ButtBidet

joined 4 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Lol I'd love for the business owners to do it. They're looking for the government to pay for it. But I bet it's often the workers who end up paying.

Sorry to be a vegan, but fuck cheap ass animal agg businesses.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I'm not great with money, but the best advice I could get for this kind of situation is to only give away from money that's not completely critical to you.

Oh this is absolutely my philosophy as well. My last friend I gave a bit more than I should because she was just between two jobs. But I'll survive. I'm not going to struggle with my own rent because of this.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago

It also seems intuitive enough. If there's a two income household, they all own their cars and house, one would imagine that they could pay back a small loan.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

These pharmaceutical companies make bank and don’t need such a small amount.

NGL I don't know the exact details with how much they're getting.

In general, with scientific research, especially medical research, the private sector won't do any research that's even remotely unprofitable unless they're paid to do so. The correct solution is to nationalise the companies, but we're living in a dictatorship of the bourgeoisie, so this is what happens in our timeline.

Really almost nearly all medical breakthroughs in the last century came from an abundance of state grants and guarantees.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 weeks ago

Sorry I absolutely missed it

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 weeks ago (6 children)

A quiet reminder that literally everyone hates Zizek

[–] [email protected] 15 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Ya I'm not giving them the tiniest amount of pressure.

Quietly tho, I would like the money back. In the end, it's my small retirement.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

It's individual people doing a one off loan. Maybe I'm too nice, but I don't inquire too much about people's finances before helping friends out. (maybe that sounds snarky but it wasn't meant to be)

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Was it the n racial slur? Do I need to add a CW?

Honestly I missed it.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 2 weeks ago

I'd like to think that if I was trying to be a bystander to a crime, if a cop asked me random questions about the investigations, I'd answer "dude, why the fuck are you asking me?!?". Not "oh maybe it was cloudy that day" and suggest you have more foresight about the crime than a normal person should.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 weeks ago

I'm gonna hire hitman to get the person who's trying to ruin my hexbear bit

/s (I actually wouldn't want anyone to lose sleep over that)

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago

Find that new product.... and you can give up on your normal job forever!

I'm betting on cat pee.

 

Highlights

•    Cognitive engagement induced distinct prefrontal haemodynamic patterns post COVID-19.
•    40% of the undergraduate students reported brain fog due to COVID-19.
•    37 % of the undergraduates exhibited impaired cognition up to 17 months post-infection.
•    Brain fog appeared to affect the distinct prefrontal haemodynamic patterns.

Abstract

To date, 770 million people worldwide have contracted COVID-19, with many reporting long-term “brain fog”. Concerningly, young adults are both overrepresented in COVID-19 infection rates and may be especially vulnerable to prolonged cognitive impairments following infection. This calls for focused research on this population to better understand the mechanisms underlying cognitive impairment post-COVID-19. Addressing gaps in the literature, the current study investigated differences in neuropsychological performance and cerebral haemodynamic activity following COVID-19 infection in undergraduate students. 94 undergraduates (age in years: M = 20.58, SD = 3.33, range = 18 to 46; 89 % female) at the University of Otago reported their COVID-19 infection history before completing a neuropsychological battery while wearing a multichannel near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) device to record prefrontal haemodynamics. We observed that 40 % retrospectively self-reported cognitive impairment (brain fog) due to COVID-19 and 37 % exhibited objective evidence of cognitive impairment (assessed via computerised testing), with some suggestion that executive functioning may have been particularly affected; however, group-level analyses indicated preserved cognitive performance post COVID-19, which may in part reflect varying compensatory abilities. The NIRS data revealed novel evidence that previously infected students exhibited distinct prefrontal haemodynamic patterns during cognitive engagement, reminiscent of those observed in adults four decades older, and this appeared to be especially true if they reported experiencing brain fog due to COVID-19. These results provide new insights into the potential neuropathogenic mechanisms influencing cognitive impairment following COVID-19.

 

After extensive forensic work, including comparing IP addresses, word choice, and image metadata, we have discovered that many users here are secretly bees. This list includes:

  • GalaxyBrain
  • Nakoichi
  • WashedAnus
  • ComradeSharkFucker
  • Yuritopiaposadism
  • DirlOwl
  • HarryLime

Your account has been disabled until the following actions have been taken:

  1. Return all the pollen that you stole. We need it back. Stop taking my fucking pollen you asshole.

  2. Register your stinger, and sign an affidavit that it will be locked in a weapons grade case.

Thank you for your cooperation.

