Archive for December, 2009

Do you think when imports suddenly become way more expensive due to the collapse of our (US) currency and The World’s unwillingness to loan U.S. any more money (finance the National Debt), it will result in invigorating our domestic manufacturing and service industries?

Important jobs like mule-breeder (for agriculture) & farm hands, Iceman (when cap&trade eliminates electricity), train conductor when everyone must use mass transit because nobody can afford gasoline any more, and of course Bread Line Monitor because large crowds require security personnel. And don’t forget prison guards. The prison growth industry has a very bright future.
Kman
Doh!
I phrased it tongue-in-cheek but there MUST be a silver lining because it will serve to isolate us from the world economically and force us to pay our own bills. Free Trade hasn’t worked out in our favor and I’m thinking this might be a way out of it.

This is America. We turn lemons into lemonaid. There must be a way. Because that dollar (note) is going down. The only question is how and when.
Levon The Man
Comrad
This is most unequal of you. In USA (United Socialist America) all persons must have equal access. We must be fair and compassionate.
Claptic
How are we to keep our snouts muddied with grasping after filthy lucre and arguing over where lines are and getting an edge over the competition if you continue reminding us of a far more important Truth; that the business of humanity is People and that if we are to avoid extinction we must continue to evolve toward realizing that our brother is ourselves?

Your source is correct. We have only just begun to realize what being human means and we really need to wake up, to raise our level of consciousness.

But first we must survive and that means self-defense. Even the God of Israel designed a capitalist system based on private rights and property for his people and insisted upon honest weights and measures.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Comments (7)

We have owned the land for 14 years. The value of all is over 0,000.00. We would like to make more improvements and pay off medical bills, etc.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: ,

Comments (3)

I just read this article:

http://finance.yahoo.com/family-home/article/107535/volt-vs-prius-which-wil-be-cheaper-to-drive??mod=family-autos

If some people are worried about electricity charges regarding the 230 mpg Chrysler Volt why don’t they harness solar power? They state a consumers electricity bill may rise by 1 in a year.

I’m amazed most manufactures havent harnessed the power of solar energy, its free and clean…and do away with combustion all together. I mean may lose jobs but this needed change may also lead to more jobs.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Comments (6)

Work, Family… Together?

Picture this: You’re sitting with your spouse, and the two of you are talking about starting a company that manufactures and sells organic children’s clothing. Your husband will handle the business side — he has an MBA — while you, whose hand-sewn outfits are the envy of neighborhood moms, will focus on product design, production and promotion.

But should you work together? There are certainly advantages to running a family business, including a built-in sense of loyalty and a shared investment and commitment.

"There is a higher trust level involved when people know each other so well, and this essentially lowers the cost of capital for the business," says Andrew Keyt, executive director of the Loyola University Family Business Center. He says family businesses also tend to carry less debt.
Family vs. Business Issues

Of course, there are some real disadvantages. Family members who are also business partners often have difficulty separating their personal and professional agendas. They can find it hard to make business decisions independent of the relationship.

"The intensity of family members working closely together creates strain," says Mr. Keyt. And there can be spillover from home that hurts the business. "Unaddressed family issues can distract partners from coping effectively with important business challenges."

Jim Grosspietsch and his wife, Tracy, run an interior-design firm together and have experienced both the pros and the cons. "As a designer, Tracy guides the mission and vision for the firm, while I manage all of our business functions," says Mr. Grosspietsch. "We work from home on flexible schedules and share household roles."

On the other hand, balancing the needs of business and family and cash flow are twin challenges, they say. And while finances are a major cause of stress for most married couples, "it’s much worse when you manage a business with your spouse," he says.
Long Odds for Success

Despite the fact that family businesses encompass 85% of all American businesses and generate over 60% of the gross national product, a startling one-third of small businesses — including family-owned firms — fail in the first year. But there are ways to increase your chances of success.

The first step is to be honest with yourself. Do you and your family member already have a strong relationship that includes healthy communication and mutual respect? Are your work ethics similar, and do you share goals, expectations and a passion for the business?

The answer to both should be yes, or close to it.

Then, before you launch, consult an attorney and set up a formal plan of operations similar to the sort you’d do with a non-family partner. "Be sure to have well-defined roles in the organization so you don’t step on each other," says Mr. Grosspietsch. "Each partner needs a set of activities to oversee."

You also need to think about the worst-case scenario. "Start by creating your exit plan," adds Mr. Keyt. "Ask the question: ‘If things aren’t going well, how can we recognize this and leave the business in a way that preserves our family relationships?’ "

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Comments (1)

Can I use the land as colateral because me and my husband have bad credit.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: ,

Comments (2)

is it possible to get a loan for a manufactured home after filing bankruptcy. i have some land and a down payment to use. does this account for anything.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: ,

Comments (2)

Condition: Refurbished

Operating Systems: Windows® Vista™ Home Premium

Platform: Notebook PC

Expansion Ports: 1 – Express Card Slot/54

PS/2 Keyboard Connectors: N/A

PS/2 Mouse Connectors: N/A

Serial Communication Ports: N/A

Parallel Ports: N/A

USB Ports: 3

FireWire Ports: N/A

Fast Infrared Ports (FIR): N/A

LAN Ports: 1

Modem Ports: 1

Audio Out Jacks: 1 – SPDIF

Line In Jacks: N/A

Microphone Jacks: 1

VGA Ports: 1

S-Video Connectors: N/A

DVI Video: N/A

HDMI Ports: 1

Port Replicator/Connector: N/A

Processor Brand: AMD

Processor Class: Turion™ 64 X2 Dual-Core Mobile Technology TL-60

Processor Speed: 2.0GHz

Processor FSB: up to 1600MHz

Processor Cache: 2 x 512KB L2

Additional Technologies: HyperTransport™ Technology

Memory Type: DDR2

Memory Size: 2GB (1GB X 2)

Memory Speed: PC2-5300

Memory Slots (Total): 2

Memory Slots (Available): 0

Capacity: 250GB (5400 RPM)

Optical Drive Type: Dual Layer DVD±RW/RAM with LabelFlash

Supplemental Drive Type: Media Reader

Capacity: 5

Media Types: SecureDigital
Memory Stick
xD-Picture Card
Memory Stick PRO
Multi Media Card

