Friday, October 30, 2009

David Letterman's Set... Red & Yellow?




I walked in to the living room this evening and David Letterman's monologue was on. I noticed that the colors that the artist used for the paintings in the background of David Letterman's set decided to go with Red and Yellow. When I visited his website I found the same thing when I scrolled to the bottom of the page.

Some of you may have heard about the controversial lighting of the Empire State Building with Red and Yellow to celebrate Communist China's 60'th birthday. Is this just a coincidence? Of all of the colors that the Empire State Building has been lit with in the past (usually white)... why choose those for his set? Is this not tacky?


FOX News Report: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,557823,00.html
Letterman's Website (Scroll Down): http://www.cbs.com/late_night/late_show/

Am I crazy? Has anyone else noticed this and I have just been on the moon? Am I making too big of a deal out of this?

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Obama Money!!!


I think these 2 videos pretty much say it all.








And you want the people who organized this event to run your health care? This video makes me laugh and feel depressed at the same time.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Will Ferrell / Funny or Die PSA - Video Response

Here's our video response to a PSA that MoveOn.org sponsored. It features Will Ferrell and a few other Hollywood morons.


Saturday, September 19, 2009

People of Wal-Mart

Photo's courtesy of a "People of Wal-Mart". The thing that bothers me the most is that these people ultimately have some sort of voting power over what kind of health care coverage I will be able to receive for the rest of my life.

 


   
   
  
      
      

     

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Fort Worth, TX - 9/12 Tea Party

Just so you can see how many people were really there in spite of the rain.







Saturday, August 29, 2009

A Nation Mourns.

by Brandon:

Is now an inappropriate time to bring up limiting carbon footprints?



Probably. I'm just curious as to who's going to be bidding on the "cap-and-trade" carbon emission allowances for the Kennedy monument.

Blog Tackiness Level: ***** (5/5 Stars)

Friday, August 14, 2009

The Happy Mall Walker

by: Brandon

I'll put down a $100 bet that says this woman voted for Obama. Any takers?

Saturday, August 8, 2009

The Democratic party is the party of the 'little guy'... ya right!

A conservative black man was attacked in St. Louis yesterday by SEIU Union Members (Democrats) that were organized to intimidate conservatives at a local town hall meeting... and they're saying that we're the racist hired lobbyists?!?! Where are the Pinkertons when you need them?





This is somewhat similar to the new black panther party standing outside of polling stations during the election.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Ugh...

by: Brandon

These people are the scum of the earth. I realize that they're just serving a niche market of people dumb enough to believe this stuff but I truly believe that this kind of crap resides subliminally in the backs of even the most intelligent people's minds. Nobody owes you anything in this world...


Sunday, July 26, 2009

Tonight's Homework

by: Brandon

Okay, I know it's been a while since our last post. Brian and I have been working hard on 4 new videos... even though it seems as if we've been hardly working (yuk yuk). Hopefully you will find them thought provoking and humorous. We're trying to release "Universal Beer Care" before the August Congressional Recess so check back soon!

In the meantime, I'll leave you with the following 5 homework questions. I expect the answers on my desk by tomorrow morning. Don't forget to show your work and label your graphs.


1. If congress passed a bill tomorrow stating that everyone in the United States was entitled to a 'FREE' 50" Plasma TV, would the increased demand and seemingly decreased price cause shortages in Televisions? Ultimately, who would pay for these TV's? Would they really be "Free"? Would people have to offer bribes to obtain one of these few TV's when lines are long and supplies are limited? What makes Health Care any different?

2. Why did a democratic majority in congress vote for a bill to hand out an $8,500 tax incentive to potential home buyers during one of the best "buyer's markets" in the last 25 years? Ultimately, is it not the current home owner struggling to make payments on his/her's mortgage who foots the bill for such an incentive?

3. How much energy (gas/oil/electricity etc...) does it take to manufacture an automobile? How much energy (gas/oil/electricity) does it take for the workers in an auto manufacturing plant to get to work every day in order to produce such automobiles? How much energy (gas/oil/electricity) does it take to shred / crush / "recycle" an automobile? Does the "Cash for Clunkers" program offset this extra fuel needed to run these "less efficient" vehicles by taking them off of the road a couple of years early? If so, why are tax incentives needed to make consumers shred their old vehicles?

