>
>>>> suds macheath wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Why haven't you jumped on the gravy train, if it's such a cushy job?
>>>>> Can't cut it?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Never considered it when I was younger. It would be a serious
>>>> consideration if I was entering college today.
>>>
>
> ----But, you would be making considerably less than 60k a
> year...probably about half that....
>
>>>>
>>>> My brother switched to a teaching career when he was about forty.
>>>> He thoroughly enjoys those 12 week summer vacations
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ---except for the fact you don't get paid for the "summer
>>> vacations"....teachers are paid for 10 months....
>>>
>>> as well as the extra
>>>
>>>> holiday and mid winter breaks. He admits the job has its ups and
>>>> downs, but it's primarily the administration rather than the kids
>>>> that are the problem. Nevertheless, he has claims to have no
>>>> regrets dumping the 40+ hr corporate job. If nothing else, his
>>>> job will never be out source,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ----If the tax base falls it will....
>>>
>>> plus the health and retirement benefits are outstanding.
>>>
>>> -----Really? He started at forty, he'll get full retirement at 70?
>>
>>
>>
>> Of course it won't be a full pension, but considering how few
>> companies even have pensions anymore (or have significantly reduced
>> them), it's a moot point..
>
>
> ---There once was a fox, strolling through a vineyard......


I'm not sure what that means, but his previous job had no pension, so
the teacher's pension (no matter how large) is gravy. I don't know the
specifics of his pension, but most grant pensions at age 60-65
regardless of years service.


== 11 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 3:14 pm
From: suds macheath


clams_casino wrote:
> suds macheath wrote:
>
>> clams_casino wrote:
>>
>>> suds macheath wrote:
>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> In PA the union teachers have an ultra deluxe Blue Cross health
>>>>> plan that was crafted especially just for them. There is zero
>>>>> possibility for out of pocket expense.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ---They don't pay premiums for their families?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Not much around here. Full family coverage was 100% covered until
>>> recent years, but now they are paying about 5%.
>>
>>
>> ----I find that hard to believe....I have the same plan as the
>> teachers and my premium's around $650 month....plus deductibles for
>> any hospital stays...
>
>
> RI has 36 school districts- "33 of the state's 36 districts required
> some form of cost sharing"
>
> "In the 2006-2007 school year, three districts — East Providence, New
> Shoreham and Pawtucket — still did not require teachers to pay a cent
> toward their health premium, which cost taxpayers an average of $13,500
> for a family plan and $5,200 for an individual plan statewide". "In
> contrast, teachers in Barrington and Coventry paid 15 percent last year
> — or about $2,000 a year for a family plan."
>
> "Last year, teachers in 17 districts paid less than $1,000 a year toward
> their family plan. Teachers in 20 districts paid $540 a year or less for
> individual coverage."
>

---In Miami Dade, the 4th largest district nationally, I pay a family
rate of over $2K a year.....and 20% of any hospital costs....we have the
same plan as teachers....


== 12 of 12 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 3:36 pm
From: suds macheath


George wrote:
> suds macheath wrote:
>> George wrote:
>>> clams_casino wrote:
>>>> suds macheath wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> clams_casino wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> John Galt wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> But, why would a retired engineer want to get up at 6AM and be
>>>>>>> grading papers in front of the TV at night for 30K per year?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What teacher gets $30k /yr other than perhaps newly hired, just
>>>>>> out of college? Here, they are paid an AVERAGE of $60k
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> ----How many of those have doctorates or masters degrees, and have
>>>>> been teaching for 20+ years? All of them?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> That's the average. Those with masters tend to be paid $75k and
>>>> up. I'm not too sure many at the elementary / Jr high / High
>>>> school level have doctorates.
>>>>
>>>> http://cspf.wordpress.com/2007/02/07/questioning-teacher-salaries-2/
>>>> is a typical RI situation. Granted, teachers put in much over time,
>>>> but but salary position doesn't?
>>>
>>> In my state that would be teachers. In my state the most powerful
>>> labor union is the PSEA which represents the public school teachers.
>>>
>>> Most of my jobs have been salaried and I have a comparable eduction
>>> to a teacher. I have a number of friends and relatives who are teachers.
>>>
>>> A typical teacher works six hours/day here. It is pretty unusual for
>>> them to take work home since they have a 1 hour study period where
>>> they can also do grading.

----Depends what they're grading.....let's say 5 periods a day, 30
students per period, that's 150 students a day.....do you think you
could read 150 essays in an hour? Along with gradebooks and calls to
parents of discipline problems? And, not all teachers have a planning
period, some have 6 periods a day.....

If a new teacher works harder they are
>>> quietly pulled and the side and told to cut it out and follow
>>> whatever is in the workbooks.

----Hearsay....

Their union contracts require that at
>>> least two teachers must be present for any event be it a bake sale or
>>> sporting competition. They get an additional $150 each for up to 2
>>> hours for this.

----I'm sure the AP's would like to get on that gravy train. Here, an AP
at a school function, no matter how long, makes $20....that's right
$20...I'm the one that paid them at sports events....teachers may make
supplemental pay for coaching a sports team, but it's peanuts, less than
$1K a year, I believe...

>>
>>
>> ----Sounds too good to be true....why aren't you on the gravy train.....
>
>
> Just stating the facts which have absolutely nothing to do with the
> personal choice of anyone.

-----Sounds a little like sour grapes to me.....teachers are stealing
our money! Maybe you need to sub for a week, get a little experience....
I'm betting you go home with a splitting headache most days....

>>>> What corporation provides 12 weeks vacation per year? Other than
>>>> UAW and government employees, I'm not aware of many paying full (or
>>>> even 90%) health coverage.
>>>
>>> In PA the union teachers have an ultra deluxe Blue Cross health plan
>>> that was crafted especially just for them. There is zero possibility
>>> for out of pocket expense.
>>
>> ---They don't pay premiums for their families?
>
>
> No, all family members are covered

----Really? I pay over $2K per year in premiums, and 20% of any hospital
costs....and, that's the bargain basement HMO plan. I have the same plan
as the teachers...

and even better if a spouse also
> happens to be a teacher they get the 1,800/month paid directly to them.

-----Doesn't happen here....

>
>>
>> This costs us over $1,800/month for each teacher.
>>> And as you stated they get 12 weeks paid vacation,
>>
>> ---They don't get paid for the summer months, do they? It takes years
>> to build up 60 vacation days....
>
> Sure they do.

----Nope. They are 10 month employees here in Miami-Dade, the nations
4th largest district. They don't get paid for the summer months, they
have to budget for them.

Teachers are paid an *annual* salary. Their job requires
> them to be at school for 40 weeks and they have 12 weeks when they don't
> need to be there.

---The summer months are not paid vacation days....