 

I have really shapely muscles, my teeth are perfect, my nose looks like a roman statue. My butt looks like two loaves of bread that just left the oven. I'm easily a 9, but honestly I'm probably a ten.

I'm just tired of logging into badposting and seeing all these posters with average cheekbone structure and mid-tier chins.

I insist that the admins make a comm titled badposting for hot people. I will take my good looking self somewhere else if my demands are not met.

 

So I was taking my extended family to our bi-weekly Italian restaurant outing. I think we were being good customers. We each ordered 1-3 dishes each, various sides, and 1/2 a dessert per person. I ordered loud enough that the waiter could hear me well. Then I said "that's it, we're done". He said "thank you", but only gave half a smile to us before sending our order to the kitchen. I just feel that I'm owed more respect than that after patronising his owner's business helping him have a job.

To be a really nice customer, we had him separate the bills, because we know that's simpler than just us splitting it ourselves.

So ungrateful.

 

Sorry I need to sleep. I'm really tired.

See you all tomorrow.

 

If you create a post with this in the title

⬆️ ⬆️ ⬇️ ⬇️ ⬅️ ➡️ ⬅️ ➡️ B A

All the users are now naked.

Blew my mind when I first tried it.

 

Mine is Mega Man 2

 

I get this a lot from friends and acquaintances: "ButtBidet, how do you do it? How do you have money put away yet still have a bit of free time". I don't normally like to share all my tricks, because if everyone did it, businesses would catch on and it would stop being so successful. You all are like family, tho. I think it's fair that I share it with you.

Here are a few tricks I found to save some money and time. 🤫 don't tell everyone, just people you know and trust. 😉

  1. Before buying anything, scour the Internet for deals. - I can't get over how often I was gonna buy something on Amazon, only to find it half the price on Aliexpress or Ubuy. Give it a Google search before hitting "purchase".
  2. Call up and haggle with your insurance company - Tell them that you found a better deal. Many customer service representatives are empowered to give discounts of 10-20% to keep a client.
  3. Cancel unused subscriptions - I can over how much people pay for Spotify or Netflix. If you're not watching it, cancel it. That $20 a month really adds up.
  4. Travel at off peak times - Did you know that flights on Tuesday are so much cheaper than on Saturday? Leaving the house at 8am on a Sunday uses so much less petrol than leaving at 1pm. Plan ahead with your trips, and you can save so much.
  5. Have a cleaner come once a week to do a deep clean - Getting under sofas, in ovens, or under sinks is really tiring and time consuming. Get some outside help, and enjoy the extra time.
  6. Order door dash instead of cooking - Shopping, preparing, cooking, and cleaning are really time consuming. Order food from your favourite restaurant, and enjoy high quality food without the effort.
  7. Rent out the home your parents' bought for you - $3000 a month for rent doesn't sound like much, but times 12 months and you've got $36k, more than a lot of people make in a YEAR! It'll be hard, but you'll thank yourself for the savings.
  8. Manage your employees to work off the clock - Labour costs are expensive, save where you can. One way to get your workers to work for free is to give them an unreasonable quota, something they definitely won't finish in 8 hours. If they stay an extra two hours past their shift to finish, that's money in the bank for you!
  9. Use political connections to get government contracts - Those politicians aren't doing anything. Call them up and get them to work for you! There's a lot done by government employees that you can easily have done by your workers who make much less. Make up a story about "efficiency" and have your dad's newspaper repeat it over and over.
  10. Start wars to destroy redundant production and increase the size of your markets - If you're finding that profits are flat, sales are down, and there's no new customers coming your way, go for war. Most people in your settler country are pretty racist already, it's not hard to stoke hatred for a non-white country far away. Occupation armies are guaranteed customers, as well as the new shops you'll able to open up (because your competition is obliterated)
 

Sorry there's some lib energy in this article

Article Text:

During the LA fires, dozens of fire trucks sat in the boneyard, waiting for repairs the city couldn't afford. Why? A private equity roll-up made replacing and repairing those trucks much pricier.

One of the reasons that the recent Los Angeles wildfires were so hard to contain, according to Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) Chief Kristin Crowley, is that more than half of the LAFD’s fire trucks have been out of service. It’s become a bit of a scandal; while fires burned through Palisades and Eaton neighborhoods, more than 100 of the LAFD’s 183 fire trucks were apparently sidelined.