4. Where does electricity come from? If I have to burn coal to get electricity to power my new plug-in hybrid... how much cleaner will the Earth be? Which is cleaner to burn... Gasoline or Coal? Will the increase in cost of electricity offset the price of gasoline? What will happen to the supply / demand of electricity? What will the new equilibrium price of electricity be?

5. If I am happy with my current health care provider and I do want to keep my current health insurance, (which I have been told several times that I can do by President Barack Hussein Obama), why did house Democrats slip the following text into page 16 of the 1,018 page bill? : "the individual health insurance issuer offering such coverage does not enroll any individual in such coverage if the first effective date of coverage is on or after the first day" of the year the bill becomes law. Does this not mean that it will become illegal for insurance companies to take on new clients? Will I no longer be able to switch providers because of this? Will this put insurance companies out of business? Will I be forced to use the government option if I can not switch? Why will this bill mysteriously become law in 2013 and not immediately if Americans so desperately need Health Care reform in such a hurry? In what year will the next U.S. Presidential election be held?

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Giving food to the third world. Helping out your fellow man or heartless economic terrorism?

by: Brandon

I know this might sound insane but don't go deleting us from your bookmarks just yet.

How could giving food to starving people ever be a bad thing?!?! Well, that's what I'm going to try to explain with a few graphs and hopefully a little bit of rational thinking. Just stick with me and try to be open minded.

We as United States citizens have been blessed with an abundance of food. Many of us have never been, nor will we ever be hungry. Food is everywhere, so why not help out our fellow man by giving them what we have left over? That's why the Democratic Party pushed for P.L. 480 back in 1954 when Dwight D. Eisenhower was in office. When President John F. Kennedy was president, he renamed the project to "Food for Peace". This bill then became the "Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996" (FAIR) during the Clinton administration (noticing a pattern evolving here?).

This program subsidizes domestic goods (buys food from U.S. farmers with your tax dollars) and gives that food to foreign governments as a low interest loan (2 to 4%) with many grace periods and leniency on repayments. These governments then turn around and sell the food to their citizens to raise cash for their governments. This is intended to help that particular country develop economically... but the road to hell is paved with good intentions.

Side Note: Isn't it interesting how our government makes all of these loans with our tax dollars and they don't repay us any of the interest they profit from them? Not just food, but when they bail out industries too... It just seems to me that I should get a check at the end of the year for that 2 to 4% profit off of the interest they made from the loan... maybe instead of it going back into some sort of pork project... Anywhoooooo…

Okay, now let's imagine that there are 1 million basket balls in the world and the price that unregulated markets are willing to pay for those basket balls is $1 each. Now let's imagine that 1 million more basket balls fall out of the sky one day. How much are all the basket balls worth now? Well, probably about half of what they were worth before right (in this example anyway)?

Let's see this in graph form:



S = Supply
D = Demand
P = Price
Q = Quantity Demanded

The first graph represents a standard supply and demand curve for an unregulated market. Supply and demand are inversely related so that when there is a large supply of something there is less demand for it and vice versa. The dot in the middle represents the equilibrium price and quantity demanded. In this example it's for basket balls.

The second graph illustrates what happens when you dump (and I use that word on purpose) basket balls into an economy. As you can see there is a shift in supply expanding it outward. In effect this decreases the price for basket balls and increases the quantity demanded at that price (in the short run).

Now I know some of you out there have put 2 and 2 together any you know we're not talking about basket balls here... we're really talking about corn, wheat, honey, cotton etc. and you might be thinking to yourself "Okay, we've doubled the amount of food they have and decreased the price that these poor people have to pay for it. I see no problem here... this Brandon guy is an idiot". Stick with me.

It's time to ask our selves what our goal is here. Do we want to these people to eat for a day, or eat for a lifetime? In the short term, this does combat world hunger. In the long run, we keep are keeping third world countries poor. I'll explain.

For the sake of math, let's keep this example simple with some made up imaginary numbers. Let's say that you're a farmer and you grow corn. Let's say that you can grow 100 cobs of corn every year and they cost you $0.75 each to grow. Let's also say that you are able to sell your corn for $1 each and make a profit of $.025 each (equilibrium price in an unregulated market). Now let's imagine that the United States government dumps an additional 100 cobs of corn into your economy. Now the price of corn is artificially deflated to be only worth $0.50 each to the consumer, but it still costs the farmer $0.75 each to produce. Now the farmer is losing $0.25 per cob of corn.