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Tax Fraud, cancer, and the IRS
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/78b4d9d9aca35c0e?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 1:12 pm
From: MSfortune@mcpmail.com


phil scott wrote:
> On Dec 8, 7:29�am, MSfort...@mcpmail.com wrote:
> > phil scott wrote:
> >
> > > myself, Id rather be shot than see my nation ruined by non productive
> > > scum, currently using tax payer money by the trillions to pay bonus's
> > > to their criminal cohortsrunning the fraudulent bank loan and
> > > derivitives schemes.
> >
> > > Phil scott
> >
> > Sir, do you request a blindfold?
>
>
> It is understandable that men with families seek to stay out of
> trouble, not agravate
> those in power ..... in order to give their famiies a chance at some
> food and shelter...thats been
> the history of men in these regards... all such men and nations, and
> thier families die in utter degradation, all thougout history.... some
> dressed better than others, a little fatter.
>
> thats the only difference.
>
>
>
>
> a man can live, and die, limitlessly above that level if he has the
> mind... some of us planned it that way...
>
>
>
> thats been absolutely wonderful.. not cowering or any of that...such
> frees the mind, sinues and spirit to much greater insight.
> some of us live for that..
>
> we dont value the comfort of cowering in fear, we are not in the least
> afraid to die, or to live for that matter...
> in fact we look forward to each of those second by second... as an
> opportunity.. yet another frontier, and as a gift left behind.
>

Death is greatly over-rated as an opportunity. I'm prepared to wait.

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Miss Manners on credit cards and protective clerks/managers
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/d050e2dac2223a44?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 2:37 pm
From: "h"

"Steve Daniels" <sdaniels@gorge.net> wrote in message
news:flpqj49l1p8hoknpi8gpq45smi13l2uehi@4ax.com...
> On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 08:25:35 -0500, against all advice, something
> compelled "h" <tmclone@searchmachine.com>, to say:
>
>>
>> "Evelyn Leeper" <eleeper@optonline.net> wrote in message
>> news:493c7e6a$0$4879$607ed4bc@cv.net...
>> >h wrote:
>> >> "Steve Daniels" <sdaniels@gorge.net> wrote in message
>> >> news:3ffoj4ts8m623kqv55ll784r0mg5fpsb3f@4ax.com...
>> >>> On Fri, 5 Dec 2008 15:15:00 -0800, against all advice, something
>> >>> compelled Coffee's For Closers <USENET2008@THE-DOMAIN-IN.SIG>, to
>> >>> say:
>> >>>
>> >>>> The logic is to make a credit card transaction as easy as
>> >>>> possible. So that you won't be discouraged by the small
>> extra
>> >>>> hassle of ID. The Visa and MasterCard associations want card
>> >>>> usage to be as easy as cash, or even easier.
>> >>>
>> >>> You know on the back, on that little strip where you're supposed
>> >>> to put your signature? Mine says, "Ask for picture ID."
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >> And you know what? That's not legal. Not signing the card is a
>> violation
>> >> of the card agreement, and merchants are not supposed to accept
>> unsigned
>> >> cards. If they do the charge can be easily contested. The post
>> office,
>> >> for example, will not take your credit card if it is not signed.
>> Neither
>> >> will many businesses, mine included. Also, at least here in NY, it
>> is a
>> >> violation of the merchant agreement to ask a customer for ID if
>> they are
>> >> using a credit card. So...if you don't sign your card I can't
>> accept it,
>> >> and I'm not allowed to ask for the picture ID you'd rather give.
>> How
>> >> often are you able to use the card for anything expect swipe
>> purchases?
>> >
>> > Mine says that, and I've never had a problem--including at the post
>> > office. They ask for picture ID, I show it, and that's that.
>> >
>> Don't know where you live, but that doesn't fly in NY.
>
> It did in New York City in October of '01. I don't think you can
> get any more New York than that.
>

Gee...7 years ago. Not sure the card companies were as strict with merchants
back then. Still not impressed. Just because some merchants are lax in their
business practices doesn't mean we all are.

==============================================================================
TOPIC: How Odin Became Santa Claus: Symbolism and Pagan Origins of a Gift-
Giving Saint
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/915677537a9d5af4?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 4:15 pm
From: wismel@yahoo.com


On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 02:10:24 -0800 (PST), LOVE Europe HATE the EU
<zzzxtyryyetytryey@googlemail.com> wrote:

>How Odin Became Santa Claus: Symbolism and Pagan Origins of a Gift-
>Giving Saint
>by Anja Heij
>
>http://www.odins-gift.com/poth/1imoth/wildhunt2.gif
>http://img510.imageshack.us/img510/9748/santasleigh800ip3.jpg
>
>The story begins in the northern regions of Europe where the supreme
>god Odin, also known as Wodan among the German tribes, reigned. (He
>still lives among us in Wednesday, which is Wodan's day). Odin/Wodan
>was the god of wisdom, magick and occult knowledge, runes, poetry and
>war. His name means "the inspired one". Like a shaman he could travel
>in other worlds to gather more insight while his two black ravens
>Huginn (Thought) and Muninn (Memory) kept him informed about the news
>in the world. Odin was depicted as a tall, old man with a white beard
>and wearing a cloak. He rode the skies and the seas on his fast white
>horse Sleipnir with his 8 (the number of transformation) legs, while
>carrying his never missing spear Gungnir (clear and focused intent) in
>his hand. He had one eye, for he had offered the other eye in exchange
>for gathering wisdom at the well of the head Mimir (Norse
>representation of the Source) and with that he became a shapeshifter,
>able of seeing in the outward world with his normal eye and
>understanding the inward worlds with his black, removed, eye. He was
>very beloved among his friends and followers who felt happy and
>energized in his surroundings (an enlightened being?). His enemies
>however he could paralyze or kill with his sight (insight, the truth).
>Odin trained many men and women as warriors for the final battle
>against the forces of destruction in the underworld at Ragnarok (the
>Norse judgement day). His fearless warriors often painted their bodies
>black and fought in the middle of the night.
>
>The story of Odin/Wodan is the battle between good and evil which will
>stop when we finally realize that black and white are two sides of the
>same coin. Odin is a mythical representation of goodness with his
>wisdom, white beard and white horse (in New Age terms we would depict
>him as 'white divine light'). And he is wise enough to understand that
>'black' is not similar to 'dark' in the sense of 'evil and taboo' for
>his helpers are black ravens and black (spiritual) warriors. The evil
>he fights is the underworld dragon of false beliefs, untruth and
>selfishness (in New Age terms we would call this 'ego').
>(So now we have a wise, good man performing magick/miracles with a
>white horse riding the skies, a white beard, a cloak, a spear and
>black advisors/informers/helpers and he is also god of poetry).
>
>Next we go to the Roman empire where between December 17 and 24 the
>pagan Saturnalia were celebrated, big feasts with a lot of
>merrymaking, dancing, gambling, sensuality and the exchange of gifts.
>This festival was meant to celebrate the return of the sun on the
>shortest days of the year and to counteract the depression due to lack
>of sunlight.
>(Here we find December celebrations with gifts.)
>
>Time goes by. Christianity develops itself. In the 4th century in
>Myra, Turkey, a Christian bishop named Nicholas lived with a great
>reputation for goodness, benevolence and performing miracles for the
>poor and unhappy. He miraculously supplied gold to three (number of
>manifestation) girls as marriage dowries so they did not have to
>become prostitutes and he brought three children back to life who had
>been chopped by a butcher. It is not difficult to understand that
>during the poverty of the Middle Ages (also called Dark Ages) this
>bishop became extremely popular as Saint Nicholas in all parts of
>Europe. His feastday, it was said to be his birthday, was December 5
>or 6, nobody knows. There is no historical evidence however for the
>true existence of this saint.
>(So now we see a benevolent, miracle performing bishop with a white
>dress and a red cloak.)
>
>After the Reformation Saint Nicholas became forgotten in all the
>protestant countries of Europe except Holland. There he became
>Sinterklaas; a kind and wise old man with a white beard, white dress,
>red cloak, a crosier and riding the skies and roofs of the houses on
>his white horse, accompanied by his Black Jacks. Sinterklaas will
>visit you on his birthday December 5 or 6 and donate gifts. His Black
>Jacks have miraculously gathered information about your behavior
>during the last year; if it were good you will now be rewarded with
>presents, if it were bad you will be punished by the Black Jacks who
>will beat you with their rods or even worse: put you in a big bag and
>take you with to Spain, said to be the residence of Sinterklaas. The
>last thing seems to be a Christian influence: punishment by a severe
>father if you don't behave morally just. On the other hand: if you do
>behave nice you will be rewarded with sweets and gifts accompanied by
>humoristic poems that give insight in your weaknesses.
>(Here the mix becomes clear between Odin the good magician god and the
>miracles of the benevolent Sinterklaas. They both ride a white horse
>in the skies,wear a white beard, a cloak and a spear/cosier. They both
>have black helpers. They try to support goodness and dispel evil
>through knowledge. And remember the poetry part? And the blend with
>Roman influences shows itself in a December feast with gaiety and
>presents.)
>
>In the 17th century Dutchmen emigrated to Northern America and brought
>their tradition of Sinterklaas with. In the new English speaking world
>the name changed into Santa Claus. In 1930 a designer for the Coca-
>Cola Company was asked to draw attractive advertisements for this
>drink that did not sell well in wintertime. He had to use the company
>colors red and white and create some cosy type. He remembered the
>Dutch Santa Claus with his white dress, red cloak, long white beard,
>kindness and benevolence. The eight-legged horse was replaced for
>eight flying reindeer. A punishing Black Jack was inappropriate in
>this concept, so he disappeared. This new Santa Claus became a big
>hit. He became so popular that right now in Europe he is serious
>competition for Sinterklaas. That's understandable: no more fear for
>punishing Black Jacks, and you no longer have to sweat on suitable
>poetry for your gifts. And the search for human perfection of Odin?
>Well, can't we just have that as a Christmas present from Santa Claus?
>
>http://www.stormfront.org/forum/showthread.php?t=535855