Audio Description: Integrated Audio

Audio Chipset: Hi-Definition (HD) Audio Support

Graphics Description: Integrated Graphics

GPU/VPU: ATI Radeon Xpress 1270

Video Memory: up tp 256MB of HyperMemory

Video Interface: HDMI, VGA

Communications Description: Integrated LAN
Integrated Modem
Integrated Wireless LAN

Interface Type: RJ-11 Phone Connector
RJ-45 Ethernet Connector
802.11g Wireless Networking

Data Transfer Rate: 10/100Mbps NIC
56Kbps Modem
54 Mbps

Protocols: V.92
802.11g

Width: 14"
355.6 mm

Height: 1.1" – 1.5", 25 – 38.1 mm

Depth: 10"
254 mm

Weight: 6.29 lbs
2.85 kg

Mouse Type: Touch Pad

Buttons: 2

Scrolling Capability: Vertical Scroll Up/Down

Keyboard Type: Fullsize

Display Type: Widescreen Ultrabright TFT WXGA

Viewable Screen Size: 15.4"

Maximum Resolution: 1280 x 800

Battery Type: 6-Cell Lithium-ion

Battery Life: N/A

Detailed Features

A Closer Look

Latest Owner Reviews

5.0
4.8
4.5
4.8

REVIEW BY: Reviewed Aug 07, 2008
Awesome, I’m so happy with mine. Mine looked brand spanking new. Very fast, the battery does last only 1 1/2 hours, but I got an extra battery for on eBay used and it works nicely. Came with Vista, but I put WinXP on mine and found all the drivers on the internet. The construction is very sturdy hard plastic, none of the cheap flimsy stuff. Overall the value is great, it feels and looks more durable than laptops of the past, and is fast. Great buy.

REVIEW BY: Rick M. Reviewed Aug 07, 2008
I bought this laptop a week ago.and received it Wednesday. Excellent condition, I would have thougt I just picked it up at a store. My only problem was when I allowed Norton Internet Security to load (60 day trial)and then brought up the internet, half way through loading, the system locked up. The only way to free it up was to manualy power down. I unistalled Norton and installed AVG Free. NO more problems !!!! This is a very fast easy to use laptop with all the bells and whistles. Also very fast shipping,3 days. VERY HAPPY

REVIEW BY: fraqtured Reviewed Aug 06, 2008
i bought the T1625 which is essentially the same specs as this, and wanted to input the impression i drew from the t1625. first off, great price, amazing features, and with a laptop cooler running dollars for a middle of the road model, this laptop will run cool [the only complaint i have found on these was the heat] and you will have picked yourself up a top with features running in some cases nearly twice as much in price of a non refurbs, which will only be the refurbs of tomorrow. run all the updates through gateway, and do a clean reinstall and pertition reformat when you unpack, it, it will take a little bit of time, but will point you in a much faster direction. this laptop is highly recomended in my opinion.

REVIEW BY: Reviewed Aug 05, 2008
This is my first purchase from TD.com, and I’m very satisfied with it. The Turion 64 dualcore processor and the 2GB of RAM make short work of everything I throw at it; I have Pidgin (my IM client), Firefox (with 3 tabs open, including YouTube), LimeWire, and uTorrent all running at the same time and there is absolutely no slowdown whatsoever. My only gripes are that it gets a little bit hot when charging, and the battery only lasts for an hour and a half; I can deal with heat and the battery can be easily upgraded. The only thing you have to worry about with refurbished products is the look, not performance; Mine came with a small scratch in the top of the case, but performs like a champ. If you don’t mind some minor cosmetic flaws, I’d definitely recommend this computer to anyone on a budget, especially at this price!

Write a Review

THIS ITEM IS REFURBISHED

A Quality Verified Refurbished Product
When an electronic product is shipped back to the manufacturer, for whatever reason, where it is inspected, restored to original specification (if needed), tested and/or repackaged for resale, the item can no longer sold as "new", but can only be sold as "refurbished". Our refurbished items are verified and restored to original working condition after undergoing an intensive inspection process by factory qualified service technicians. This allows us to offer refurbished products with confidence, and provide them to you at a substantially discounted price. See below for our warranty and available options. For more information about buying quality refurbished products, click here.

What You Should Know
Keep It Private!
3M Privacy Filters Help You Comply with Federal Confidentiality Laws
3M Privacy Computer Filters help companies comply with federal legislation requiring confidential personal information be kept confidential. 3M Privacy Computer filters can help medical facilities (i.e. hospitals, clinics, health insurance companies, etc.) comply with the Health Insurance Portability & Accessibility Act (HIPAA). The privacy filters are a simple accessory to desktop monitors, both LCD and CRT, as well as laptop computers. They darken the viewable area of the monitor screen when viewed from the side, which helps prevent the release of confidential personal information that must be protected. Similar legislation exists for those in the financial industry. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) places the same restrictions on banks, finance companies, mortgage companies and credit card companies, to name a few. They even help with PCI & SOX!
Click Here to See all our 3M Privacy Filters »

AMD Turion™ 64 Mobile Technology
Is uniquely optimized to deliver AMD64 performance in thinner and lighter notebook PCs with longer battery life, enhanced security, and compatibility with the latest wireless and graphics technologies- today and tomorrow. The most advanced family of simultaneous 32- and 64-bit Windows®- compatible processors made for mobility; Uniquely optimized to deliver AMD64 performance in thinner and lighter notebook designs; Longer battery life, enhanced security with Enhanced Virus Protection* enabled by Windows XP SP2, and compatibility with the latest wireless and graphics technologies, today and tomorrow.
Click Here To Learn More »

Got Enough Memory? Bet You’ll Need More!
Windows Vista and today’s software applications make much greater demands on your system’s memory. Adding peripherals, like webcams, USB hard drives, and complex Internet pages, all take memory. Watching DVD movies, or watching videos on the web, or playing PC based games demand increased memory. So take full advantage of your system’s potential, your operating system’s enhancement and entertainment capabilities, and your software’s productivity by expanding your system memory!
The best time to add more memory is when you buy your system! Get the memory that’s right for your computer, whether laptop, desktop, or All-In-One. Click Here for our Memory Upgrade Options. »

Shared Memory? Or Where Did My Memory Go?
Your computer uses memory to run your Operating System, applications, peripherals, and to generate and display graphics on your computer monitor. Video memory is a form of RAM, and is either built into your motherboard; or on a graphics card (video card). Depending on the motherboard’s configuration, and that of the video card (if separate or built-in to the motherboard), your computer may have to draw on its own RAM memory to meet its video memory needs. This creates shared memory, where your computer’s RAM will be shared between its own Processor (CPU) and its graphics chip.
The result is that some systems will have shared memory, some will not. If you have 2GB (for example) of system memory installed, you may notice that your system reports significantly less memory. This is because your system is using shared memory for your video.