Why couldn’t the LAFD keep its equipment in working order? A lot of people blame budget cuts, but there’s another root issue - increasing prices and metastasizing production delays for these vehicles. The cost of fire trucks has skyrocketed in recent years––going from around $300 -500,000 for a pumper truck and $750-900,000 for a ladder truck in the mid-2010s, to around $1 million for a pumper truck and $2 million for a ladder truck in the last couple years. Meanwhile, the time it takes to get a fire truck delivered has grown dramatically, from less than a year before the pandemic to anywhere between 2 and 4.5 years today. (It’s not just trucks, all fire equipment is increasing quickly in price, from air supply packs to maintenance contracts.)

The skyrocketing prices and longer delivery times have made it difficult for the LAFD to replace aging vehicles in its fleet, many of which have exceeded their service life. As the LAFD’s vehicles have gotten older, they’ve become prone to more frequent and serious breakdowns, leading to more costly repairs and prolonged downtime. And as the rising cost of fire-truck maintenance and replacement has squeezed the department’s budget, it has had fewer resources for recruiting and retaining firefighters. Against this backdrop, the LAFD wound up having to face some of the worst fires LA has seen in a century while both understaffed and under-equipped.

What I’ll show you in this piece is that the increasing price is a result of a private equity firm, American Industrial Partners, consolidating the fire truck industry and forcing up prices across the board. For decades before the 2010s, the fire apparatus industry was characterized by relatively stable (inflation-adjusted) prices and ample production capacity.

Then, however, AIP bought multiple fire-truck manufacturers and rolled them up into conglomerate called the REV Group. Although AIP initially made a show of allowing these manufacturers and their distributors to continue operating independently, under the surface it quickly moved to operate them as a single firm, like a food conglomerate selling a bunch of different brands that all appear to be different companies. As one industry executive has observed, “There are now times when all vendors at a bid table, each with a ‘different’ product, are all owned and managed by the same parent company. How is that competitive for the purchaser?” The answer, of course, is that it isn’t. And you don’t need to take my word for it. REV Fire Group Vice President of Sales Mike Virnig made it clear in 2020: “What I won’t tolerate is negative selling,” he said. “I won’t tolerate it with our competitors, and I won’t tolerate it within the group. If I even get a hint or see anything like a dealer taking a shot at another dealer, we step in and say, ‘Stop it.’”

Before getting to how AIP operates, I want to note that higher costs of trucks are not just an LA problem. The Seattle Fire Department is also struggling to replace and maintain an aging fire truck fleet. So is the Houston Fire Department, and the Atlanta Fire Department. Across the country, in communities large and small, headlines about fire departments struggling to cope with metastasizing fire-truck prices and bottlenecks in fire apparatus supply chain have become commonplace. “Waiting Lists and Higher Prices Add Up to Long Delays for New Fire Trucks,” says the Connecticut Examiner. “Why did that fire truck cost $1.9 million? Because it just does,” says a small-town news website in Kansas. "Despite FIRE Act grant,” the Tribune-Review of Pennsylvania reports, “Export, PA, fire department says rising fire apparatus costs a challenge.” Illustration by Daniel Medina

Even when fire departments can put together these large sums of money for new trucks, they can’t seem to get the dang things because of steep delays in production. Since 2019, “[T]he lead times for delivery from [the] date the order is placed [for a new a fire truck] to final inspection has gone from 10-12 months to greater than 2 years in many cases and in some cases approaching 3 years.” The Seattle Fire Department says it faces even longer wait times, with ladder trucks orders taking 54 months — 4.5 years — to be fulfilled. In an emergency, Evanston, Illinois, spent over $2.3 million to try to get a fire truck in a year and a half — and it was a demo vehicle previously ordered by a dealer and passed down to the city as a favor, without any of the customizations that fire departments typically require.

The Economic Termite That Ate Up the Fire Apparatus Industry

The modern fire apparatus and emergency vehicle manufacturing industry came into its own in the post-war decades of the 1950s and 1960s. Aided by antitrust enforcement actions that protected small manufacturers from exclusionary practices and ensured they could source necessary supplies (like steel) at the same discounts as large firms, small and midsized fire apparatus manufacturers––typically family-owned operations––appeared in every region of the country to produce emergency vehicles tailored to the needs of local fire department. Competition among these smaller firms served to keep fire truck prices near costs, and the existence of a large number of manufacturers ensured there was always plenty of redundant manufacturing capacity to meet demand.

This remained the case well into the 2000s. Then, the Great Financial Crisis decimated municipal budgets, which in turn decimated demand for new fire trucks. The number of fire truck’s ordered plummeted from 5,000-6,000 a year to around 3,000 a year. At the same time, many of the manufacturers in the industry began facing leadership succession questions, as founders were aging and considering their options for retirement. That’s when a private equity group, American Industrial Partners (AIP), took an interest in rolling up the industry.