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misc.consumers.frugal-living - 25 new messages in 10 topics - digest

misc.consumers.frugal-living
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living?hl=en

misc.consumers.frugal-living@googlegroups.com

Today's topics:

* Is keeping a car 50 years frugal? - 7 messages, 5 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/973c7ade053ebb0f?hl=en
* 533,000 Jobs Lost While Feds Import 140,000 Foreign Workers! - 6 messages, 3
authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/a1526898a9ebc1d2?hl=en
* घर बैठे कमायें लाखो रुपये - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/439d75fdc53241d6?hl=en
* supreme court to determine obama presidential eligibilty - 3 messages, 3
authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/546a49e0512f561c?hl=en
* Miss Manners on credit cards and protective clerks/managers - 3 messages, 1
author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/d050e2dac2223a44?hl=en
* New 650mAh Rechargeable Replacement CASIO NP-20 Digital Camera Battery - 1
messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/ae7b4d7727629d99?hl=en
* professional AAAAA+++ replica watches suppliers - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/a38e34db229bf082?hl=en
* Tax Fraud, cancer, and the IRS - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/78b4d9d9aca35c0e?hl=en
* Folks, this is a real depression, protect your assets - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/cb1cc803cf7130ab?hl=en
* Financial Services Inter/Nationalization, effective as of 08.08.08 (www.
grishenkoff.com/Finance.html) - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/fe2bd7bda3dfe136?hl=en

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Is keeping a car 50 years frugal?
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/973c7ade053ebb0f?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 7 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 8:42 am
From: Theev


Lou wrote:
> "'nam vet." <georgewkspam@humboldt1.com> wrote in message
> news:georgewkspam-FF6CDA.15425507122008@news.humboldt1.com...
>> It's going on 47 next year. should I keep it? What if I buy a ford and
>> they go under. warrantee, parts service?
>
> Let's see, you have a 47 year old car, and you're worried about warrantees,
> parts, and service on a new(er) car? Whatever happens, the parts and
> service situation would have to be easier than it is for that 47 year old
> car.

Not necessarily. Fewer -- LOTS fewer -- things to go wrong with the
older car, and you can fix them yourself. If you break an outside
mirror you can just screw on a new generic one (or one from a wrecking
yard). You don't have to disassemble the dashboard area (a $400 job 10
years ago).

--
Cheers,
Bev


== 2 of 7 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 8:54 am
From: The Real Bev


Daniel T. wrote:
> "h" <tmclone@searchmachine.com> wrote:
>> "Daniel T." <daniel_t@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>> "'nam vet." <georgewkspam@humboldt1.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> It's going on 47 next year. should I keep it? What if I buy a
>>>> ford and they go under. warrantee, parts service?
>>> How much does your 47 year old car cost you over the next year?
>>> Over the next 5 years? Over the next 10 years? Compare that to the
>>> cost of a new car...
>> Assuming the OP isn't trolling, I'll bet the 47 year old car was
>> built to last and might very well be worth keeping on the road until
>> it dies.
>
> What does "dies" mean in this context?

Something essential that can't be replaced breaks. Case in point: leaf
springs for a 1960 Ford station wagon. The ones in the wrecking yard
are just as rotten as the ones you have and you can't find any new ones
no matter how hard you look.

--
Cheers, Bev
==============================
All bleeding eventually stops.


== 3 of 7 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 9:07 am
From: Vic Smith


On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 08:54:25 -0800, The Real Bev
<bashley101+M@gmail.com> wrote:

>Daniel T. wrote:
>> "h" <tmclone@searchmachine.com> wrote:
>>> "Daniel T." <daniel_t@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>>> "'nam vet." <georgewkspam@humboldt1.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> It's going on 47 next year. should I keep it? What if I buy a
>>>>> ford and they go under. warrantee, parts service?
>>>> How much does your 47 year old car cost you over the next year?
>>>> Over the next 5 years? Over the next 10 years? Compare that to the
>>>> cost of a new car...
>>> Assuming the OP isn't trolling, I'll bet the 47 year old car was
>>> built to last and might very well be worth keeping on the road until
>>> it dies.
>>
>> What does "dies" mean in this context?
>
>Something essential that can't be replaced breaks. Case in point: leaf
>springs for a 1960 Ford station wagon. The ones in the wrecking yard
>are just as rotten as the ones you have and you can't find any new ones
>no matter how hard you look.

Just not looking in the right place.
You can get a leaf spring set up in many spring shops for just about
any car. Won't be as cheap as bone yard springs, but not very
expensive either. One of my kids works in such a shop, oddly enough
called Spring Align.
Frame rot is the only real killer for most cars.
But when too much cancer hits the body, it might be more frugal to
replace the car.