What can you do about this?
You can actually configure this shared memory through your computer’s BIOS settings. However, this is a setting best left alone, since it is typically optimized for display performance, and making changes may impact display resolutions, and other video capabilities.

The simplest solution is usually to either: increase your system memory; or to upgrade the video hardware. By upgrading to a new video card with built-in video memory, then turning off shared memory, you will free your system to use it’s maximum potential memory, and provide your system with much more robust video features.

Click Here for our Memory Options » Click Here for the latest Video Cards »

How Much Memory Do You Really Have?
When you look at the specifications for a computer, it will display the installed memory, and typically the maximum memory that can be installed. However, while these are real values, they represent a potential useable memory. The actual useable memory may be different from these values. The reason is simply that a computer may configured to use shared memory, which reduces the amount of RAM that is available to the CPU by using some of it for other purposes, such as for video memory. In some cases, you can control the maximum useable memory through system settings, and by upgrading to a video card that has internal onboard video memory.
But always remember, that the amount of memory that your system reports, is not always the amount of actual installed memory. If you find that you need more memory, we suggest expanding your system memory, since this is the most effective performance increase, and the one that is easiest to perform .

Click Here for our Memory Upgrade Options »

NOTE REGARDING RECOVERY MEDIA
Most computer systems no longer include "Recovery Media" (Disks or CDs or DVDs used to restore your computer system to its factory shipped state). This is not specific to systems purchased from one company, but now standard practice throughout the entire industry.
Click here to read more about creating your own Recovery Media »

Limited Warranty

This Item’s Warranty is:
- 3 Months Parts
- 3 Months Labor

Warranty provided by
- Gateway Reconditioned
- View Warranty Info

Gateway M-1600 Series Notebook PC – Reference Guide
Technology Advisory: Recovery Media
Technology Guide: Getting The Most From Your Laptop Battery

What’s In The Box

Contents of package may vary from those pictured and stated here, due to changes in manufacturer’s specifications or merchandising. Please check the product information carefully, items not included may no longer be required.

Gateway M-1625 Refurbished Laptop Computer – AMD Turion 64 X2 Dual-Core Mobile TL-60 2.0GHz, 802.11g, 2GB DDR2, 250GB HDD, DL DVDRW, HDMI, 15.4" WXGA, Webcam, Pacific Blue, Windows Vista Home Premium
9.99

Manufactured by: Gateway Reconditioned
Mfg Part No: RB-1015330R
UPC No:
Box Size: ( Length: 16, Width: 14, Depth: 7 )
Shipping Weight: 10.0000 pound(s)
Limited Warranty:
3 months parts; 3 months labor
Click here for full warranty and support information
Limited Warranty: A full text version of the limited warranty may be obtained by mailing a self addressed, stamped envelope to the address below and requesting the warranty for item number: S445-M1625

TigerDirect.ca
Warranty Information
55 East Beaver Creek Rd. Unit G
Richmond Hill, ON
Canada, L4B 1E5

Page Feedback
For IMMEDIATE customer service assistance or help with an order please click here or call 1-800-800-8300.
Remember, you can call us 24 hours a day…7 days a week.

Help us continuously improve by reporting any errors on this page:
The information above is incorrect or conflicting.
This page has misspellings and/or bad grammar.
This page did not load correctly on my browser or generated an error.
The rebate information is incorrect.

Please provide an example of any missing or incorrect information.
Again, if you need immediate Customer Service assistance, click here.

Email Address:

Learn Before You Buy!

· 3M Privacy Federal Confidentiality Laws Keep It Private!
3M Privacy Filters Help You Comply with Federal Confidentiality Laws
3M Privacy Computer Filters help companies comply with federal legislation requiring confidential personal information be kept confidential. 3M Privacy Computer filters can help medical facilities (i.e. hospitals, clinics, health insurance companies, etc.) comply with the Health Insurance Portability & Accessibility Act (HIPAA). The privacy filters are a simple accessory to desktop monitors, both LCD and CRT, as well as laptop computers. They darken the viewable area of the monitor screen when viewed from the side, which helps prevent the release of confidential personal information that must be protected. Similar legislation exists for those in the financial industry. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) places the same restrictions on banks, finance companies, mortgage companies and credit card companies, to name a few. They even help with PCI & SOX!
Click Here to See all our 3M Privacy Filters »

· AMD Turion 64 Mobile Article AMD Turion™ 64 Mobile Technology
Is uniquely optimized to deliver AMD64 performance in thinner and lighter notebook PCs with longer battery life, enhanced security, and compatibility with the latest wireless and graphics technologies- today and tomorrow. The most advanced family of simultaneous 32- and 64-bit Windows®- compatible processors made for mobility; Uniquely optimized to deliver AMD64 performance in thinner and lighter notebook designs; Longer battery life, enhanced security with Enhanced Virus Protection* enabled by Windows XP SP2, and compatibility with the latest wireless and graphics technologies, today and tomorrow.
Click Here To Learn More »

· Memory – New Systems – Need More Got Enough Memory? Bet You’ll Need More!
Windows Vista and today’s software applications make much greater demands on your system’s memory. Adding peripherals, like webcams, USB hard drives, and complex Internet pages, all take memory. Watching DVD movies, or watching videos on the web, or playing PC based games demand increased memory. So take full advantage of your system’s potential, your operating system’s enhancement and entertainment capabilities, and your software’s productivity by expanding your system memory!
The best time to add more memory is when you buy your system! Get the memory that’s right for your computer, whether laptop, desktop, or All-In-One. Click Here for our Memory Upgrade Options. »

· Memory – Shared Memory Shared Memory? Or Where Did My Memory Go?
Your computer uses memory to run your Operating System, applications, peripherals, and to generate and display graphics on your computer monitor. Video memory is a form of RAM, and is either built into your motherboard; or on a graphics card (video card). Depending on the motherboard’s configuration, and that of the video card (if separate or built-in to the motherboard), your computer may have to draw on its own RAM memory to meet its video memory needs. This creates shared memory, where your computer’s RAM will be shared between its own Processor (CPU) and its graphics chip.
The result is that some systems will have shared memory, some will not. If you have 2GB (for example) of system memory installed, you may notice that your system reports significantly less memory. This is because your system is using shared memory for your video.

