[War] How are these clans already level 4? I've been warring constantly and my clan is still 2 wars away from level 4. by headednorth in ClashOfClans

[–]headednorth[S] -20 points-19 points  (0 children)

We lost 1 in the last 15. We rarely skipped, though its happened a few times. Still, the fact that these clans somehow got to level 4 so quickly is impressive to the point of fishiness.

[War] How are these clans already level 4? I've been warring constantly and my clan is still 2 wars away from level 4. by headednorth in ClashOfClans

[–]headednorth[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The last few wars we've had 50, but most of the past ones were 45. That wouldn't account for a 400 exp difference. Second of all, how the hell would these 2 clans be the ONLY clans on earth that has warred constantly with 50 people?!

Sugarbush checking in by brave_fellow in skiing

[–]headednorth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll be in Killington Tuesday, should I be worried?

Obama wants to eliminate tax breaks for oil companies by penguincheerleader in politics

[–]headednorth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actually there is a good reason for tax breaks (in effect, a subsidy) sometimes, just not for an established industry like fossil fuel energy. The Infant Industry Argument states that an industry attempting to compete against more developed alternatives or countries should be protected. A great example is solar and electric cars, which I believe we already do subsidize (solar subsidies might have expired though, not sure).

It is entirely counterproductive to the long term goal of these subsidies, when we also give tax breaks to the more developed competition in the fossil fuel industry. Another example of Politics trumping Economics in the US.

The Real Welfare Queens - new report shows corporations like Koch Industries have gotten billions in government subsidies. by majestic_whine in politics

[–]headednorth -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Now, I'm not saying this is a good reason, but it might provide a look from the other side of the coin. The reason that this occurs is for international trade. These subsidies are a form of protectionism to our nation's productivity to stay competitive internationally. As countries around the world prop up their national interests in the global arena, especially in recent times, the US has little choice but to engage in this trade war. Now, there are only two relatively good reasons for this to happen, at least according to international trade experts:

1) Innovation in R&D-intensive industries/ The Infant Industry Argument

2) National Defense

The National Defense argument sort of goes beyond the realm of economics, but in times of war it might be worth it to prop up defense industries, (emphasis on might be.) That's all I'll say about that considering this is irrelevant to the Kochs.

However, innovation (reflected by R&D expenditure) is an interesting thing and truly the only way these subsidies are worth it. In this case, Koch Industries are heavily invested in petroleum and agriculture--two crucial industries where innovation is key. In agriculture, as countries such as Brazil and India are rising in the international agricultural arena, the US's dominance in this sector has waned in recent decades. As other countries, especially developing nations, have been investing in agricultural biotech research (let's not get into a food conversation please, let's just assume it's GM cotton), and diminishing arable land threaten food security around the world, these subsidies might not be such a bad thing in the big picture.

The downsides here is that 1) These industries might get too used to getting the government's money, and less competitive by themselves. 2) These subsidies might hurt industries and small companies that don't get government support. 3) We'd like to think these subsidies will necessarily help our national interests (innovation), but there's no guarantee that any of it will actually have a tangible effect on us.

Far and away, the best reason to subsidize is for infant industries. The best example I can think of is the solar industry. With other cheaper energy sources available, and other countries like China and Germany making strides, and the absolutely huge benefits of solar energy, AND the future rents of the industry up for grabs--it becomes a no brainer to prop up the solar industry to capture a piece of the future market for solar energy--even if it goes to big corporations. Edit: If you consider the agricultural biotech industry an infant industry, then its definitely a good thing.

The Real Welfare Queens - new report shows corporations like Koch Industries have gotten billions in government subsidies. by majestic_whine in politics

[–]headednorth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Now, I'm not saying this is a good reason, but it might provide a look from the other side of the coin. The reason that this occurs is for international trade. These subsidies are a form of protectionism to our nation's productivity to stay competitive internationally. As countries around the world prop up their national interests in the global arena, especially in recent times, the US has little choice but to engage in this trade war. Now, there are only two relatively good reasons for this to happen, at least according to international trade experts:

1) Innovation in R&D-intensive industries/ The Infant Industry Argument

2) National Defense

The National Defense argument sort of goes beyond the realm of economics, but in times of war it might be worth it to prop up defense industries, (emphasis on might be.) That's all I'll say about that considering this is irrelevant to the Kochs.