--Vic

== 4 of 7 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 9:38 am
From: curly'q


Vic Smith wrote:
> On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 08:54:25 -0800, The Real Bev
> <bashley101+M@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Daniel T. wrote:
>>> "h" <tmclone@searchmachine.com> wrote:
>>>> "Daniel T." <daniel_t@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>>>> "'nam vet." <georgewkspam@humboldt1.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> It's going on 47 next year. should I keep it? What if I buy a
>>>>>> ford and they go under. warrantee, parts service?
>>>>> How much does your 47 year old car cost you over the next year?
>>>>> Over the next 5 years? Over the next 10 years? Compare that to the
>>>>> cost of a new car...
>>>> Assuming the OP isn't trolling, I'll bet the 47 year old car was
>>>> built to last and might very well be worth keeping on the road until
>>>> it dies.
>>> What does "dies" mean in this context?
>> Something essential that can't be replaced breaks. Case in point: leaf
>> springs for a 1960 Ford station wagon. The ones in the wrecking yard
>> are just as rotten as the ones you have and you can't find any new ones
>> no matter how hard you look.
>
> Just not looking in the right place.
> You can get a leaf spring set up in many spring shops for just about
> any car. Won't be as cheap as bone yard springs, but not very
> expensive either. One of my kids works in such a shop, oddly enough
> called Spring Align.
> Frame rot is the only real killer for most cars.
> But when too much cancer hits the body, it might be more frugal to
> replace the car.
>
> --Vic
>

I agree. Up here in the road salt belt, those late '80s early '90s
Hondas and Toyotas then run forever (probably the best generation for
both) are mostly all swiss cheese and not worth anything to me.

LA


== 5 of 7 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 10:53 am
From: Jeff


Don Klipstein wrote:
> In article <Xns9B6DCC19918B5TBAnoonecarescom@87.106.137.111>, Malcolm
> \"Mal\" Reynolds wrote:
>> "'nam vet." <georgewkspam@humboldt1.com> wrote in news:georgewkspam-
>> FF6CDA.15425507122008@news.humboldt1.com:
>>
>>> It's going on 47 next year. should I keep it? What if I buy a ford and
>>> they go under. warrantee, parts service?
>> You have a 47 year old car. How long have you had it? Does it work?
>
> I wonder if a 47 year old car as of 2008 even has air conditioning
> (including any that has conked out). I suspect more likely not, since I
> found presence of air conditioning in cars to be selling points and
> options for new cars about 35 years ago.

Boy, that just shows how a few extra years will change your opinion of
auto AC.

I have a friend that used to cut the AC drive belts (to save
horsepower), now he adds ACs to cars that didn't have them.

There's short term frugal and long term. But I'm not sure either one
matters here. You might drive a 10 year old or 20 year old car because
it is frugal not to buy a newer model. No one does that for a 1961
model. You drive that car because you like it!

Now, there's few cars of that era that are frugal on gas. The
collectables in particular are gas hogs.

Jeff

Who drives a 20 year old car, owns a couple of 1970 models, and is
looking for a Honda hx for a daily driver.

Jeff

>
> Keep in mind that A/C system in a car has the main good way to defog
> windows on cool/cold humid days.
>
> How much are you good for having your car being one without A/C and the
> window defogging that is done so much better when the car has a working
> A/C system?
>
> (Yes, I am aware that most cars less than 20 years old use the
> A/C system to "defrost" the front windshield and such cars that
> have a feature to "defog" the rear window do so by resistance heating.)
>
> - Don Klipstein (don@misty.com)


== 6 of 7 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 11:28 am
From: Dennis


On Sun, 07 Dec 2008 21:03:57 -0500, "Daniel T."
<daniel_t@earthlink.net> wrote:

>I'm not so sure about that. Also remember, it is in Consumer Reports
>best interest to inflate the differences in quality between
>manufactures. If the came out with a report that said that all car makes
>were near the same in quality, no one would need their magizine anymore.

Aren't you the same guy who was railing about conspiracy theories in
another thread? Sheesh, PKB.

Dennis (evil)
--
"There is a fine line between participation and mockery" - Wally


== 7 of 7 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 12:06 pm
From: Jeff


Vic Smith wrote:
> On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 08:54:25 -0800, The Real Bev
> <bashley101+M@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Daniel T. wrote:
>>> "h" <tmclone@searchmachine.com> wrote:
>>>> "Daniel T." <daniel_t@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>>>> "'nam vet." <georgewkspam@humboldt1.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> It's going on 47 next year. should I keep it? What if I buy a
>>>>>> ford and they go under. warrantee, parts service?
>>>>> How much does your 47 year old car cost you over the next year?
>>>>> Over the next 5 years? Over the next 10 years? Compare that to the
>>>>> cost of a new car...
>>>> Assuming the OP isn't trolling, I'll bet the 47 year old car was
>>>> built to last and might very well be worth keeping on the road until
>>>> it dies.
>>> What does "dies" mean in this context?
>> Something essential that can't be replaced breaks. Case in point: leaf
>> springs for a 1960 Ford station wagon. The ones in the wrecking yard
>> are just as rotten as the ones you have and you can't find any new ones
>> no matter how hard you look.
>
> Just not looking in the right place.
> You can get a leaf spring set up in many spring shops for just about
> any car. Won't be as cheap as bone yard springs, but not very
> expensive either. One of my kids works in such a shop, oddly enough
> called Spring Align.

I agree. I've got a shop right in my neighborhood that does nothing
but make leaf springs.

Must be a lot of them around.


> Frame rot is the only real killer for most cars.
> But when too much cancer hits the body, it might be more frugal to
> replace the car.

If you love the car, you can keep it alive for a long time. If you
don't, a bad tranny or an engine rebuild or a bad fender will finish it off.

Jeff


>
> --Vic
>

==============================================================================
TOPIC: 533,000 Jobs Lost While Feds Import 140,000 Foreign Workers!
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/a1526898a9ebc1d2?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 6 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 8:51 am
From: suds macheath


clams_casino wrote:
> suds macheath wrote:
>
>>
>> Why haven't you jumped on the gravy train, if it's such a cushy job?
>> Can't cut it?
>
>
> Never considered it when I was younger. It would be a serious
> consideration if I was entering college today.
>
> My brother switched to a teaching career when he was about forty. He
> thoroughly enjoys those 12 week summer vacations

---except for the fact you don't get paid for the "summer
vacations"....teachers are paid for 10 months....

as well as the extra
> holiday and mid winter breaks. He admits the job has its ups and downs,
> but it's primarily the administration rather than the kids that are the
> problem. Nevertheless, he has claims to have no regrets dumping the
> 40+ hr corporate job. If nothing else, his job will never be out
> source,

----If the tax base falls it will....

plus the health and retirement benefits are outstanding.

-----Really? He started at forty, he'll get full retirement at 70?


== 2 of 6 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 8:53 am
From: suds macheath


clams_casino wrote:
> suds macheath wrote:
>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In PA the union teachers have an ultra deluxe Blue Cross health plan
>>> that was crafted especially just for them. There is zero possibility
>>> for out of pocket expense.
>>
>>
>> ---They don't pay premiums for their families?
>>
>>
>
>
>
> Not much around here. Full family coverage was 100% covered until
> recent years, but now they are paying about 5%.

----I find that hard to believe....I have the same plan as the teachers
and my premium's around $650 month....plus deductibles for any hospital
stays...


== 3 of 6 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 9:25 am
From: George


suds macheath wrote:
> clams_casino wrote:
>> suds macheath wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Why haven't you jumped on the gravy train, if it's such a cushy job?
>>> Can't cut it?
>>
>>
>> Never considered it when I was younger. It would be a serious
>> consideration if I was entering college today.
>>
>> My brother switched to a teaching career when he was about forty. He
>> thoroughly enjoys those 12 week summer vacations
>
> ---except for the fact you don't get paid for the "summer
> vacations"....teachers are paid for 10 months....


Sure they do. It is a salaried position and the pay is quoted at an
annual rate. They just happen to only need to actually show up for 40
weeks/year. In our states public schools they can choose to be paid
their salary/52 or salary/40 to reflect the time that they actually need
to show up. The salary/40 payment method is from older days when people
were paid with physical checks.

