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6/26/2025, 6:52:15 PM
>>713718434
>neoliberal policy
I literally advocating for the opposite though? I want less government intervention while neoliberalism wants more.
>neoliberal policy
I literally advocating for the opposite though? I want less government intervention while neoliberalism wants more.
6/13/2025, 1:18:07 AM
>>712483491
>Regulations aren't a reason small businesses fail
Sure.
Start a small business, get regulated, fail because you can't pay for expensive licenses or spend the TIME on paper work, or get sued to death by a large competitor.
>IP laws are good in some cases. For instance, pharmaceuticals spend a lot of money on R&D for their products and we want them to be able to recoup their losses so they can continue to do research.
I know about this and I think it might be the case HOWEVER, it could also be that R&D takes the fuck off because you don't have to worry about overlapping with an existing patent and better method of developing drugs might emerge because they have to be more efficient to get to market faster.
>why do Americans pay less for generics while the newest things aren't even marketed in European markets? Is there a way to cooperate and diffuse the American cost while making these drugs available in European markets?
Here's a question, why do so many European countries tax the hell out of businesses? Like Stripe, a unicorn startup, by Irish brothers is based in AMERICA, you wonder why that is?
>Taxes aren't bad or good they just are, and taxes are very often beneficial multipliers on what your productivity.
HELL NO.
You give money to the government there's a 1/5 chance it'll go to something useful and 1/3 chance that it'll be as efficient as private industry. I've worked in and around Gov for years and have seen this in every sector.
> Places like LA have rows and rows of singly family suburban homes that desperately need to be redeveloped but instead old people that entered the local market before it exploded and are now incentivized to endlessly speculate on the rapidly increasing price of their property, thereby wasting everyone's time.
Yeah basically government zones so we can't build new homes and the supply is capped while demand continues to increase. It's also the reason our transport is fucked in cities
>Regulations aren't a reason small businesses fail
Sure.
Start a small business, get regulated, fail because you can't pay for expensive licenses or spend the TIME on paper work, or get sued to death by a large competitor.
>IP laws are good in some cases. For instance, pharmaceuticals spend a lot of money on R&D for their products and we want them to be able to recoup their losses so they can continue to do research.
I know about this and I think it might be the case HOWEVER, it could also be that R&D takes the fuck off because you don't have to worry about overlapping with an existing patent and better method of developing drugs might emerge because they have to be more efficient to get to market faster.
>why do Americans pay less for generics while the newest things aren't even marketed in European markets? Is there a way to cooperate and diffuse the American cost while making these drugs available in European markets?
Here's a question, why do so many European countries tax the hell out of businesses? Like Stripe, a unicorn startup, by Irish brothers is based in AMERICA, you wonder why that is?
>Taxes aren't bad or good they just are, and taxes are very often beneficial multipliers on what your productivity.
HELL NO.
You give money to the government there's a 1/5 chance it'll go to something useful and 1/3 chance that it'll be as efficient as private industry. I've worked in and around Gov for years and have seen this in every sector.
> Places like LA have rows and rows of singly family suburban homes that desperately need to be redeveloped but instead old people that entered the local market before it exploded and are now incentivized to endlessly speculate on the rapidly increasing price of their property, thereby wasting everyone's time.
Yeah basically government zones so we can't build new homes and the supply is capped while demand continues to increase. It's also the reason our transport is fucked in cities
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