This is similar to when chicken farmers in the United States drowned all of their baby chickens because they couldn't afford to raise them and they couldn't afford to sell them. It seemed heartless to most people but what were they supposed to do? Let them starve to death slowly in a field somewhere?

This is the problem. Government intervention of free markets has now provided disincentives for the farmers in these countries to continue to grow corn. You have put them out of business and now the country relies only on the federal food relief that was given to the country. Now that these farmers are not making food anymore we're back to square one on the amount of food that's in the economy. No additional people have been fed, the price will find a newer and higher equilibrium again, and it doesn't make economic sense for local farmers to grow their own corn. Not to mention, we, the United States Tax Payers, footed the bill for this mess.

So what about the non farmers in these countries who have no understanding of how this works? Now they somehow feel entitled to these food programs. How are their governments (who are profiting from these programs) going to portray us when we withdraw these food programs? The point is we shouldn't have gotten involved in the first place. Government intervention in business = bad. Period.

So what am I suggesting here? Is it always a bad thing to give food to other countries? Well sometimes bad things happen to good people. Sometimes there are floods and hurricanes and food crops are completely wiped out. Sometimes people are in desperate need of short term help. Although I don't believe that it's necessarily the governments job to step in with tax payer dollars to help out, I do think it's okay to help out your fellow man every once in a while. Who knows? You might be down on your luck one day. Just seriously rethink the consequences before you act in the long run. These programs have been around for more than 50 years now.

Monday, June 8, 2009

A voice of reason...

by: Brandon (re-post from 2008)

Last year I bought a new car. I really needed a SUV because my new beetle wasn't cutting it anymore. I was hauling all sorts of junk in it for my t-shirt business and lumber to work on my house and it just didn't make sense anymore.

While shopping around for a new car I came up with the following list of wants / needs.

Needs:
1. Seat at least 7 people (because I needed to take it on the road for band stuff)
2. Tows a large trailer (for band equipment & my merchandise business).
3. Gets 20+ miles to the gallon.

Wants:
CD Player

I went to all the websites. I did all the research. I asked around for family and friends advice. I finally decided on a v6 Toyota Highlander because it met all of my needs and wants and towed 6000 lbs. I bought it used with 20,000 miles on it for less than $18,000 (The new price being somewhere around 20k to 22k).

A few months later, a family member came over to my house with a beautiful new GM Tahoe. It was the base model of the car but it still had leather heated seats, navigation, DVD, and all the bells and whistles. It seated 7 people and towed 6000 lbs. And it got an amazing 25 miles to the gallon. I have to admit, I was rather envious... that is until she told me how much she paid for it... $40,000!!!

Let's do some math here. Let's say that gas costs $5.00 per gallon from now until I sell this car (probably 5 years or 100,000 miles which ever comes first). Let's say that I put another 80,000 miles on the car. If I get 20 miles to the gallon, I will have used 4000 gallons of fuel and paid $20,000 in gas over 5 years. Now let's look at the Tahoe. If I use the same math I would have consumed 3200 gallons of fuel and spent $16,000. A price difference of $4,000 does not justify spending another $22,000 on a car today, or over the course of 5 years (and that's gas calculated at $5.00 a gallon, the numbers would be signifigantly different if calculated at today's $2.00 prices increasing through 2013 prices).

I guess the point I'm trying to make here is that GM has been building cars that are too expensive and ignoring what most consumers want for too long. They have spent too much time fighting legislature against gas guzzlers and handing out $1.99 gas cards for a year to get people to buy their cars. Overall poor management.

There are 4 costs that pretty much contribute to the price of any good. They are Raw Materials, Setup / Development costs, Labor, and Taxes. Well, taxes are pretty much impossible to control (except by voting responsibly) and they get bigger every year. Setup and development costs are needed to develop any new product and usually fixed, but managed wisely can reduce some costs. Raw materials, just like anything else, get more expensive as the resources required to make them become more sparse. So how do you control costs? Well, labor get's its own paragraph...