>
> as well as the extra
>> holiday and mid winter breaks. He admits the job has its ups and
>> downs, but it's primarily the administration rather than the kids
>> that are the problem. Nevertheless, he has claims to have no
>> regrets dumping the 40+ hr corporate job. If nothing else, his job
>> will never be out source,
>
> ----If the tax base falls it will....
>
> plus the health and retirement benefits are outstanding.
>
> -----Really? He started at forty, he'll get full retirement at 70?


== 4 of 6 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 9:31 am
From: George


suds macheath wrote:
> George wrote:
>> clams_casino wrote:
>>> suds macheath wrote:
>>>
>>>> clams_casino wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> John Galt wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> But, why would a retired engineer want to get up at 6AM and be
>>>>>> grading papers in front of the TV at night for 30K per year?
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> What teacher gets $30k /yr other than perhaps newly hired, just out
>>>>> of college? Here, they are paid an AVERAGE of $60k
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ----How many of those have doctorates or masters degrees, and have
>>>> been teaching for 20+ years? All of them?
>>>
>>>
>>> That's the average. Those with masters tend to be paid $75k and
>>> up. I'm not too sure many at the elementary / Jr high / High
>>> school level have doctorates.
>>>
>>> http://cspf.wordpress.com/2007/02/07/questioning-teacher-salaries-2/
>>> is a typical RI situation. Granted, teachers put in much over time,
>>> but but salary position doesn't?
>>
>> In my state that would be teachers. In my state the most powerful
>> labor union is the PSEA which represents the public school teachers.
>>
>> Most of my jobs have been salaried and I have a comparable eduction to
>> a teacher. I have a number of friends and relatives who are teachers.
>>
>> A typical teacher works six hours/day here. It is pretty unusual for
>> them to take work home since they have a 1 hour study period where
>> they can also do grading. If a new teacher works harder they are
>> quietly pulled and the side and told to cut it out and follow whatever
>> is in the workbooks. Their union contracts require that at least two
>> teachers must be present for any event be it a bake sale or sporting
>> competition. They get an additional $150 each for up to 2 hours for this.
>
>
> ----Sounds too good to be true....why aren't you on the gravy train.....


Just stating the facts which have absolutely nothing to do with the
personal choice of anyone.

>>
>>
>>
>> I, for example, typically worked an
>>> extra 8-12 hrs/ week (no overtime). Most I know in the corporate
>>> world do / did similar overtime (without additional pay).
>
> ----Sounds like you're a fool for not teaching, if teaching's such a
> well paid, cushy job....
>
>>>
>> Mr too, that isn't unusual at all. I remember one year where I worked
>> every Saturday and Sunday besides the 10 hour weekdays without
>> additional pay.
>
> ----Sounds like you're a fool for not teaching......
>
>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>> plus very generous
>>>>
>>>>> benefits benefits with very generous holiday, sick time and
>>>>> vacation time that no engineer could ever expect to see.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ---I'm sure benefits at large corporations are comparable....
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>> What corporation provides 12 weeks vacation per year? Other than
>>> UAW and government employees, I'm not aware of many paying full (or
>>> even 90%) health coverage.
>>
>> In PA the union teachers have an ultra deluxe Blue Cross health plan
>> that was crafted especially just for them. There is zero possibility
>> for out of pocket expense.
>
> ---They don't pay premiums for their families?


No, all family members are covered and even better if a spouse also
happens to be a teacher they get the 1,800/month paid directly to them.

>
> This costs us over $1,800/month for each teacher.
>> And as you stated they get 12 weeks paid vacation,
>
> ---They don't get paid for the summer months, do they? It takes years to
> build up 60 vacation days....

Sure they do. Teachers are paid an *annual* salary. Their job requires
them to be at school for 40 weeks and they have 12 weeks when they don't
need to be there.

>
> all holidays and if
>> there is a hint of snow they can just hit the snooze button because a
>> snow day will be called.
>
> ----Why haven't you got on the gravy train?
> Can't cut it?


== 5 of 6 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 9:35 am
From: George


clams_casino wrote:
> suds macheath wrote:
>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In PA the union teachers have an ultra deluxe Blue Cross health plan
>>> that was crafted especially just for them. There is zero possibility
>>> for out of pocket expense.
>>
>>
>> ---They don't pay premiums for their families?
>>
>>
>
>
>
> Not much around here. Full family coverage was 100% covered until
> recent years, but now they are paying about 5%.

The school boards back down here. Each year one of the boards announces
that it is contract renewal time and they would like to lower medical
insurance costs by say instituting a $5 copay. The teachers then
inconvenience everyone by striking for a few weeks and then the board
backs down.

And if a spouse happens to also be a teacher they get the $1,800/month
that is allocated for each teacher's family medical plan paid to them.


== 6 of 6 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 9:36 am
From: Mike


On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 08:14:12 -0600, HeyBub wrote:

> Mike wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> They had no shame.
>>
>>
>> there's very little evidence that msft ever had any good programmers
>> judging by product quality which is as bad as it gets.
>
> ## People vote with their wallets. Microsoft on 92% of the world's
> desktop is a pretty compelling vote.


about as compelling as a vote on a one-candidate ballot in a dictatorship


>> sure they
>> eventually developed an os that doesn't crash every 10 minutes but that
>> was written by what, one or two programmers? how many tens of
>> $billions of monopoly profits obtained by highly predatory monopolistic
>> antitrust violating activities did it take for that to happen?
>
> ## Monopolies are, in general, good.


an unregulated monopoly is a license to print money, a considerable
amount of which is used to brainwash the ignorant masses into becoming
"useful idiots" that go around praising the corporate robber barons that
are exploiting them. another extensive use of monopoly profit is spent
on rearranging the political landscape (via campaign contributions,
lobbying, etc) such that corporate interest is favored over all other
interests (eg. labor, consumers).


> The people who rail against them
> are usually the competitors. The arch villain, Standard Oil, brought
> down the price of kerosene from $3.00/gallon to five cents. In three
> years. Of course the people who supplied whale oil for lighting were
> upset, but the ghouls no longer owned the night.


much of standard oil's monopoly profit went straight into rockefellers
pocket, which according to wiki was an inflation adjusted equivalent of
$318 BILLION which makes him second on the list of the world's worst
robber barons of all time right behind genghis khan. the thing that
worshippers of corporate robber barons don't seem to understand is that
the more money they suck out of the economy the less that is available to
the rest of us...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealthy_historical_figures_2008


> ## Microsoft has never engaged in predatory monopolistic antitrust
> practices - at least according to a few courts and thousands of lawyers
> who routinely get prospective clients that want to allege such. Heck,
> most of the software that runs on Macs was written by Microsoft!


about twenty seconds on google yielded this article from 2004:

"Microsoft (NSDQ:MSFT) has spent more than $3 billion settling antitrust
litigation over the past 18 months, and its total bill for settling
claims could exceed $4.5 billion
....
Though Microsoft has evaded a potential breakup and Windows redesign, the
company has amassed a hefty bill in settling antitrust offenses. Since
mid-2003, Microsoft has paid out just less than $3 billion to settle
claims with four entities, including AOL Time Warner ($750 million), Sun
Microsystems ($700 million) and now Novell ($536 million). Microsoft also
paid $1 billion to settle more than a dozen state class-action lawsuits
related to the main antitrust case, and its top attorney said it's
"reasonably possible" that the company might have to pay another $950
million for other class-action claims."