AIP’s initial theory was that, with sales depressed and succession issues on the horizon, the owners of fire apparatus manufacturers could be convinced to sell on the cheap. That theory turned out to be mostly wrong––the family-owned players in the industry were resilient. The only fire apparatus company that AIP was able to nab at the bottom of the market was a large, investor-owned manufacturer of fire trucks and ambulances, Federal Signal/E-ONE. As late as 2015, there were still “approximately two-dozen companies producing motorized fire apparatus in the United States,” including “nine full-line manufacturers producing their own chassis for pumper and ladder trucks,” and “fifteen limited-line manufacturers producing only pumpers based on purchased chassis.” All twenty-four manufacturers were either independent or owned by a separate parent company.

Nonetheless, AIP’s acquisition of E-ONE gave it a beachhead in the fire apparatus industry — one on which it would build as demand returned. By 2016, state and local budgets had mostly recovered from the Great Recession. Demand for fire trucks went up, reaching 4,000-5,000 orders annually. That’s when AIP’s offers became too good to refuse. One by one, leading fire apparatus manufacturers around the country fell under AIP’s control: KME, a large, 70-year-old manufacturer in the Mid-Atlantic region that supplied engines to the Los Angeles Fire Department, was acquired in 2016. Ferrara, E-ONE’s direct competitor in the South, was acquired in 2017. Spartan and Smeal, two Midwest stalwarts, came into AIP’s fold in 2019. Ladder Tower, based out of Pennsylvania, was bought in 2020. Over the same decade, these were paired with acquisitions of a large portfolio of ambulance, bus, recreational, and other specialty vehicle manufacturers, which AIP ultimately bundled into a conglomerate holding company called the “REV Group.”

These acquisitions quickly transformed REV Group into one of — if not the — dominant manufacturer of fire trucks and ambulances in the United States. In 2017, even before its acquisitions of Spartan, Smeal, and Ladder Tower, REV Group told investors it controlled approximately 44% of annual fire trucks and ambulance sale. The first thing REV Group appears to have done with its newfound power is tamp down competition in the industry. Although REV Group executives initially made a show of preserving the independence of the Group’s subsidiary manufacturers and their dealers, they simultaneously disseminated unsubtle signals that aggressive — or “negative” — competition among subsidiaries would be frowned upon.

By 2021, REV Group stopped even pretending to support subsidiary independence. In September of that year, KME’s plants — which were important suppliers of fire trucks to California municipalities before KME’s acquisition in 2016 — were shut down pursuant to a new “platforming” and “channel management” strategy. A REV Group investor presentation around the same time showed that strategy called for REV Group’s subsidiaries to “[c]onverge on common designs that can be shared across brands,” and to use Spartan’s Metro Star chassis/cab as the “platform” for their offerings. It also called for the elimination of geographic overlaps between the marketing of its different fire-truck brands and dealers. The mask was officially off: REV Group’s fire apparatus operations were now officially “center-led,” with REV Group dictating and managing the execution of “margin improvement actions” across its subsidiaries.

The Aftermath

As a result of AIPs roll-up of fire truck and emergency vehicle manufacturers into the REV Group over the past decade, the overwhelming majority of the industry’s sales and capacity are now concentrated among three dominant manufacturers: REV Group, Oshkosh, and Rosenbauer. Out of roughly $3 billion in fire truck sales made in the United States annually, the available data suggests that REV Group captures around $1 billion (or 33%), Oshkosh takes around $750 million (or 25%), and Rosenbauer takes “only” $250 million (or 8%) — giving these dominant firms two-thirds of the national market, and undoubtedly even more market share in some regions of the country where fewer manufacturers operate. And the acquisition sprees do not appear to be slowing down: in 2021 and 2022, Oshkosh responded to REV Group’s roll-up by making acquisitions of its own, including Maxi-Metal in Canada and Boise Mobile Equipment in Idaho –– the latter being an important supplier of wildland firefighting apparatus to the California, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana markets.

In conjunction with this consolidation, we’ve also seen a reduction in industry capacity from actions like REV Group’s shutdown of its KME plants. What is curious about that shutdown in particular is that it came in the face of rapidly increasing demand: As federal COVID-19 assistance filled state and local government coffers, fire truck orders grew approximately 50% from 2020 to 2022, reaching roughly 6,000 for the first time since 2008. Since then, order activity has remained strong, hovering between 5,500 and 6,500. As a result, both REV Group and Oshkosh have seen their backlogs skyrocket over the last two years. The latest available data shows that REV Group had a $4.2 billion backlog on fire and emergency vehicle orders in the United States as of October 2024, while Oshkosh had a $5.3 billion backlog on fire apparatus orders globally as of June 2024. And yet, neither company appears to be making significant investments in additional manufacturing capacity to rapidly cut down its backlog — or even concerned that multi-year delays in delivery might lead customers to bail on their orders.

