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Mike Farrell speaks
Message
From
10/06/2006 10:02:36
Dragan Nedeljkovich (Online)
Now officially retired
Zrenjanin, Serbia
 
 
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01124779
Message ID:
01128279
Views:
28
>>So how is it worse than losing job here for nothing?
>
>This is illegal and you have recourse in the courts.

Sure, see the note about the lawyers. They are an international corporation sitting on millions of dollars, and I don't even have any proof that I've lost the job, no paperwork whatsoever. Just no salary anymore.

And what about other cases, where you lose your job when the company just sinks? Or when they hire a new CEO who promises to cut the expenses by 15% and then does it by firing 15% of the workers? Or when the gang on the top just plays the company stock down, forces a downsizing just to play their agenda? Your John Q Worker must have done something really awful to deserve this.

>>Or losing your head just because you parked your car in the wrong neighborhood?

>You could use your head and avoid the wrong neighborhood.

There's something utterly wrong in the mere existence of such neighborhoods. And guess what: these didn't exist in socialist countries.

>>Of course everything wasn't fine, and we were just as free as anyone here. Just replace the number of things you couldn't do because of The Party with the number of things you can't do here because of The Corporations, and the score is pretty even.
>
>This is complete bull. What specifically are "The Corporations" preventing you from doing?

The latest straw is the credit card companies refusing to send my money to my tobacco supplier. I can still buy cigarettes in the supermarket, but this limits my choice - I want to keep buying it directly from the inventors. But Discover, Mastercard, Visa and American Express seem to have some ideas what I can and what I can not do with my money.

Let's see... a random list off the top of my head:
- I can't choose which TV channels I will pay for. There's only packages, not a la cart.
- I can't start my own cable service
- I can't start manufacturing of anything that's already manufactured by a big corporation; they'll price me out, or blackmail the retail chains into not buying from me (I've read of cases when this happened)
- I can't start a bank which would not keep everyone's money for five "banking" days but rather keep it only for the ten seconds it takes to verify the transaction electronically
- If I complain about my boss, I get labeled as "not a good team worker" and I'm next to fly out when the next round of firing comes (didn't happen to me, happened to my team manager)

> Are these the same "Corporations" which have led to the greatest scientific, medical and industrial advances in the history of mankind? Which corporate computer, ISP, and software are you using to compose your response?

Internet wasn't invented by corporations, it was funded by tax money. And so was a lot of research. Last time I looked, the private sector produces only half of US's GNP.

My computer is not really mine - about half of it belongs to Microsoft.

I use Open Source whenever I can, and I contribute as much as I can. If corporate software was such a good thing for the humankind, there'd never be a compelling reason to create open source in the first place.

And don't get me started about medicine, in a country where there's no system, and where there's nothing to stop Merck from repeating Vioxx.

>>Man, you can't even stand on the corner and chat with your friends for a couple of hours, because that's called loitering and someone will call the police.

>Sure you can, we have parks and public areas as well, you just can't do it on private property. The property's owners have rights.

OK, so if you happen to meet a friend and start talking, and another two come, and you begin an interesting dispute which may take an hour or two, you first need to see whether you're on private property? It's a street, a public place. The land belongs to the city, and city belongs to the people. Or am I fundamentally wrong? Is there some sort of regulation that forbids random encounters and chat, depending on where you meet?

>>I find more similarity with Sloba's fuq-topia -
>
>>destruction of middle class,
>
>Alexander Deane might argue that this is not a bad thing
>http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0907845975/sr=8-2/qid=1149785600/ref=sr_1_2/103-9005906-5031858?%5Fencoding=UTF8

The blurb there doesn't say much about the argument, it's all about the current lack of definition.

Doesn't change my argument that the middle are going down, regardless of definition.

>>inventing wars,
>
>War was brought to us.

Nope, that was a terrorist attack. Which country attacked, which military units?

>>cronyism,
>
>I would say that all political systems partake in cronyism

Not necessarily and not to the extent I've seen in these two cases. Replacing successful heads of departments or important government agencies with the guys who helped during the rise to power, no matter how incompetent, doesn't happen in these proportions just everywhere.

>>media control,
>
>Ever heard of the internet? The major media is becomming less influential.

But still overwhelmingly influential. The trouble with the web is that you have to search, dig and sift, but when you buy a new machine you get ready links to... the same corporate media. So I figure a minuscule percentage of the populace is reading something different from what they're served by the TV.

>>Let's choose weapons - do you want a million percent inflation, or revocation of bankruptcy laws so you're in debt forever (unless you're a corporation, that is).
>
>Lets not forget that anyone can form a corporation. Its not like they are exclusive. The tax laws apply to everyone equally, you just need to learn them.

I know, even I as a foreign citizen can form one (and may still do). But if I go bankrupt as a person, according to the latest law, I'll get into debt forever; if I do the same as a huge corporation, I may negotiate forever.

As I once heard, if you owe some, you're in debt; if you owe a lot, you're a business partner ;).

>>And on TV you'll see a virtual reality where real issues never come up, any mass demonstrations against the regime are ignored or downplayed
>
>This is absolute crap. The major anti-war demonstrations were given wall-to-wall coverage on the cable news networks. The immigration rallies were given wall-to-wall coverage on the cable news networks. Heck even Cindy Sheehan's Camp Casey was given wall-to-wall coverage on the cable news networks. What planet are you living on?

Earth, very close to the soil itself. What color was this wall-to-wall carpet? Speaking of Cindy Sheehan, I haven't heard more than ten seconds of what she had to say, it was all voice over. And then those who commented on her got minutes and minutes.

I've seen this done over and over in Slobaland, I recognize the pattern.

>> patriotism spinning and search for internal enemies never stops.
>
>I would say that all political systems partake in patriotism spinning and search for internal enemies.

I've lived in only three countries so far, and one of them was the exception to this - for those two years in Hungary I haven't seen much of this. I'd be glad if our readers from other countries would chime in here, we need a larger sample.

Or should we just use a time machine and go back to previous administrations here?

>>Iron hammer is physically instantiated as a lawyer much more expensive than your lawyer. You're equally disqualified.
>>
>
>That's right no lawyer has ever won anything for the cause of good. Sheesh your world is depressing.

Cynicism helps. Keeps you sane and somewhat distanced from the ugly reality :).

This was such a nice country when I came, specially when compared with Slobaland I left. And then within a couple of years most of the symptoms appeared. I often wondered whether I brought them with me, or was it just my bad luck.

Not that I'm complaining about my personal situation. I've lost a job four times here, but was always able to find the next one, and even now as an independent (for only two weeks :) I'm able to stay afloat, keep my mortgage paid regularly. It's just my disappointment with what I see, compared with what I thought it would be (and what it was before the current regime took over).

back to same old

the first online autobiography, unfinished by design
What, me reckless? I'm full of recks!
Balkans, eh? Count them.
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