http://www.crn.com/software/52500275


>
>> not to mention how many decades behind the technology curve they were
>> in implementing the core of a stable system (ie. memory management),
>> twenty years at least behind what was standard in computer science, not
>> to mention the plethora of systems already using the technology. no,
>> msft's millionaires didn't come from technology, it came from
>> sales/marketing and a whole lot of antitrust violating "innovation".
>
> ## You live in an alternate universe where "best" is equated with
> technological superiority. I suggest that universality is more important
> that technological prowess. Word Perfect (or even Wordstar) may be a
> technologically better product than Word, but if everyone to whom you
> send such a document has to either ignore it or re-format it or download
> a reader, you've just increased the entropy of the computer world.


with a viciously predatory antitrust violating monopoly controlling
everything with proprietary format/standards for everything from video/
audio to documents/spreadsheets no other alternatives are a viable
option, hence no improvement, no innovation, no progress, no nothing (but
more of the same bloated overpriced monopoly crap)


>> now that's not to say that there weren't any msft millionaires that had
>> the title of "programmer", but their success is more properly
>> attributed to being in the right place at the right time (under the
>> astronomically huge waterfall of antitrust violating monopoly profits)
>
> ## Yep. Woody Allen said "90% of success is just showing up." I'd say
> that "showing up at the right place" is implied. Again, Microsoft has
> never violated U.S. antitrust laws -


the hell you say, and what do you suppose all those antitrust settlement
payments were for?


> there is no law against being a
> monopoly. There ARE laws against monopolistic practices, but Microsoft
> has never been shown to have engaged in these prohibited tactics.


"In 2000 U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson found Microsoft
guilty of antitrust violations. He ordered the software giant to be
broken apart. Microsoft appealed the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court
but the Court refused to hear the case and sent it instead to the court
of appeals. THE APPEALS COURT UPHELD THE MICROSOFT CONVICTION."
...
On June 30, 2004, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
UPHELD THE ENTIRE SETTLEMENT reached in November 2002 between the federal
government, states, and Microsoft."

(uppercase emphasis added)

http://law.jrank.org/pages/12388/Sherman-Antitrust-Act-Microsoft-
Settlement-Twenty-First-Century-s-First-Major-Antitrust-Settlement.html


>
>> because in the real world (outside of the fiction created within the
>> walls of msft) applications like talking paperclips & "microsoft bob"
>> just don't cut it. so the point being that all the programmers that
>> didn't happen to be working for msft could see the writing on the wall,
>> and the smart ones reacted accordingly...
>
> ## Well, yeah, Microsoft has made product mistakes that even their sales
> prowess couldn't overcome. So did Ford with the Edsel. Likewise "New
> Coke." Being large doesn't confer perfection. But you must allow that
> Microsoft generally makes fewer (marketing) mistakes than it's
> competition.
>
> FULL DISCLOSURE
> Just because I own a few thousand shares of MSFT in no way colors my
> comments or perception of the company!


==============================================================================
TOPIC: घर बैठे कमायें लाखो रुपये
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/439d75fdc53241d6?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 9:07 am
From: madhurimaniknepal


घर बैठे कमायें लाखो रुपये
क्या आप सचमुच में इन्टरनेट पे कैसे रुपया कमाया जाता है सीखना चाहते
हैं ? तो आपको चाहिए इ-मनी बलास्टर टेक्नोलॉजी। इस टेक्नोलॉजी के द्वारा
आप २४ घंटे के अंदर इन्टरनेट पे रुपया कमाने लगते हैं। इसे सीख्ने के लिए
कृपया फी् में ज्वाइन करें
http://emoneyblastertechnology.edu.tc/join-us.html


==============================================================================
TOPIC: supreme court to determine obama presidential eligibilty
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/546a49e0512f561c?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 9:59 am
From: Jeff


JonL wrote:
> max wrote:
>> In article <49381198.5050808@Mayday.com>, JonL <JonL@Mayday.com> wrote:
>>
>>> max wrote:
>>>> In article <4937A1C8.2000502@Mayday.com>, JonL <JonL@Mayday.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Marsha wrote:
>>>>>> Dennis wrote:
>>>>>>> I do find it interesting that the Obama camp has so far spent
>>>>>>> almost a
>>>>>>> million dollars in legal fees to avoid simply releasing a piece of
>>>>>>> paper that would put this whole issue to bed. What could their
>>>>>>> reasoning possibly be? (And don't even try to suggest some
>>>>>>> mythical "right to privacy".
>>>>>>> Recent campaigns have proven that there is no such thing in the
>>>>>>> political area.)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Dennis (evil)
>>>>>> True, but you would think Hillary's camp would have fought this to
>>>>>> the bitter end a long time ago. Then again, Obama has fought to
>>>>>> keep a lot of things under wraps.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Marsha
>>>>> Just a few things under wraps:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Original, vault copy of Certificate of Live Birth in the USA -- Not
>>>>> Released
>>>>>
>>>>> a Certificate of Live Birth -- Released ­ Proven Counterfeit
>>>>> (www.ObamaFiles.com)
>>>>>
>>>>> Obama/Dunham marriage license -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> Soetoro/Dunham marriage license -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> Soetoro adoption records -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> Fransiskus Assisi School application -- Released
>>>>>
>>>>> Punahou School records -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> Selective Service Registration -- Released ­ Proven Counterfeit
>>>>>
>>>>> Occidental College records -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> Passport -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> Columbia College records -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> Columbia thesis -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> Harvard College records -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> Harvard Law Review articles -- None (maybe 1, Not Signed)
>>>>>
>>>>> Baptism certificate -- None
>>>>>
>>>>> Medical records -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> Illinois State Senate records -- None (Locked up to prohibit public
>>>>> view)
>>>>>
>>>>> Illinois State Senate schedule -- Lost (All other Illinois state
>>>>> senators' records are intact)
>>>>>
>>>>> Law practice client list -- Not released
>>>>>
>>>>> University of Chicago scholarly articles -- None
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> ===========================n:
>>>>>
>>>>> My addition:
>>>>>
>>>>> graduated from Zbigniew Brzezinski's Manchurian Candidate school
>>>>> --- no records released
>>>> dipshit
>>>>
>>> "Insults are the arguments of those who have no arguments."
>>> ~Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, (1712-78), French philosopher and social critic
>>
>> you googled and pasted that.
>
> Which ones are untrue???

Who cares?

It's an obsession that nothing will ever come of. You probably had a
similar obsession with Clinton's dick.

And yet, you care not one whit about the crimes that have been
committed and covered up by Bush, Cheney and company.

Or, 5 trillion dollars further in debt, an unfinished neglected war
in Afghanistan that the commander on the ground says is dire, 8 years
and nearing a net job loss. Nearly a trillion dollars pumped into a
failing banking structure.

And what are you worried about? How to keep Obama out of office at
any cost.

The electorate has spoken, if the Republican party was dog food it
would be taken off the shelf.

Obama is not an idealogue like yourself. He's a deeply pragmatic
president elect who is committed to getting a collapsing government and
country working again. But you don't give a rats ass beyond beyond your
hatred of Obama. Good luck selling that to anyone who doesn't have your
blinders on.

