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4208RetroDaze Halloween Special<div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: rgb(153, 51, 0);"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Hey Halloween Special attendees!</span></span><br><br><span style="font-weight: bold;">You too can have your very own<span style="color: rgb(255, 204, 0);"> Dutch</span> &amp; <span style="color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">Hamato</span> action figures!</span><br><br><img src="/images/postImages/DutchandHamato.jpg"><br><br>After the Special has completed, a code word will be given for you to write in a PM to me, Vaporman87, along with your shipping information.<br><br>If you have 25 Points to spare, they will be deducted from your account and your figures will be shipped directly to you! <br><br>Dutch &amp; Hamato will happily arrive, ready to chow down on your Fearless Photog cereal and sit on your couch watching hours of television.<br></div><br><br>Vaporman87Oct 11, 2013View
4207ExcitebikeLook how he cruises through the tracks like they're nothing. <iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/543dG0EWcYM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>Mr MagicOct 11, 2013View
4206Excitebike <blockquote rel="shakin steak"><b>shakin steak wrote :</b> beep, beep, beep, BOOOP! VVvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvrrr rrrrrrrrrgggh, vvvvvvvvvvvvv vrrrrrrrrrgggggghhhh VEEEEEEEEEEEE *chooka choosh* fip fip fip fip fip fip VVVvvvvvvrrrrrrr din, dun-dun-dun, din, dun, dunnn! </blockquote> I can hear it now. :lol:Vaporman87Oct 11, 2013View
4205Things you don't like about this era.There is a lot of sense in what you've mentioned. Some things I just can't agree with include: -Soaking the rich: I'm not rich. And, I probably never will be. But I could never ask anyone, EVER, to pay our government any more than 35% of their income. And to me, 35% (or 37%) is too much. Our government was never founded to get it's financial support from an income tax. That is something that came about as a temporary measure that, unfortunately, never ceased. If you want to make taxes fair, then you need a "Fair Tax". Tax consumables. That's what I'm for. Get rid of progressive income taxes altogether. Yes, the Fair Tax is also progressive in scale, but it's also on what you CHOOSE to buy. Yes, things will be far pricier, but we'll also have more expendable income. The benefits are clear, but we're too afraid of what we don't understand. -Condensing: I agree with most of this. But I DO NOT agree with imminent domain at ANY time, no matter the benefit. What is mine should be mine until I choose for it not to be. Vaporman87Oct 11, 2013View
4204Excitebikebeep, beep, beep, BOOOP! VVvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvrrr rrrrrrrrrgggh, vvvvvvvvvvvvv vrrrrrrrrrgggggghhhh VEEEEEEEEEEEE *chooka choosh* fip fip fip fip fip fip VVVvvvvvvrrrrrrr din, dun-dun-dun, din, dun, dunnn!shakin steakOct 11, 2013View
4203Things you don't like about this era.This is stuff I think about a lot. I'm not an economist, so I could be very wrong. But I base this on looking at history and what's been going on. I try to be pragmatic. The role of govt as I see it, in a nice non-totalitarian country, is to make life as good as possible for as many people as possible. So here's my ideas to fixing quality of life, income inequality, unemployment, a lot of environmental issues, and the economy. I should preface by saying these are long range plans, none cold turkey. They are also not necessarily in order of priority, because I might not be smart enough to figure out exactly how all these pieces fit together, even though I know they do. 1. No more importing. If you do business in this country, your goods come from this country. This leads to more jobs. This also leads to higher prices, but also higher wages. As I said elsewhere, when you don't want to pay $2 for a roll of toilet paper, you don't get to complain when your job goes overseas. Let's bring them home. It'll be difficult to pay $10,000 for a new computer, or $20 for a McDonald's hamburger, I know. We as a society need to start understanding the true cost of things. And when a McD burger costs $20, the person flipping that burger will be making $20 an hour, so they will be able to afford it. Our consumer habits as they are, are built entirely on false premises. It is inconvenient to jack up the walls of a house one section at a time, but when you need a brand new, solid foundation, it's that or tear down the whole thing and start from scratch. If we do not do the former, I see the latter coming within our lifetimes. The current govt shutdown is very significant step towards destroying everything. I do understand that at the very least, it will be difficult to figure out how to obtain materials, since we have stripped and mined so much away already. Again this is not a cold turkey process. We can start with "no more importing whole computers", move on to "no more importing components" and then eventually "no more anything" as we find solutions. America the home of innovation and exceptionalism, if it truly deserves those words, can find a way. I believe this is possible within one hundred years. "Free trade" is freedom for people who already have lots of money and power and does nothing long-term good for ordinary citizens. If no more importing means no exporting because other countries get pissy that we won't buy from them, I'm OK with that. Where are we now, and why should we continue on that path? I'm all for capitalism and people being able to profit from their good ideas. I am not for that profit giving the power of price-fixing to destroy the little guy. And I think titans of industry should know that, while their empire might provide jobs, it could not exist without employees who should be valued, suppliers who should not be screwed, and taxes that allow the infrastructure needed for it to all come together. 