Labor is difficult to control, especially in the auto industry. Lets say you need to decrease supply to reach equilibrium because you're making too many cars and not enough people are buying them, and therefore you need to lay off workers that are not needed to produce those goods, how can you do that when you're going to get sued by some labor union or you have to pay them severance pay? This is probably the highest cost of the car... along with the several features that you think are cool but could live without. This is why American industries ship their production out of the country... to control labor cost. They do this because they're tired of labor unions pushing them around and telling them how to run their business. Shipping jobs elsewhere (to areas of inexpensive labor) is not always a bad thing because we as consumers enjoy cheaper products. When we have money and we want to spend it this is good. However, when we don't have money and we need to earn it, this is a bad thing. Any government or union interference with labor wages is a bad thing because it drives wages above the equilibrium price. Period. If an automaker can only afford to spend a fixed amount of money on its labor, and someone is artificially increasing the price of that labor, then they will higher fewer employees to fill that gap.

So how do we get out of this mess? Well first of all, giving them tax payer money won't help anything. Why? Well if you give money to a known crack addict to buy food, what do you think they will do with it? The auto industry is no different. Just let the market work itself out... and it will.

When you start saying "Oh, we have to protect the banking industry because if we don't the world will end", where can you draw the line? The same thing could be said for every industry in the United States whether it be Automakers, Semiconductors, Farming, Fishing, Underwater Basket Weavers or whatever. Well, my business has been pretty slow lately, maybe I'm entitled to a handout too. Perhaps I should charter a private jet to capitol hill? Well, I don't really think that because I think that I'm a responsible individual and if I handle my business and finances poorly I should be allowed to fail.

The fact of the matter is, the government has no business in business. They are there to do one thing... what we the citizens of the United States can't do on our own... and trust me, we know how to innovate and conduct good business. When a company fails, others will buy up their assets cheap and make a killing off of it and they won't repeat the mistakes of their predecessors.

If you want to see protectionism at it's worst, watch the following video. This is what happens when you over protect an industry... and not just the auto industry, but any industry (ie: banking, housing, semiconductors etc...):



I love how the breaks lock up and the car stalls at the end of the video. Priceless.


More good information can be found here:
Commanding Heights
Commanding Heights on Google Video


PS: Try to pay attention to see which political party votes for handing out your tax dollars to the auto industry. Maybe you should vote against them in the next election. Check out www.votesmart.org for voting records.


2009 UPDATE: Guess what, we just threw billions more of taxpayer's money at them and they still went into bankruptcy. Awesome! The democratic party will probably do a much better job of running GM anyway.

Will someone please explain...

by: Brandon (Re-Post from 2008)

Will someone please explain to me why $1.5 billion of our tax dollars went to buying people digital converter boxes for their old TV's?

Okay, so I'll give them the benefit of the doubt. I guess you could make the argument that "People get their news from TV (if you can call what comes on CNN or ABC "news"). What if there's a nuclear war or natural disaster. How will people get information on what to do?". That's about the only thing I can think of... but why does everyone need 2 converters? One wouldn't be sufficient for this task?

I'm also tired of people agreeing with me with comments like "Ya! That money should have gone to education, or feeding the homeless, or fixing roads, or to the unemployed underwater basket weaver's union" or some crap like that. The money should have stayed in our (the taxpayers) pockets... period.

Why do I need to give the government money so they can turn around and give it right back to me for things that I'm perfectly capable of doing on my own? If you can't afford a $40 converter box, you shouldn't be watching TV.

I'd also like to point out that due to the law of adverse selection, the less than 10% of US Citizens who really would have benefited from these (ie: the elderly) probably have no access to the internet so they couldn't order their government coupons to begin with.

You didn't even have to provide any proof of anything when you ordered these things other than a residential address. So now that all of the rest of us (including non-tax paying illegal aliens) have gotten them, the government will try to increase that $1.5 billion to pay for another round of them later this year.

Fantastic!


2009 UPDATE:
Guess what, the government did move back the conversion date and they did add to that $1.5 Billion dollar budget. I wonder how many people there are out there like me who followed the law of adverse selection and bought them only to leave them in the box because I already have cable.

I did a quick google and according to the OC Register, here are some more interesting numbers:

Included within the additional funding for this useless social welfare program:

$54,000 for DTV Transition Maps awarded to Hammett & Edison.
$12 million for DTV call center support services awarded to IBM Corp.
$1.3 million for DTV magazine advertising for elderly and people with disabilities.
$1.5 million for FCC DTV Consumer Education Support Services awarded to Ketchum Inc.
$3.5 million for public relations and advertising awarded to Burson-Marsteller.


Interesting...

Friday, May 15, 2009

New GM Car!



From our friends over at Iowahawk.