Jeff

>
> With your lack of an Inquiring Mind, you cudda been a good journalist.
>


== 2 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 10:21 am
From: "AllEmailDeletedImmediately"

<sgallagher@rogers.com> wrote in message
news:f8c6ac2a-1fae-4cfa-80ca-46989703e920@t11g2000yqg.googlegroups.com...
On Dec 8, 2:59 am, "AllEmailDeletedImmediately" <der...@hotmail.com>
wrote:
> <sgallag...@rogers.com> wrote in message
>
> news:76db2928-59db-4684-8d0a-6d6a3d4f802f@j32g2000yqn.googlegroups.com...
> On Dec 7, 7:44 pm, "Dave" <no...@nohow.not> wrote:
>
>
>
> > "JR Weiss" <jrwe...@invalid.invalid> wrote in message
>
> >news:ghhodm$fdj$1@news.motzarella.org...
>
> > > "AllEmailDeletedImmediately" <der...@hotmail.com> wrote ...
>
> > >>>> OK, I found it. No. 08A407. But this suit accepts that Obama was
> > >>>> born
> > >>>> in the USA and was an American citizen at birth.
>
> > >>> And? Again, a citizen is not eligible to be President. -Dave
>
> > >> correct. american citizenship does not automatically constitutionally
> > >> qualify one to be prez
>
> > > However, an American citizen who achieved that citizenship by virtue
> > > of
> > > being born in the US IS a "natural born" citizen, and therefore meets
> > > the
> > > basic criterion!
>
> > Unless you become a citizen of another country where you can not hold
> > dual
> > citizenship.
>
> Only if that other country requires you to go to the officials of your
> original country and formally renounce citizenship according to the
> original country's laws, and then return to them with proof that you
> really did renounce your original citizenship. Otherwise, the fact
> that this other country does not allow dual citizenship would have no
> effect upon a person's US citizenship.
>
> the u.s. didn't allow dual citizenship except with israel at that time. i
> pretty sure.

At the time, the US policy was strongly against dual citizenship, but
it was not outrightly prohibited. There were also several ways that a
person could lose US citizenship back then, ways that no longer
exist. Many of those ways of losing US citizenship ended up being
removed due to the Supreme Court decision of Afroyim v. Rusk in 1967.
Because this decision was based on a Constitution interpretation,
people who were told, prior to that decision, that they had lost their
citizenship were able to have their cases re-adjudicated and their
citizenship restored, if they wished. Others who may have performed
an action that would have resulted in loss of their US citizenship,
but who were never formally told that their
citizenship was revoked, don't have to worry about it ever having been
lost. By the way, there was no special allowance for dual citizenship
with Israel. It's just that Israeli nationality law was written in
such a way that it did not invoke any of the provisions that caused
loss of US citizenship. For example, at the time, swearing alleiance
to a foreign country or applying for that country's citizenship would
normally cause loss of US citizenship. Israeli law conferred Israeli
citizenship upon any Jew who immigrated there under Israel's law of
return, without that person having to actually apply for the Israeli
citizenship or to swear any oath of allegiance to Israel. Since,
other countries did not do this, it meant that for many years, Israeli
citizenship was the only one that could be acquired by a US citizen
(after birth), that would not cause loss of US citizenship because
acquisition of Israeli citizenship did not trigger any of the ways
that caused loss of US citizenship.

But, a person who was born with both US and other citizenships, was
allowed to keep both citizenships as long as he didn't violate any of
the parts of law that would cause loss of US citizenship.

---------

thanks for all the hard work. this is all part of what i hope the sc will
choose
to wade thru. bo should demand it, because w/o it there will always be a
whiff.
if the sc finds in his favor, as in actually reviewing it and not dismissing
it, then
that's that. the highest court has annointed him and anyone w/suspicions
otherwise
will have to just accept that decision.

== 3 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 11:02 am
From: "JR Weiss"


"AllEmailDeletedImmediately" <derjda@hotmail.com> wrote...
>
> the u.s. didn't allow dual citizenship except with israel at that time. i
> pretty sure.

Also Switzerland.

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Miss Manners on credit cards and protective clerks/managers
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/d050e2dac2223a44?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 10:22 am
From: Steve Daniels


On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 08:20:22 -0800 (PST), against all advice,
something compelled tweeny90655@mypacks.net, to say:

> On Dec 7, 4:20 pm, Steve Daniels <sdani...@gorge.net> wrote:
>
> >
> > You know on the back, on that little strip where you're supposed
> > to put your signature? Mine says, "Ask for picture ID."
>
>
> Yeah, but half the time the card doesn't enter the clerk's hands. You
> swipe, punch in a zip, and back in the wallet it goes. Now what,
> coach?


I didn't say it was a flawless system, and was rather commenting
upon the presumed rudeness of a shopping clerk asking for picture
ID before running the card. I was pointing out that not only did
I not find this behavior rude, I in fact encourage it.

Perhaps I was too subtle. Please accept my apologies.


--

Real men don't text.


== 2 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 10:24 am
From: Steve Daniels


On Sun, 7 Dec 2008 20:33:28 -0500, against all advice, something
compelled "h" <tmclone@searchmachine.com>, to say:

>
> "Steve Daniels" <sdaniels@gorge.net> wrote in message
> news:3ffoj4ts8m623kqv55ll784r0mg5fpsb3f@4ax.com...
> > On Fri, 5 Dec 2008 15:15:00 -0800, against all advice, something
> > compelled Coffee's For Closers <USENET2008@THE-DOMAIN-IN.SIG>, to
> > say:
> >
> >> The logic is to make a credit card transaction as easy as
> >> possible. So that you won't be discouraged by the small extra
> >> hassle of ID. The Visa and MasterCard associations want card
> >> usage to be as easy as cash, or even easier.
> >
> >
> > You know on the back, on that little strip where you're supposed
> > to put your signature? Mine says, "Ask for picture ID."
> >
> >
> And you know what? That's not legal.

You'll never take me alive, copper.

<blah blah blah>

> So...if you don't sign your card I can't accept it, and I'm not
> allowed to ask for the picture ID you'd rather give. How often are you able
> to use the card for anything expect swipe purchases?
>

Every time I want to. It has never been refused. Not once in
ten years.


--

Real men don't text.


== 3 of 3 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 10:27 am
From: Steve Daniels


On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 08:25:35 -0500, against all advice, something
compelled "h" <tmclone@searchmachine.com>, to say:

>
> "Evelyn Leeper" <eleeper@optonline.net> wrote in message
> news:493c7e6a$0$4879$607ed4bc@cv.net...
> >h wrote:
> >> "Steve Daniels" <sdaniels@gorge.net> wrote in message
> >> news:3ffoj4ts8m623kqv55ll784r0mg5fpsb3f@4ax.com...
> >>> On Fri, 5 Dec 2008 15:15:00 -0800, against all advice, something
> >>> compelled Coffee's For Closers <USENET2008@THE-DOMAIN-IN.SIG>, to
> >>> say:
> >>>
> >>>> The logic is to make a credit card transaction as easy as
> >>>> possible. So that you won't be discouraged by the small extra
> >>>> hassle of ID. The Visa and MasterCard associations want card
> >>>> usage to be as easy as cash, or even easier.
> >>>
> >>> You know on the back, on that little strip where you're supposed
> >>> to put your signature? Mine says, "Ask for picture ID."
> >>>
> >>>
> >> And you know what? That's not legal. Not signing the card is a violation
> >> of the card agreement, and merchants are not supposed to accept unsigned
> >> cards. If they do the charge can be easily contested. The post office,
> >> for example, will not take your credit card if it is not signed. Neither
> >> will many businesses, mine included. Also, at least here in NY, it is a
> >> violation of the merchant agreement to ask a customer for ID if they are
> >> using a credit card. So...if you don't sign your card I can't accept it,
> >> and I'm not allowed to ask for the picture ID you'd rather give. How
> >> often are you able to use the card for anything expect swipe purchases?
> >
> > Mine says that, and I've never had a problem--including at the post
> > office. They ask for picture ID, I show it, and that's that.
> >
> Don't know where you live, but that doesn't fly in NY.

