Posted January 26, 2012
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I thought you yanks were in general opposed to taxpayers bailing out unsuccessful businesses?
- The residents of the town clearly don't see the shop as just another corporation. They see it as an institution, part of their community. That in itself is cool imo.
- Someone was thoughtful enough to realize people needed help, and they thought of a good way to give it to them. Again, imo, that's cool.
- You've taken the concept of "using taxpayer money" completely out of context. People had a problem with the bank bailouts because their money was used for it whether they wanted it to be or not. This was entirely voluntary, everyone who helped "bail them out" did so because they wanted to.
- If you don't support local businesses, then there won't be any. When you buy a product, you may only look at the price, but many people also look at other factors, such as who is selling it, where it comes from, what kind of service you're going to get, etc. A good example of this is that Gamer's Gate sometimes sell games that we can get here, but a bit cheaper. I still pay the extra and get them here anyway, because this is a company I believe in and want to support. Enough of your country already belongs to China anyway - if you stick to only buying products based purely on retail pricing, your kids are going to end up living in the United States of China, afterall, the US workforce is terribly uncompetitive on an international scale if you look at pricing alone.
- Nothing about the article suggests that the business is operating on a business model that isn't financially viable in the long term under more usual circumstances. They have been going for over a century, so they must have been doing something right. I suspect the issue is more to do with the current difficulties small businesses are facing trying to acquire financing during these tough economic times. The banks probably said no, but the community said yes. Again, imo, that's awesome. The community WANTED it to be financially viable, so they made it so. You really don't see what's cool about that?
- People protest against large corporations by sitting in parks and tweeting about it on their iphones and pretending to boycott stuff. These guys did the polar opposite of that. They protested big business by supporting small business instead. I believe that's by far and away the most effective way of doing things.
Post edited January 26, 2012 by MonstaMunch