What can you do about this?
You can actually configure this shared memory through your computer’s BIOS settings. However, this is a setting best left alone, since it is typically optimized for display performance, and making changes may impact display resolutions, and other video capabilities.

The simplest solution is usually to either: increase your system memory; or to upgrade the video hardware. By upgrading to a new video card with built-in video memory, then turning off shared memory, you will free your system to use it’s maximum potential memory, and provide your system with much more robust video features.

Click Here for our Memory Options » Click Here for the latest Video Cards »

· Memory – Useable Memory How Much Memory Do You Really Have?
When you look at the specifications for a computer, it will display the installed memory, and typically the maximum memory that can be installed. However, while these are real values, they represent a potential useable memory. The actual useable memory may be different from these values. The reason is simply that a computer may configured to use shared memory, which reduces the amount of RAM that is available to the CPU by using some of it for other purposes, such as for video memory. In some cases, you can control the maximum useable memory through system settings, and by upgrading to a video card that has internal onboard video memory.
But always remember, that the amount of memory that your system reports, is not always the amount of actual installed memory. If you find that you need more memory, we suggest expanding your system memory, since this is the most effective performance increase, and the one that is easiest to perform .

Click Here for our Memory Upgrade Options »

· Recovery Media Disclaimer
NOTE REGARDING RECOVERY MEDIA
Most computer systems no longer include "Recovery Media" (Disks or CDs or DVDs used to restore your computer system to its factory shipped state). This is not specific to systems purchased from one company, but now standard practice throughout the entire industry.
Click here to read more about creating your own Recovery Media »

Must Haves

Microsoft Office 2007 Basic OEM License Only

Now Just 7.99

More Microsoft Office OEM

More Recommendations

Crucial 1024MB DDR2

Now Just .99*

More PC4200

CA Internet Security Suite Plus 2008

Now Just .99*

More Security

Targus – AMW2002CA – Wireless Mouse

Now Just .99

More Wireless Mice

Targus Computer Cable Lock

Now Just .99

More Other Accessories

MoGo Mouse X54 Wireless Mouse and Media Remote

Now Just .99

More Bluetooth Mice

Targus Notebook Cooling Chill Mat

Now Just .99

More Other Accessories

Targus Universal Docking Station

Now Just .99

More Docking Station/Port Replicators

Targus Universal Notebook AC Power Adapter

Now Just 5.99

More AC Adapters

Targus Ultra Mini USB Hub 4-Port

Now Just .99

More Hubs

HP V100W 2GB USB 2.0 Flash Drive

Now Just .99

More 2GB

Tools And Tips

E-Mail This Page
Print This Page
Why Buy From Us?
RSS Feed

Featured Deals Of The Day Save now on these limited time offers! While supplies last!2000 Lumens Projector

9.99 MORE INFO AMD Dual-Core CPU

.99 MORE INFO 512MB Video Card

.99 MORE INFO 20x DVD Rewritable Drive

.99 MORE INFO 2GB MP3/MP4 Player

.99† MORE INFO
Deal Alerts: Bookmark To: Need help browsing our website? Call 1-800-800-8300

Copyright © 2008, TigerDirect.ca
55 East Beaver Creek Rd. Unit G
Richmond Hill, ON
Canada, L4B 1E5

YOUR PRIORITY CODE IS: CANWGOOCAMON Customer Service
Help
Contact Us
About Us
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Online Returns Navigation
Business Sales
Government Sales
Educational Sales
Visit our Retail Stores
Site Map
Employment Site Tools
Shop by Brand
Email This Page
Report a Bug on This Page
Affiliates
Deal Alerts via Choose Your Country: USA Customers UK Customers French Customers German Customers

TigerDirect is your source for the best computer and electronics deals anywhere, anytime.

TigerDirect is not responsible for typographical or photographical errors. Prices and specifications are subject to change without notice.
*Price after manufacturer mail-in rebate. Restrictions apply. Click MORE INFO button next to your selected product above, then click "Rebate Terms and Conditions" for terms and conditions.
All prices in Canadian dollars. No additional duties or fees.

†This product is factory recertified.

Items with this icon have an additional discounted price. Please click the icon for more information.

WEBX14

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Comments (4)

I have a question that has been bugging me. I am a LREA. I have a lot owner and the lot is paid for clean and clear. The lot has a new doublewide manufactured home on it and a friend of the lot owner owns the doublewide. Both parties want to sell their property. Neither of the two can afford now to buy the other owners property. The lot owner wants to sell the land to the doublewide owner and make it payable when the doublewide owner sells the doublewide and land together as a package. My question is how do I go about handling this deal form wise. My broker and I are kind of stumped on whether we should use an unimproved contract form with a owner finance addendum with no terms except transfer of deed and payable at closing of both the doublewide and land. I have talked with a real estate attorney, but he was no help. Anyone had this situation before? Please help.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , ,

Comments (2)

I have heard SO many different answers to this question. Some say yes and then some say no, I feel like a realtor with all the info I have learned about the real estate market but I still can’t seem to resolve this question. I have the website to the USDA but I’m still confused. A little info….I am looking to put a bid on a 1997 double wide on 3.3 acres of land. It qualifies for USDA due to the area but I dunno if mobile homes do. PLEASE HELP me solve this question ONCE AND FOR ALL!! Thanks!