It did in New York City in October of '01. I don't think you can
get any more New York than that.


--

Real men don't text.

==============================================================================
TOPIC: New 650mAh Rechargeable Replacement CASIO NP-20 Digital Camera Battery
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/ae7b4d7727629d99?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 10:26 am
From: "www.Queensbridge.us"


On Dec 2, 2:34 am, Zanasil <batbusin...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Overview:
> This casio np-20 battery is made specifically for canon digital camera
> and to meet or exceed the original manufacturer specifications. Spare
> casio rechargeable lithium ion np-20 battery pack suitable for CASIO
> EX-S100, EX-S600GD, EXILIM EX-Z60 digital cameras. 3.7 volt 650mAh
> capacity. Lithium ion technology so no memory effect which means you
> can recharge it at any point without having to discharge it first.
> With a fully charged battery pack np-20, you will never miss the
> important snap moment when you're just about to capture the perfect
> moment! Best choice to get extra power for your digital camera.
>
> specifications:
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> Type: li-ion
> Volt: 3.7V
> Capacity: 650mAh
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> Weight: 18.00g
> Color: black
>
> This Casio NP-20 Digital Camera Battery Replaces the Following Battery
> Parts:
>
> CASIO NP-20
> CASIO NP-20DBA
>
> This Casio NP-20 Digital Camera Battery Fits in the Following Models:
>
> CASIO EX-S100 CASIO EX-S500EO CASIO EX-S500GY CASIO EX-S500WE CASIO EX-
> S600EO CASIO EX-S600GD CASIO EXILIM EX-M1 CASIO EXILIM EX-M2 CASIO
> EXILIM EX-M20 CASIO EXILIM EX-M20U CASIO EXILIM EX-S1 CASIO EXILIM EX-
> S100 CASIO Exilim EX-S100WE CASIO EXILIM EX-S1PM CASIO EXILIM EX-S2
> CASIO EXILIM EX-S20 CASIO EXILIM EX-S20U CASIO EXILIM EX-S2PW CASIO
> EXILIM EX-S3 CASIO Exilim EX-S500 CASIO EXILIM EX-Z3 CASIO EXILIM EX-
> Z4 CASIO EXILIM EX-Z4U CASIO EXILIM EX-Z60
>
> visit for info about casio np-20:http://www.power-batteries.net/digital-camera/casio/np-20.html
>
> http://www.laptop-battery-inc.co.uk/digital-camera-batteries/casio-np...

A few month ago I bought one for $5.99 from
http://store.ibiao.com/retail/catalog/index.php
and am very happy.
It fit better then one I had bought from someone else previously

==============================================================================
TOPIC: professional AAAAA+++ replica watches suppliers
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/a38e34db229bf082?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 10:34 am
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==============================================================================
TOPIC: Tax Fraud, cancer, and the IRS
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/78b4d9d9aca35c0e?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 10:43 am
From: phil scott


On Dec 8, 7:29 am, MSfort...@mcpmail.com wrote:
> phil scott wrote:
>
> > myself, Id rather be shot than see my nation ruined by non productive
> > scum, currently using tax payer money by the trillions to pay bonus's
> > to their criminal cohortsrunning the fraudulent bank loan and
> > derivitives schemes.
>
> > Phil scott
>
> Sir, do you request a blindfold?


It is understandable that men with families seek to stay out of
trouble, not agravate
those in power ..... in order to give their famiies a chance at some
food and shelter...thats been
the history of men in these regards... all such men and nations, and
thier families die in utter degradation, all thougout history.... some
dressed better than others, a little fatter.

thats the only difference.


a man can live, and die, limitlessly above that level if he has the
mind... some of us planned it that way...

thats been absolutely wonderful.. not cowering or any of that...such
frees the mind, sinues and spirit to much greater insight.
some of us live for that..

we dont value the comfort of cowering in fear, we are not in the least
afraid to die, or to live for that matter...
in fact we look forward to each of those second by second... as an
opportunity.. yet another frontier, and as a gift left behind.

.

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Folks, this is a real depression, protect your assets
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/cb1cc803cf7130ab?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 10:55 am
From: EskWIRED@spamblock.panix.com


In misc.survivalism Dave <noway1@noway2.not> wrote:

> > > Well let's hope not. But nobody with a brain imagines that higher taxes
> and
> > > unskilled workers building roads and bridges is going to increase
> > > non-government employment. -Dave
> >
> > What if those roads and bridges make it cheaper to get goods to market
> > and people into their factories and office parks?

> Great. When unemployment goes over 50%, who is going to need roads and
> bridges to get to boarded-up factories and office parks?

You assume facts not in evidence. If indeed, unemployment goes over 50%,
there will be huge problems. If that is your only response, then you are
not really worth the time it takes to read your posts.

> >
> > Why wouldn't that increase efficiency?

> I guess it would make it easier to drive to the unemployment office to pick
> up your check maybe.

Your response seems to be the same: Hiring people to build infrastructure
will not lessen unemployment. Somehow, that makes sense to you.


> > What if the rail systems were
> > modernized?

> A rail system is a vacuum which sucks up all the commuters' money to
> subsidize cheap tickets for the very few people who want to use it.

I was thinking of rail for transport of goods.

> > What if people could drive 5 miles to a depot and then ride
> > in comfort to a central location?

> The people would do exactly what they do now...they'd drive to work. Even
> $5/gallon gas won't stop people from driving to work...what makes you think
> you can build a rail system that people will actually want to ride? Because
> virtually nobody wants to ride it now.

If you look at reality, the Bosotn MBTA has had record ridership since gas
prices soared. The increase has abated, but has not gone down to
pre-increase levels.

> >
> > Imagine if every business were in locations beset by traffic jams,
> > compared with easy direct access for workers and egress for finished
> > goods?

> WHAT businesses? WHAT finished goods? If you haven't noticed, the economy
> is tanking.

If you haven't noticed, the vast majority of busiesses have stayed in
business.

Are you a fool? Do you intentionally ignore reality? Do you think
constant hyperbole impresses thinking people?

> >
> > How can wise infrastructure investments fail to help foster business
> > development?


> There is nothing "wrong" with improving infrastructure. But that, by
> itself, won't increase employment.

By itself? Why do you conceive things in a vacuum?

--
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so
certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts.
-- Bertrand Russel


==============================================================================
TOPIC: Financial Services Inter/Nationalization, effective as of 08.08.08 (www.
grishenkoff.com/Finance.html)
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/t/fe2bd7bda3dfe136?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Mon, Dec 8 2008 11:52 am
From: Prime Minister of the Kingdom of God Serge Grishenkoff


Financial Services Inter/Nationalization, effective as of 08.08.08
(www.grishenkoff.com/Finance.html)


==============================================================================

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