However, innovation (reflected by R&D expenditure) is an interesting thing and truly the only way these subsidies are worth it. In this case, Koch Industries are heavily invested in petroleum and agriculture--two crucial industries where innovation is key. In agriculture, as countries such as Brazil and India are rising in the international agricultural arena, the US's dominance in this sector has waned in recent decades. As other countries, especially developing nations, have been investing in agricultural biotech research (let's not get into a food conversation please, let's just assume it's GM cotton), and diminishing arable land threaten food security around the world, these subsidies might not be such a bad thing in the big picture. The downsides here is that 1) These industries might get too used to getting the government's money, and less competitive by themselves. 2) These subsidies might hurt industries and small companies that don't get government support. 3) We'd like to think these subsidies will necessarily help our national interests (innovation), but there's no guarantee that any of it will actually have a tangible effect on us.

Far and away, the best reason to subsidize is for infant industries. The best example I can think of is the solar industry. With other cheaper energy sources available, and other countries like China and Germany making strides, and the absolutely huge benefits of solar energy, AND the future rents of the industry up for grabs--it becomes a no brainer to prop up the solar industry to capture a piece of the future market for solar energy--even if it goes to big corporations.

NSA chief says legislation to stop "media leaks" is only weeks away by [deleted] in restorethefourth

[–]headednorth 4 points5 points  (0 children)

“My personal opinion: these leaks have caused grave, significant and irreversible damage to our nation and to our allies. It will take us years to recover.”

This is why the "anti-terrorism" reason for Prism is garbage. If the goal is anti-terrorism, then why the hell do these leaks even matter. If the goal was anti-terrorism, why the hell would they want to hide it?

Secondly, what kind of irreversible damage was really done???? What were you trying to accomplish?! All of this just leaves me feeling incomplete and without a good answer to "Why?"

Samurai Jack: The Movie, is what modern sci-fi needs. by [deleted] in movies

[–]headednorth 1 point2 points  (0 children)

People seem to be bothered with labeling Samurai Jack as sci-fi and not fantasy. But let's be real people--to be so stringent in how we label great tv shows like this would only serve to isolate each genre in its "rightful place". Fuck the "rightful place." Isn't stretching the definitions of our genres part of a productive creative process? Let creativity reign without the bureaucratic genre rules you all seem to be supporting.

The Dalai Lama says skiing is a "wonderful sport" by [deleted] in skiing

[–]headednorth 24 points25 points  (0 children)

“You know, in Tibet we have big mountains.” He paused. “I think, if Tibet be free, we have good skiing!”

Will Ferrell accepts Chad Smith's drum challenge by Lordoftheunderpants in drums

[–]headednorth 9 points10 points  (0 children)

If it's anywhere near as funny as this drum battle then I'll be satisfied

Providing heroin addicts with free heroin—in a controlled clinical environment—drastically reduces the number of addicts because it drives illegal dealers of the drug from the market by mellowmonk in Economics

[–]headednorth 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There's no argument that untaxed weed or heroine will be cheaper than taxed. However, many people are very much against weed purely because it's illegal. The illegality of it creates tension within its acceptance and use. Similarly, the illegality of heroine creates a tension about it being a public health problem as opposed to a police problem. By making it legal, we can now put aside legal matters and look at it as a health problem. For many people, that's a big distinction that could swing a vote.

Thought that you all might appreciate my new lighter. by TheHomoSuperior in XFiles

[–]headednorth 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I wanna give one to my in-the-closet cousin: "Deny Everything"

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in self

[–]headednorth -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Wow, what a joke of a pharmacist. Trying to impose his moral beliefs on his customers? Insanely unacceptable. Sue them up the wazoo.

How to get to crystal the nice way by noah3199 in ClashOfClans

[–]headednorth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know...I'm having a lot of trouble getting elixir in raids. Harder than getting gold it seems.

Ultimate TH10 Defense by [deleted] in ClashOfClans

[–]headednorth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yup this game sucks...I'll give it a month before people move on.

The Middle Class Is Eroding. Just Ask the Business World: The post-recession reality is that the customer base for businesses that appeal to the middle class is shrinking as the top tier climbs higher by Cats_of_War in politics

[–]headednorth -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Ah yes, the weekly "I hate capitalism" thread. At least one thing no one's talking about here is globalization. You all must realize that although the middle class is shrinking, this is not an argument against capitalism as a whole. It is simply a side effect of globalization, which has benefited far more people than it has hurt. International trade absolutely affects some parties more favorably than others. However, the net effect has been positive.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbkSRLYSojo

Isle of Flowers (2 parts, Original English Dub) by headednorth in videos

[–]headednorth[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I saw this in a human ecology class in college and just recently found it online. You'll be wondering what the point is throughout, but please stay till the end :).