2. Condense. With all the open land in this country, we should not need to import food. Some areas will need to be cleared of residents to make more room for farming. Perhaps a policy of "no new residents" to allow people to stay where they are if they wish. Farming must be done intelligently, with crop diversity and rotation. Monoculture ruins soil. City planning also needs a boost around here. We need to admit European urban and building planning have a lot of good ideas, and start using some of them. 3. Rework taxes. I know it's hard for a small business to pay more taxes. I don't want to raise theirs. But somebody's gotta pay more. There's a pretty easy correlation between high taxes and good economy all across the 20th century. When was our economy the best? World War 2. At that time the very richest people were paying upwards of 90% income tax. The greatest generation: Gotta take all parts of that. Also including where govt was heavily investing in infrastructure. Austerity does. Not. Work. And the "job creators" have been paying some of the lowest taxes in history for their class for quite some time now; where are the jobs?? Stop kowtowing to their threats to leave, to close, etc. If you want to do business and therefore reap the benefits of society, you have to contribute to society as well and not just take take take. All the time here in Chicago we get businesses opening a new office because we give them some huge tax break, and what we get out of it is short term, that is if there's even any benefit at all. 4. In areas of dense population, incentivize 24 hours a day operation. This will create more jobs and more profit to support those jobs. This is probably the easiest thing to do. 5. Living wages. I'm sorry if Joe's Pizza feels like it's BS to take care of their employees, but let's be responsible here. It's the same as people who don't want their tax dollars going to schools, because THEY don't have any kids so school isn't something they should worry about. But education of people around you does affect your life. (And I do say that as someone who decided, twenty years ago, to never have children.) The health and happiness of your employees does affect your business. Can we just get everybody to agree that we're all human beings here? I don't even care if a company doesn't want to provide health insurance, but it should be possible for everybody to get it somewhere else then.shakin steakOct 11, 2013View
4202ExcitebikeSuch a great classic. It's fun and simple. All you could want in a game like this.Vaporman87Oct 11, 2013View
4201Bringing back a retro product.Plus, if a cartridge was dirty, you could blow on the bottom of it. Sure, it was um...breathtaking, but it was better than wasting money on a cleanser for the compact disc.Mr MagicOct 11, 2013View
4200Bringing back a retro product. <blockquote rel="thecrow174"><b>thecrow174 wrote :</b> I'd like to replace compact discs with cartridges. <img style="width: 447px; height: 290px;" src="/images/postImages/593-cartridge-1.jpg"> They were more reliable. </blockquote> I could go for that so long as they were capable of equal or greater graphics, audio, storage, etc.Vaporman87Oct 11, 2013View
4199Things you don't like about this era.I think if you're going to end subsidies for one group, you need to end them for everyone. The government should not be in the business of picking and choosing which areas of business need a boost, and which ones do not. I certainly agree with you that what happens with regard to "corporate welfare" is a sham. There are corporations out there that likely are guilty of every sin you list in that last paragraph. The problem is that we now live in a global market. It's not simply a matter of saying "this is wrong" and then going cold turkey. If you do that, then what benefit that actually exists as a result of the corporation operating here in America will be packed up and shipped to China, Taiwan, Korea, or some other country (what parts aren't already there, that is). So while it is true that these mammoth corporations are destroying smaller competitors and not paying fair wages and such, it's also true that these corporations are being coerced into leaving the country, and leaving our economy worse off. I'm no fan of big business (though in the propane business, it's not the big guys you have to worry about, it's the other guy down the street), but the sad fact is that we need them. And we need them to stay here in America. I hate that this is true, but it is. It's a balancing act with government trying to keep the corporations honest and not exploiting people, and allowing them leeway to operate at a significant profit. If the balance shifts too far one way or the other, the effects are bad for us all. On a side note: I'm no fan of Ayn Rand's views on altruism or religion, but I think she was spot on regarding pure capitalism. Yes, we need regulation and we need accountability, but we have to be VERY careful with these things, and not be passing 70,000 new regulations every year. It's crazy. Vaporman87Oct 11, 2013View