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , ,

Comments (2)

Critics accuse libertarians of reveling in government failures. Yes and No. No one is pleased to see the destruction caused by government policies, whether small scale, as when a tighter regulation causes business failures, or large scale, as when wars destroy life for millions.

The kernel of truth to the claim is this: the failure of government illustrates something extremely important about the structure of reality that most people are likely to forget. It comes down to this: statesmen and public officials, no matter how powerful they may be, cannot finally control social outcomes.

If I might offer a summary of a point emphasized in all of Mises’s works: the structure of society and world affairs generally is shaped by human actions, stemming from imaginative human minds working out individual subjective valuations, and their interactions with the material world, which is governed by laws that are beyond human control.

What that means is that you and I cannot on our own, even if we have maximum political power, control all of human society, and especially not its economic side. Let’s first consider an example from current popular wisdom about the manufacturing base. Many products that were once made in the US – thinking here of televisions, pianos, firecrackers, plastics, and bicycles–are now made in China. This has caused a great deal of alarm–all unwarranted, so far as sound economics is concerned.

But let’s say we have the ambition to change this social outcome. Anyone is free to build a bicycle and attempt to market it to willing buyers. Let’s say you rent some property, hire the workers, acquire all the necessary capital, and then put your bike on sale. In order to cover your costs and make a profit, you find that you must price your bikes above the going market price. Maybe you can persuade people that you have a special product that is better than the others. Or maybe yours will sit on the floor. Or maybe you will have to lower your price and you will find that your revenue does not cover your costs, and you have to go out of business.

No matter what you decide, this much is clear: you are not dictating the outcome. You wanted to build bikes, but it is the consuming public that decides whether it is in our interest to do so. There is nothing you have to say about it. You cannot make people fork over the money. I would venture to suggest that you will ultimately come to the conclusion that you should be doing other things besides attempting to keep up with other businesses that have lower labor and capital costs and hence can make a profit through selling goods at much lower prices.

But let’s say you decide that you don’t want to bow to the realities of the market. Instead you lobby Congress to tax everyone who buys a bike from overseas. The tax is high enough that you can continue to charge exorbitant prices for your bikes. You make a profit. But at what expense? The consumers who buy your bikes have less income left over for other pursuits, whether consumption, saving, or investment. The workers you are employing are being kept from other pursuits as well, and the capital you are consuming is not available for other projects.

Ultimately, you have skewed the entire economic system in a way that benefits you at everyone else’s expense. Others have found a way to do what you are doing much more efficiently, but because you lobbied and got your way, society is prevented from benefiting from others’ innovations. And how long must this distorted system last? That you managed to tax everyone to benefit you does nothing to change the reality that others can do what you are doing more cheaply and better. Do workers really want to be employed in an industry that is something of an artifice? Do consumers really want to pay high prices just so that you can continue to indulge in your bike-making passion?

Clearly not. At some point, people will catch on to the racket, and find other ways to go about acquiring bikes. Maybe they will exploit loopholes in the law that allow them to import bike parts. An industry of do-it-yourself bike building becomes a threat to your profits. Or perhaps black markets will take over. Or maybe people will turn away from bikes altogether and starting trying out new forms of informal transportation. Skateboards are fitted with handlebars. Gas-powered scooters develop a peddle-only option. The very definition of a bike comes into question. Increasingly, enforcement will have to become ever more onerous.

At some point in this game, we face a choice. We can continue to impose an ever more absurd and preposterous system of regulations and protections just so that you can benefit, or we can bow to reality and let in foreign bikes for consumer purchase. Let’s say your tariff lasts a year or even ten years. What will it accomplish? In that time, vast resources are wasted. Consumers of all sorts are exploited. Capital is consumed in economically wasteful ways. People are pushed around and the police powers of the state grow. It does society no good at all.

My point is that whatever the fate of the so-called manufacturing base, there is nothing in the long run that can be done to turn it in one direction or another. The fate of manufacturing is in the hands of consumers at large, and subject to the laws of economics which no man can repeal. It is the outcome of human choice.

Now, the Bush administration has thought otherwise and imposed a huge range of protections to benefit its supporters and people who the administration hoped would become its supporters. The result has been to skew the world economy, hobble markets, delay inevitable transitions, and impose massive social costs.

What this example shows is that governments are not omnipotent. Many try to be, and no government is liberal by nature. But there are limits. Governments bump up against human valuations time and again. Even in the highly rarified event of a despotic government that rules a population unanimously in support of despotism, government still bumps up against the structure of the world, which resists control.

Let us consider another example. Let us say that government desires a strong dollar. But it still wants to print dollars and ship them around the world. In this case, there is nothing that government can do to insure the dollar’s strength against depreciation. Nothing. This is due to the laws of economics. All else equal, the value of a currency in terms of goods falls as its quantity increases. Governments that desire otherwise can only shake their fist in anger.

The same is true domestically. The government wants economic recovery before a recession has fully run its course. It thereby drops interest rates, spends vast amounts of money to gin up demand, and otherwise encourages as much consumption as possible. These tactics can result in some short-term gains but it doesn’t work in the long run. These tactics deplete savings and capital and weaken the foundation for solid future growth.

The issue of the price of prescription drugs will be a big one in this coming campaign. The problem is high prices. Popular wisdom has it that this is because of the greed of the medical industry. The truth is that these high prices are partly a result of subsidized demand due to Medicare and Medicaid, as well as the restricted supply due to patent laws. In other words, the political class is responsible for the high prices. It’s true that the pharmaceutical industry is not complaining. In fact, high prices are precisely what its friends in government want to bring about.

They may regret that the poor have to pay the higher prices, but not enough to do anything substantive about it. Prices would plummet today if patents were repealed, free trade (including re-importation) allowed, and subsidized demand ended by the abolition of Medicare and Medicaid. But no one wants to consider that solution, so Congress creates ever more intrusive programs designed to control prices, keeping the prices high enough to satisfy the industry but low enough to reduce the political clamor.

The problem is that the government can’t have it both ways. It cannot reward its friends with high prices and keep consumers happy at the same time. The current system with its large subsidies is only creating massive new liabilities in programs that cannot be funded in perpetuity without massive tax increases that no one is willing to advocate. Absent tax increases, the only answer is inflation, which taxes us in other ways.

