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Comment Never really made sense (Score 1) 39

First Amazon crushes brick-and-mortar stores, then decides to get into the bricks-and-mortar store business?

Beyond convenient return locations, this never made sense, and now they'll convert many of the shuttered locations into Whole Foods stores that will make equally wonderful return depots for online purchases.

Comment Re: Neighborly reciprocity (Score 1) 112

With the coffee shop example, eventually the neighborhood will be full of people with high-paying jobs that can afford their own coffee maker, and the coffee shop will go out of business.

Does anyone move to a neighborhood because of a shop or restaurant? Outside the major cities, folks like me look at the local schools, crime, and other, more meaningful metrics about a neighborhood - not local retailers.

Comment Re: Not terribly new issue (Score 1) 112

I'm confused - what are local businesses entitled to?

If I open a coffee shop in an up and coming neighborhood, the neighborhood was ascending before my shop opened, I opportunistically hope to ride that wave and enrich myself.

As the property values increase, arguably the property value of my coffee shop increases - but if I rent a store front, why do I 'deserve' subsidies? Why does the land lord deserve subsidies? Why do my neighbors owe me money to keep my doors open?

If you want to profit from increasing property values, you have to OWN property, not rent it.

Comment Is that why you open a coffee shop? (Score 1) 112

The essay suggests creating hybrid institutions -- something between homeowners' associations and business improvement districts -- that could levy hyperlocal taxes to keep valued retail alive.

Why do coffee shop owners feel they are owed a reward for increasing property values? They make their money offering a product to local customers - as the income level of the neighborhood increases, they need to adjust their offerings to benefit in the changing environment.

The ONLY benefit they might 'deserve' would be reduced property taxes to offset increasing property values...

Comment Re: total batshit (Score 1) 112

"Rent is theft" - really?

So we should end rental of properties, then everyone can settle into one of two groups - homeowners and homelessness. Brilliant.

Rental properties solve housing problems for people looking for a place to live without the ability to actually buy a property.

Comment Re: using water in a closed loop system is irrelev (Score 1) 55

Exactly.

Bigger facilities pass cold liquid through tubes near the chips to absorb the heat. This hot liquid is sent outside to a cooling yard, where sprawling networks of pipes use as much water as a city of 50,000 people to remove the heat.

And from the cooling yard the water goes where? Oh, yeah, back into the cooling system. The water is not "used," it is "re-used" - yes, some evaporates, but not 50,000 people worth of water (BTW, how much water does "one people" use?)

Comment Re: We need electric everywhere (Score 1) 36

Deep questions must be asked why so called "governments", "corporations" and "charities" have allowed the situation to persist for so long.

We raced down this rabbit hole years ago with the debates about the OLPC project, that promised to bring the internet/computing to villages that lack basic sanitation, fresh water or electricity... I think the conclusion was with internet access third-worlds could simply order whatever they lacked from Amazon or something if they had internet access.

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