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Dec 18, 2020 — Year after year, by popular demand, millions of Italians sit down to watch the dubbed version of the movie, Una Poltrona per Due.
The classic American comedy, a 20th-century take on the tale of the rich man (Dan Aykroyd) and the poor man (Eddie Murphy), has become a fixture in Italy every Christmas.
Least bad and most efficient not far off from each other. All I know is health insurance companies like to give massive salaries to executives and increase profits by denying care.HA HA HA HA HA
PLEASE don't clutter this thread with healthcare-related postings. As a physician, I could give you horror stories of both Medicare and private insurance. It's not which is better than the other, it's which is the LEAST bad. I personally have seen wastage of hundreds of thousands of dollars on patients by BOTH. And both are insanely inefficient at capital allocation.
Just like Elon said yesterday, the Gov should not be involved in picking winners and losers (paraphrasing), they should just ensure a fair and COMPETITIVE market. Healthcare has ZERO market forces (because prices are not transparent - each player has their own little monopoly - including Uncle SAM). That's the underlying reason why it's so expensive here in the states.
Beyond this, we should move any discussion about gov out of this thread, because:
1) the mods hate it
2) it's getting pretty far off-topic
Least bad and most efficient not far off from each other. All I know is health insurance companies like to give massive salaries to executives and increase profits by denying care.
In general I agree about picking winners and losers, but corporations also like to throw weight around. A former employee of mine worked for JP Morgan and when the financial crisis happened he had employed consultants who worked for me. He told in a conference call where Jamie Dimon told managers that they would take advantage of the situations and make consulting companies suffer.
Saving so that when the roof invariably needs to be replaced, tada! no need to take on debt.I disagree Medicare is far more efficient then Health Insurance. Like 97% of the funds go to healthcare where we had to codify into law that 75% of health insurance premiums had to go into healthcare.
We dont have debt issues. I was showing that judging financial health based on deficit (spending more in a year then you take in) and debt is not a wise choice. Net Worth is a far better judge of financial health. Our Net Worth is about $14M while our debt is $2M. Debt is a tool that can be wisely used. Taking out a loan to fix a hole in your roof is a wise choice. Just like Government taking out debt to combat climate change is a wise choice. The alternative is far more expensive. We both also came from lower middle class families that abhorred debt. We were more educated and realized debt is a tool that can be used wisely.
As are many corporations. Generally people suck, and they suck harder when they have more power.I think it a bloated beached whale and sucks bananas
Looks like a death-trap: 8 sharp blades waist-height right around the person operating it, if there is any trouble no way to jump out safely.I want one!
Home | Jetson - Personal Electric Aerial Vehicle
Your personal aircraft in aluminium and carbon fibre, powered with eight powerful electric motors.www.jetsonaero.com
Yes that explains the volatility in this one as well.
Did you know most people only wash their hands in the bathroom when someone else is in there? It was a pre-covid study as I recall but seems to match what you're trying to speak... I think.What's remarkable is to notice how our shared social reality works. As humans we evolved pragmatically to believe what was useful moreso than what was truthful. We adopt as truth the truths we perceive are commonly held. So it is recursive. This could be called culture or at least the instinct that allows culture.
The correct model isn't that everyone is an independent evaluator of the truth and the result of some group decision is the sum of independent assessments, as much as everyone evaluates objective truth for about 50% of their score and 50% of their perception of other people's scores which is sampled based on whatever they happen to see at the moment. Thus some things fly to the moon and others not based on a fairly chaotic process sensitive to initial conditions rather than intrinsic merit. Momentum is real. Having Elon as a seeding factor very well makes the difference between CT succeeding and not, much more than one might think the objective merits do. A comment here might sit at 0 or fly to 100 based literally on who happens to be logged in at the time it was made, etc.
However when it comes to putting a maximum price envelope there must be some answer. I dont have any precise answer but i think 15x forward revenue is a decent approximation however momentum means you will have pretty short lived and sharp punctures of whatever the general heuristic max is.
Did you know most people only wash their hands in the bathroom when someone else is in there? It was a pre-covid study as I recall but seems to match what you're trying to speak... I think.
Long day, need rest, worked hard-ly. Wake to some Chinese education.
And it's pouring rain in Az. YAY!
Rob not only "says some useful things", he digs deeper than most, provides context and connects dots - doing homework many of us do but many more don't.Yeah he's an interesting guy. Well tempered and rational. I think he's firmly in the nobility of Tesla geeks. However I do also particularly enjoy the vaguely homoerotica with him. The vaguely watering eyes of affection and deliberately gardened hair before interviews with fairly attractive men. I guess he also says some useful things but mostly all things already known but of course it becomes super important when the same thing one already thinks is said by someone that represents what others think.
Rob not only "says some useful things", he digs deeper than most, provides context and connects dots - doing homework many of us do but many more don't.
For example, each time some China sales or production number comes out (monthly) he compares this to what went before and how he expects this to impact the future of the current quarter.
Also every quarter he provides one of the best and most detailed/well reasoned P&D report previews, using all available data in the Teslaverse.
His quarterly Earnings Report and Conference Call analyses are among the most insightful out there.
I could go on, but the above is enough to point out I strongly disagree with your sentiment that Rob only rehashes "mostly all things already known". I won't even go into your other comment.
He's one of the most valuable assets in the Tesla community.