Indeed, it appears that the dominant manufacturers have managed to turn their delivery failures into financial advantage. Using the purported difficulty of projecting material costs over a 2-3-year lead time as an excuse, they have imposed “floating” price clauses onto their customers — allowing them to increase the final price of a rig when it finally goes into production. In effect, the bottleneck in fire truck production that REV Group, Oshkosh, and to a lesser extent, Rosenbauer created with their M&A and operating strategies are giving them even more bargaining power vis-à-vis fire departments. Not only that but, according to REV Group’s SEC reports, the twenty-four-month backlog it is running is literally enhancing its value to shareholders — AIP being the largest among them — by giving the company “strong visibility into future net sales.”

Altogether, these facts paint an alarming picture. A handful of financiers have been allowed to transform a critical, once-vibrant industry into a rent-extracting racket. By consolidating the fire-apparatus industry through serial acquisitions, REV Group and Oshkosh appear to have consolidated the power to raise prices and throttle output of lifesaving equipment with impunity. Using that power, they have imposed years-long delays in delivery on their customers and exorbitant payment terms that will enable them to pass on production costs almost at will — leaving them little incentive to invest in new capacity or greater efficiency to relieve the bottleneck in the fire truck supply chain. They can reap rising stock prices and “attractive levels of return on invested capital” for their shareholders just by sitting pretty — all while fire departments across the country struggle to replace aging fire trucks, have to spend more on maintenance for older vehicles, and are forced to shirk on other budget items, like firefighter salaries, to get what equipment they can. But the ultimate harm of AIP’s monopolization of the fire apparatus industry, of course, is not something that can be measured on a spreadsheet. It’s a hundred fire trucks sitting out of commission while a disastrous wildfire burns whole neighborhoods of Los Angeles to the ground. It’s lives lost, homes destroyed, communities gutted.

Where Do We Go From Here

While AIP’s consolidation of economic power over fire truck manufacturing is appalling, it is not some unsolvable, intractable problem we just have to live with. State and federal antitrust laws already prohibit the kind of monopolistic roll-up that AIP perpetrated — they just need to be enforced. State AGs can bring lawsuits to force REV Group to divest the manufacturers it illegally acquired and to pay damages to fire departments for the harm that its (attempted) monopolization of the fire-truck industry has caused. Fire departments and other fire-apparatus purchasers can bring their own lawsuits to do the same. So can the FTC and the DOJ’s Antitrust Division. If state legislators or members of Congress want to pave the way for such lawsuits, they can launch their own investigations into the fire apparatus industry. And if anyone wants guidance on what a lawsuit against AIP could look like, Lina Khan left us a roadmap just before she stepped down from the FTC last week — when she sued private-equity giant Welsh Carson for rolling up Texas anesthesiology practices to drive up the price of anesthesia services to Texas patients.

We have all the tools we need to check AIP’s greed and abuse and restructure the fire-truck industry so it serves the public interest. The only question is whether our political leaders have the will.

Thanks for reading. Send me tips on weird monopolies, stories I’ve missed, or comments by clicking on the title of this newsletter. Or if you work for or adjacent to a monopoly and have interesting confidential stuff to share, go ahead and do that. If you liked this issue of BIG, you can sign up here for more issues of BIG, a newsletter on how to restore fair commerce, innovation and democracy. If you really liked it, read my book, Goliath: The 100-Year War Between Monopoly Power and Democracy.

cheers,

Matt Stoller

 

I got a ban from a group because there was a lot of horse posting. I basically commented that "hey there's a lot of evidence that horse riding causes permanent injuries", and "who here can actually afford this posh hobby". The admins were rich as fuck. Somehow rich people tend to have more time to do this shit. Anyhow, they said that I was being personally insulting because "posh hobby".

blocky-wat

I was also kicked from a reddit-logo sub for reporting obvious Islamophobia. Fuck that place.

I got a two week ban from Facebook for anti-white racism. And I'm officially the whitest person on Hexbear.

Maybe I'm a lib or too damn civil, but I haven't yet been kicked from a site yet deeper-sadness

 
 

I gotta do this thing IRL and it would be supremely funny if I went as a libertarian.

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