One way to think about government is as a rat wandering through a maze with no escape. There is no magic solution to getting around basic economic laws. All lunches must be paid for by someone, prices cannot be both high and low at the same time, and all attempts to coerce generate counter-reactions. In short, there is no alternative universe in which the fantasies of politicians come true.

But try telling that to the political class. The last thing they want to hear is that their power is limited, that their will is not a way. They are prone to believe that membership in the political class comes with the privilege of shaping the world to their liking. If you read the social science literature, you find the same error at work on a nearly universal basis. Very rarely does anyone come along and say: great theory but it has nothing to do with reality. You are just playing intellectual games.

Socialism was really nothing other than an intellectual game. People from the ancient world to the present conjured up some vision of how they would like the world to work and then advocated a series of measures of how to achieve it. Mises and his generation explained that their vision was fundamentally at odds with reality. In the real world, capital must have price rooted in exchange of private property in order for it to be employed in its highest-valued capacity. It solves nothing to say that everyone should own capital collectively. This was the equivalent of pointing out that the Emperor was wearing no clothes.

In some ways, what we do as commentators on economic affairs is to follow this model again and again. The other day, a candidate for president suggested that the answer to our economic woes was more regulation. He had it all figured out in his mind. Immediately, free-market economists from all over the world joined forces to point out that his goal of higher economic productivity could not be achieved this way. It was an unwelcome message but one necessary to deliver regardless.

The experience of Iraq has provided myriad examples of the same. The US wants to pump oil. It wants to start factories, stores, and commerce generally. But it refuses to put private owners in charge. As a result, all its military muscle has amounted to very little at great expense. It is a classic example of how governments fail when they try to fight against forces they cannot control. Factories in Iraq that have gone into operation have done so without support of the occupying government.

And think of the war generally. At the outset, the visionaries in the Bush administration imagined that Iraq was really a very simple problem to solve. It only needed to be decapitated and the magic dust of the US presence would otherwise create an orderly and prosperous society that would be a model for the region. The reality hit. Crime was unleashed. Feuding political factions clamored for control. Production stopped. Society flew into chaos. This was not because of the absence of the political leadership. It was because of the presence of foreign martial law in a country that was seething in resentment against the US.

Time and again, we have seen evidence that the Iraq war only accomplished the opposite of its aims. Its purpose was to find weapons, punish terrorism, and bring order to the region. Instead it has fueled terrorism and brought new levels of disorder to the region. Not having done that, the war is then re-defined in terms that reflect whatever government has done: namely to toss out and capture Saddam,

In this sense, the war was like any other government program: bringing about the opposite of its stated intentions and doing so at greater expense. Thus do we see the intersection between foreign and domestic policy. Government is famously ham-handed at home and similarly incompetent abroad. No matter how much government claims that it is master of the universe, it constantly confronts forces beyond its control.

In all the talk of the calamity of this war, never forget the broader picture: what an incredible opportunity was squandered after the end of the Cold War. The US had emerged as the universally acknowledged ideological victor in that forty-year struggle. That the Cold War was not actually an ideological struggle so much as a classic standoff between two empires is irrelevant for understanding the implications of this fact: totalitarian communism collapsed while the free economic system of the market remained standing in total triumph. The world was ready for a new period of genuine liberalism, and looking to the US. On the verge of an amazing period of technological advance, we were perfectly situated to lead the way.

There had never been a time in US history when George Washington’s foreign policy made more sense. A beacon of liberty. Trade with all, belligerence toward none. Commercial engagement with everyone, political engagement with as few as possible. The hand of friendship. Good will. This was the prescription for peace and freedom. It was within our grasp. Our children might have grown up in a world without major political violence. A world of peace and plenty. It could have been.

But it was not to be, mainly because George W.’s father decided that he wanted to go down in the history books for doing something big and important. What else but war? The US was now the world’s only superpower and itching for some fight somewhere. It’s a bit like a playground filled with wimps and one boy with a black belt in karate who never absorbed the lesson in how and where to use his fighting skills. And then there was this oil-drilling dispute between Iraq and Kuwait, and Bush decided to intervene. Twelve years later, the US is still there, causing unrelenting havoc for those poor people.

Here at home we are given constant examples of the huge gulf that separates government’s perceptions of itself versus the reality. The Bush administration wanted to give the steel industry a boost. The administration established tariffs, which amounts to a tax on all consumers of steel. American manufacturers faced a choice of paying the tax to buy imported steel or paying the higher prices for domestic steel. Those who could do neither had to cut back production and hiring in other areas. Other consumers had to pay higher prices, which diverted income from other pursuits.

As for the steel industry itself, the tariffs did nothing to help it achieve greater efficiency, which is the only way to deal with more efficient competitors. They only ended up subsidizing inefficiency. Even then, it wasn’t enough. During the period of tariffs, the industry dramatically consolidated in order to become more efficient in other ways.

Once faced with the prospect of trade wars, the ultimate cost of protectionism, the Bush administration pulled back and repealed the new tariffs, thereby landing the industry in exactly the same predicament it was in before the tariffs were past. As for commercial society as a whole, it paid dramatically higher steel costs, and faced sporadic shortages, for absolutely no reason.

Faced with failure on every front, the Bush administration did the right thing and repealed the tariffs. Not that it was honest about the failure. Instead it claimed its policy worked so well that it could now repeal it. This is like a physician prescribing poison and then changing his mind. He can’t but try to put the best spin on it, I suppose.
But what a beautiful example of the powerlessness of government this is! The Bush administration wanted to save American industry and only ended up vastly raising the costs of doing all forms of business. More cutbacks are inevitable as steel production shifts to other countries and the US finds its comparative advantage elsewhere.

Much legislative energy is poured into helping some groups gain favorable treatment in the workplace. I’m thinking here of the usual litany of victim groups as identified according to race, ability, sex, national origin, religion, and the like. Have these laws actually helped the group in question? The results are mixed at best. If you send people out into the workforce with a high price attached to their heads – and the prospect of a lawsuit is a very high price indeed – you only make employers less likely to hire them.

