![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Matt Whiting wrote:
They have to be replaced periodically and monitored by folks on the ground. There are onging operational costs. If the military isn't the sole user, it shouldn't be the sole payer. The military doesn't pay a dime. They get every bit of "their" money from the general fund, so "everybody" *is* paying the cost. George Patterson There's plenty of room for all of God's creatures. Right next to the mashed potatoes. |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
jls wrote:
"Matt Whiting" swaggered in message news:P1ofe.2026 I wouldn't pay school taxes if I didn't have kids in school, Oh, yes you would or suffer the consequences. Matt postulated a world in which everything is based on a "pay as you use" basis. In that world, there would be no consequences to that action. To see what that education system would look like, you have only to look back about 200 years. George Patterson There's plenty of room for all of God's creatures. Right next to the mashed potatoes. |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
George Patterson wrote:
Matt Whiting wrote: They have to be replaced periodically and monitored by folks on the ground. There are onging operational costs. If the military isn't the sole user, it shouldn't be the sole payer. The military doesn't pay a dime. They get every bit of "their" money from the general fund, so "everybody" *is* paying the cost. Well, everybody in the US anyway. Matt |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Government is very wasteful, but it does provide for the special interests in a manner that wouldn't exist were everything based on a "pay as you use" basis. Ah, but if EVERYTHING were pay as you go, then they might exist because we could afford to pay. In the end it might work out OK, but it certainly would look a lot different. I wouldn't pay school taxes if I didn't have kids in school, but I'd probably pay $10/gallon for avgas, if it was even available, and I'd pay for weather briefings, use of ATC, use of GPS, etc. Exactly! Because we are not "pay as you go", whenever you take out one item and say it is "sunsidized" and we should be grateful for the government, you are falling for a fallacy. The existing system has us all standing with our hands out after they take so much taxes. |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "FlyBoy" wrote in message ... Follow up: Here, is the bill, http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c109:s786: Why don't your links work for me? |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Blueskies" wrote:
Why don't your links work for me? I don't know. They work for me in Mozilla, Firefox, and Internet Explorer. I did notice that ipetitions.com was down for a few hours yesterday. For the record, here are all the links I referenced: 1: NWS ADDS: http://adds.aviationweather.noaa.gov/ 2: S. 786: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c109:s786: 3: http://www.ipetitions.com/campaigns/SaveTheNWS/ |
#37
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Matt Whiting wrote: Blueskies wrote: This could end up like things in Russia. Public money funded resources are deemed too inefficient to be run by the government, so the assets are put up for bid to private companies. The private company acquires the asset, and then sells the service to the public.Very bad idea for the NWS, very bad idea for our freeways, very bad idea for our airways... I'm not sure it is all that bad. I think if most "public" services were provided by a free enterprise system, then we'd get a lot more in aggregate for our money. Probably so for some services, I dunno about most. In the instant case, it is not feasible for private concerns to operate the weather bureau infrastructure, inclusing constellations of weather satellites and so on. There is also a need for consistant (preferably high) quality and availabllity from the standpoint of public saftey. The proposal would not significantly reduce the goernment's costs, but would significantly reduce the public benefit. Not good. A similar program during the Reagan era privatized much of the Landsat data, after the Governement had paid for the programs to obtain and archive it. The result was that it was priced beyond reach of a lot of researchers. Oil companies could afford it though. It all comes down to what is less costly, the waste in government or the profit margin that a private enterprise would require. If the private enterprise is efficient enough that it can make a profit and still cost less than a government agency, then it is a good deal overall. Not in the instant case. The government would still have all the expense of operating a weather service--then a private concern would get to sell the fruits of that tax money. E.g. Corporate Welfare without even the meager benefits that something like a subsidized sports stadium brings a community. The proper and effective way to privatize services of this sort is to put the operational support for the service up for competative bidding by prospective contractors and NOT by privatizing the data themselves. -- FF |
#38