I don’t doubt that some people have been helped by these laws, but they are not the people most in need of help. Today, the disabled, blacks, women, and religious minorities go in search of jobs with a major problem: employers fear them on the margin, and, on the margin, are less likely to hire them relative to others, provided they can get away with it. It is the least qualified among them who pay the highest price. A good test case is disability: it is a documented fact that unemployment among the truly disabled is higher today than it was when the Americans with Disabilities Act was passed.

Because libertarians know in advance that government policies are destructive, we tend to focus our editorial energy on pointing to its destructive effects. But in our zeal to draw attention to issues others ignore, let us not forget the bigger picture. There are always limits to what the government can do, and the government’s destruction is always accompanied by examples of great creativity on the part of the market.

Even as government dominates the headlines, private entrepreneurs are busy every day working to improve products and services that improve our lives. They do it without taxing us or regulating us, or making us suffer through tedious elections or political debates. They make their products and offer them to us in a way that pleases the consuming public the most. We can choose whether we want them or not.

Consider the success of Wal-Mart. If government had set out to create a volume discounter that made a world of material goods and groceries available to the multitude in all countries, it might have tried for a thousand years and not created anything resembling this company. Even the military has relented and now routinely points its employees not to its on-base stores but to Wal-Mart, Office Depot, and others for the best prices.

Foreign development aid is another example. It took decades to get the message across, but today finance ministers in the developing world understand that they have far more to gain through integration into the world economy than from development aid and all the restrictive policies that come with it. Today, as Sudha Shenoy points out, the largest resistance to new trade deals comes from the developing world, not because they don’t want trade but because they desire trade without the labor and environmental controls the US demands.

The same is true in the area of communications. In the last century, governments aspired to control them all: the phones, the mails, the media. Today, we see that government, in practice, controls very little of the communications industry, despite every attempt to hobble private enterprise.

In that same vein, a major issue for everyone these days are computer viruses and spam, which threaten to make our chief mode of communication less reliable. Congress passes ineffectual legislation against spam and viruses, while private enterprise has given us dozens of means of winning the battle.

Private enterprise creates; government destroys. That is the great economic lesson of our times and all times.
Of course there is one way in which government never fails. It can loot. It can gain footholds into society’s command centers. It can punish enemies. It can even indoctrinate people in its preferred vision of the world through propaganda.

This is the best way to understand the public school system. It doesn’t work to educate but it does work to transfer vast sums from the private to the public sector. And here too, we see the power of private enterprise: booster clubs in public schools represent a de facto source of privatization, and the clubs and groups connected to them are the only really successful things going on in public school.

We’ll hear much in the coming months about all the wonderful reforms politicians are going to bring us. This is the time when politicians vie for our allegiance by telling all about their ideas and vision for the future. As usual, they will parse their words in ways to maximize the numbers of people who are persuaded and minimize the amount of trouble they get into for inadvertently telling people something they don’t want to hear.

As an aside, whoever came up with this idea of a mass democracy just wasn’t thinking things through very clearly. Nothing runs well by majority vote, to say nothing of the fact that a truly free society shouldn’t be "run" at all; it works on its own without would-be masters-and-commanders grasping at the helm.

Let me then offer to you my own top ten list of political lies you are told, all designed to make you believe that government should have more power than it already has, so that it can create more of the disasters we are accustomed to:

10. My new program will generate jobs. Truth: only the market generates jobs on net.

9. My education program will reform schools so that they leave no child behind. Truth: the public schools do not work for the same reason no government program can work. They exist outside the market economy.

8. My program will save industry x. Truth: industry must be part of the market or else it is not really industry at all.

7. I won’t raise your taxes but I will pass lots of new programs: Truth: all programs must be paid for.
6. As president, I will pursue a humble foreign policy. Truth: nothing in the office of the president encourages humility.

5. This war is humanitarian and winnable. Truth: war is nothing but a government program on a massively destructive scale, and just as error prone.

4. My reform will bring market-based competition. Be on the lookout for this lie, which market partisans are likely to believe. There is only one kind of genuine market, and it is rooted in private property and nothing else.

3. We will secure the nation. Truth: government cannot provide security better than markets, any more than it can provide food or houses better than the market.

2. Government is compassionate. Truth: men who seek power over the lives of others are the coldest, cruelest humans of all.

1. You can’t love your country and hate your government. Truth: A person who loves his country loves liberty first.

One hundred years from now, the great story of the latter part of the 20th century and the first part of the 21st century will be the vast improvements in life wrought by technology. Consider the web, the cell phone, the PDA, the affordable laptop computer, advances in medicine, and the spread of prosperity to all corners of the globe. What has government had to do with this? The answer is: nothing contributory. It has worked only to impede progress, and we can only be thankful that it hasn’t succeeded.

Through all of human history, governments have caused frightening levels of bloodshed and horror, but in the end, what has prevailed is not power but the market economy. Even today governments can only play catch-up. This is because of the reasons that Mises outlined. Government cannot control the human mind, so it cannot, in the long run, control the choices people make. It cannot control economic forces, which are a far more powerful and permanent feature of the world than any government anyway.

Governments have a propensity to overreach in so many areas of life that their exercise of power itself leads to their own undoing. The overreach can take many forms: financial, economic, social, and military. In this way, and with enough passion for liberty burning in the hearts of the citizenry, governments can be responsible for their own undoing. It comes about as a result of overestimating the capacity of power and underestimating its limits.

I believe this is happening in our time. It may not be obvious when taking the broad view, but when you look at the status of a huge range of government programs and institutions, what you see is a government that is at once enormously powerful and rich, but also fragile and teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. Events of the last year indicate just how far the government has slipped in its ability to manage the economy, society, culture, and world order. Despite the exalted status of the state today, the vast and sprawling empire called the US government may in fact be less healthy than it ever has been.

A few months back, we had a special speaker come to Auburn, probably the most famous man who has visited us since the Country and Western star Alan Jackson was in town. He was Mikhail Gorbachev, a very interesting figure in the history of nations. He came to power with the reputation of a reformer and instituted many reforms that were designed not to give more liberty to the people, but to stop the unraveling of an empire before it was too late. But it was too late. All his talk of perestroika and glasnost couldn’t fool the people, who had become convinced that the Soviet machine was something of a hoax.

The empire unraveled not because of him, but despite his efforts to save it. When it came time to make the critical decision of whether to try to hold the empire together by more and more force, or not, history had already made the choice for him. The empire dissolved in the blink of an eye. Not too many months later, he was out of a job, not because he was recalled in some formal process, but because the forces of history had run him over.

Democratic governments are not immune from the forces of history that overthrew Soviet tyranny. All governments overreach and no government is permanent. So let us fear government but not exaggerate its powers. It can cause enormous damage and it must always be fought. But in this struggle, we are on the right side of history. The power of human choice, aided by the logic of economics and the laws that operate without any bureaucrat’s permission, are our source of hope for the future.

_______________________________

Llewellyn H. Rockwell
http://www.mises.org/story/1396

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Comments (2)

There are two properties I am interested in. One was built in 1966 & the other in 1974. Is there a company out there that does first mortgages on older manf. homes? I have a down payment well over 20%. Please help

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , ,

Comments (2)

There are two properties I am interested in. One was built in 1966 & the other in 1974. Is there a company out there that does first mortgages on older manf. homes? I have a down payment well over 20%. Please help

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , ,

Comments (2)

There are two properties I am interested in. One was built in 1966 & the other in 1974. Is there a company out there that does first mortgages on older manf. homes? I have a down payment well over 20%. Please help

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , ,

Comments (2)

The nation’s largest builder, distributor, contractor & lender of manufactured housing under the Clayton umbrella? Whose company, Vanderbilt, routinely finances anyone with a sizable downpayment on the spot with interest rates at unheard of highs, with just a phone call? Then, just as routinely, repossesses & resales these homes? Whose finance company refuses to refi those same loans as credit improves & threatens to pull its financial backing from any bank that would?

http://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/0/196/ripoff0196515.htm

I have seen this man finance a 120k park loan for a 22yo making minumum wage with 35k down from a inheritance. How long could a single 22yo living alone make payments on such a loan? @ 16%+ interest? Having been offered employment with his company, I declined because I did not have the stomach for it.

Should Hillary be accepting the support of a man who has made a fortune from exploiting our lower classes this way?
If you have ever walked into a Clayton lot, you know these guys are hard sale…
Dashloc, Gustooch, thinking that this woman and her cohorts could sit in our WH, scares the heck out of me.

What are people thinking? Are they just that uninformed?
You are right, Barry.

Land, money – Buffet will strip unwitting buyers of either and not bat an eye.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Comments (6)

 Mail this post

Comments (2)

Im trying to find a bank that will finance a doublewide on perm. foundation with 1.5 acres.Id like to apply for FHA loan. I live in central Al. Does anyone know who i can go to??

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , ,

Comments (4)

I purchased an older home through a large realestate company under the representasion that it was a boca built modular. Two and a half years later i went to sell it and the appraiser said it is not a boca modular but a hud manufactured.(doublewide) Making it almost imposible to sell since banks will not finance a manufactured home this old. The realestate ad from when i purchased has boca modular right under the features listing. The realtor even told us it took some doing but they proved it was a modular. (a claim they cant remember now how they proved) Can i sue the realtor for the value difference between a modular and a manufactured?

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Comments (6)

Does anyone know a good source? my husband and i are trying to get this home for us and our two children but so far everywhere we go don’t do Manufactured homes. HELP!!!! we really want a place to call HOME! ((we live with my parents right now and its just getting cramped … were 21 and 23 and both our children were birth control babies so please no rude comments, there gifts from god))

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

Comments (4)

I have one prescription that costs more than the insurance cost in Mass.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags:

Comments (7)

In other words, is the Dow Jones average, and all the other stock-based averages, representative of what’s really happening in the world of commerce, in which the manufacturing of products and not the manipulation of money is the main consideration?

It seems that the making of money off of money has taken precedence over the production of goods, services and the creation of jobs. Why else would Main Street seem so disconnected to the money mad men of finance?

And please, I don’t want to hear about all the bs concerning lagging indicators. Any rational person realizes that after a crash of the magnitude of the Bush induced financial calamity, that it takes time for the infusion of money to work its way through the system so that goods and jobs can be created. But even when it does, where are the jobs going to come from if America no longer has the capacity to produce the products that create them?

A service economy can take us just so far. And this is, in my opinion, the great sin of Barack Obama and his inherited crew of economic rapists, they are merely continuing the lies of past administrations that suggests a service economy can satisfy the financial needs of our people.

The Obamanations are also pulling the wool over America’s eyes when they foster the notion that the boom and bust system of the Federal Reserve is the best financial policy that we can muster.

If there is one thing that Texas Congressman Ron Paul is dead right about, it’s the need to eliminate this relic of the Robber Baron era and start afresh. If we did that then maybe we just might stop the flow of real economic power to China for the useless paper that only benefits bankers.

If we did that, then maybe we’d create the jobs that allow the rest of us to share in the future "recovery" that these criminals are predicting. But I don’t expect that to happen anytime soon if Main Street doesn’t get its act together and stops being a slave to the whims of foreign investors and home grown traitors pretending to be traders.
What do you think?
Our primary exports are natural resources and a few labor non-intensive industries like pharmaceuticals , so where exactly do you see our jobs benefitting from the lower dollar?
Again, you miss my point. We don’t manufacture anything of value, so how can the dollar effect on our exports? Several cases in point. 3 of the 4 "American" pharmaceuticals are foreign owned and produce their goods overseas. That’s why a shortage exists of swine flue vaccine. Chevy is exporting their jobs to China to make the new models. Fords are mostly manufactured in Canada. 70% of all construction equipment is made overseas. The American clothing and shoe manufacturing industry no longer exists. Becton Dickonson, the world’s largest producer of thermometers makes most of their product in France. I can go on and on, but the best way to end my litany of lack is to refer to the fact that when Ford decided to split the manufacture of one of their models between Japan and the US, the Japanese model became the consistent favorite of their customers. The fact is, a lower dollar won’t matter if we don’t start learning how to make products that don’t fall apart.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Comments (3)