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ups.com... In the instant case, it is not feasible for private concerns to operate the weather bureau infrastructure, inclusing constellations of weather satellites and so on. Oh, like the constellation of communications satellites? And the broadcast groups? There is also a need for consistant (preferably high) quality and availabllity from the standpoint of public saftey. So you rely on government bureaucrats to provide that? These are much the same people as run the Postal Disservice and Amtrak. The proposal would not significantly reduce the goernment's costs, but would significantly reduce the public benefit. Not good. Yeah..corporations give us all our comforts and prosperity, but they could do that. Get a clue!! |
#39
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Matt Barrow" wrote in message ... wrote in message ups.com... In the instant case, it is not feasible for private concerns to operate the weather bureau infrastructure, inclusing constellations of weather satellites and so on. Oh, like the constellation of communications satellites? And the broadcast groups? There is also a need for consistant (preferably high) quality and availabllity from the standpoint of public saftey. So you rely on government bureaucrats to provide that? These are much the same people as run the Postal Disservice and Amtrak. The proposal would not significantly reduce the goernment's costs, but would significantly reduce the public benefit. Not good. Yeah..corporations give us all our comforts and prosperity, but they could do that. Get a clue!! C'mon Matt. You are overboard here. First of all, the USPS was, IMHO, much better at providing services before it was made into its present "corporate form". Even if it was expensive, you could stand on solid ground when you said you mailed something to someone, and they should have gotten it. Not so anymore, no matter what the IRS says. Second, both examples are more like what would be created by this bill, not what we have now. Semi-privatization just don't fly. Lastly, the argument that is made here is both valid, reasonable, and should be a litmus test for privatization or outsourcing. What this bill does is not really either privatization or outsourcing anyway. If the NWS is not up to the level of quality desired by the market, then why do the private services need the NWS data? IOW, why are there not self contained services ready to go? The problem this bill would address is one where the fine cheese makers cannot sell cheese because the government is giving it away. That would be a good argument except that in this case, the government will still be making the cheese and the cheesemakers wil just become profitable distributors. No, there is a need for better packaging, delivery, and interpretation. There are many services that perform these functions but they often use government sources along with private ones to make their predictions and build their products. They make money only where they can add value. Giving up a lot of benefit for little reward is not something the taxpayers should do just in the name of free markets. We first need to be convinced the free market will be better and more efficient. IOW, we need to know that the satellites and other infracstructure will be replaced by the private sector instead of the private sector simply siphoning off some profit and leaving when the free cheese runs out. |
#40
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dude" wrote in message ... "Matt Barrow" wrote in message ... wrote in message ups.com... In the instant case, it is not feasible for private concerns to operate the weather bureau infrastructure, inclusing constellations of weather satellites and so on. Oh, like the constellation of communications satellites? And the broadcast groups? There is also a need for consistant (preferably high) quality and availabllity from the standpoint of public saftey. So you rely on government bureaucrats to provide that? These are much the same people as run the Postal Disservice and Amtrak. The proposal would not significantly reduce the goernment's costs, but would significantly reduce the public benefit. Not good. Yeah..corporations give us all our comforts and prosperity, but they could do that. Get a clue!! C'mon Matt. You are overboard here. First of all, the USPS was, IMHO, much better at providing services before it was made into its present "corporate form". Even if it was expensive, you could stand on solid ground when you said you mailed something to someone, and they should have gotten it. Not so anymore, no matter what the IRS says. Second, both examples are more like what would be created by this bill, not what we have now. Semi-privatization just don't fly. No, it doesn't. The point made, though, is that private industry "could do what the NWS does", and that's plain BS. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
They are trying to remove your weather access | Dylan Smith | Piloting | 34 | June 29th 05 10:31 PM |
Senate Bill S.786 could kill NWS internet weather products | FlyBoy | Home Built | 61 | May 16th 05 09:31 PM |
American nazi pond scum, version two | bushite kills bushite | Naval Aviation | 0 | December 21st 04 10:46 PM |
Hey! What fun!! Let's let them kill ourselves!!! | [email protected] | Naval Aviation | 2 | December 17th 04 09:45 PM |
millionaire on the Internet... in weeks! | Malcolm Austin | Soaring | 0 | November 5th 04 11:14 PM |