kentadams
Giggity
kentadams

You're naive. But that's ok, because I was too in the late 80's when I was a researcher for the Cato Institute. You still believe in a free and fair marketplace as I did. If your mind is ruled by curiosity rather than dogma, you too will learn there isn't such a thing as free and fair in the marketplace.

Sure, you could do all of that at one time, it was called Jim Crow. The problem with your logic is you confuse speech with group discrimination. You can discriminate against ideas, but you can't discriminate against race, creed, disability, gender, religion, nationality and soon sexual orientation. I'm sure that

I lived across the state line in Asheville. We went to the fair and the golden ball was impressive. I remember the massive parking lot and all of the different country pavilions. I liked the rides most of all but I remember some of the pavilions like the Australia one and so forth. We had a good time. But I do

You're correct, I added 1 too many zeros. But, I get .00468253968

They're also rebroadcasting their commercials which is the source of revenue for them as well.

Your math is way way off. Using your numbers, it costs only .0004 for every dollar they collect.

This right wing court will never side with a small business company against a corporate behemoth. I think we know the outcome already.

Getting electrocuted?

Good on Nokia to fess up, sad for Nokia because….

Get over yourself. I think most Americans would love to get out of the Israeli Palestinian conflict.

Some folks don't mind working in that environment and see it as a means to an end. I've spent most of my career with four walls and a door over the last 25 years, so I've been fortunate in that regard. But, for me, its a soul killer, the whole corporate rat race. I wish I had started my own company in my twenties

Why not put office buildings in Yosemite or along the ridge of the Grand Canyon? Heck, let's put them on the top of Mt. Rushmore. Nothing like a concrete cube farm to brighten up the natural landscape.

It makes sense to go up and not out.

At some point in time, a building peaked over central park's tree line. NYC turned out just fine.

When I see buildings like this, I associate the interior with a cube farm which totally ruins any positive attribute the building could contain. I imagine people slaving away, hour after hour, day after day and year after year in this:

Yep, it pretty much is. When I look at the natural beauty and architecture of the Earth, I ignore the office buildings and images of cube farms in my head, like most humans.

I dont, since working at the top A/E and LEED firm in the world doesn't expose me to Class A construction.

LEED standards are really the new standards, there isn't anything special about that. I finance LEED building construction all the time, its the norm now, not some sort of unicorn like it once was. You really don't know much about Class A construction do you?

These types of regs keep Washington D.C. looking green, despite the fact 5 million people live in and around the D.C. metro region.

I would buy this before Google Glass in a heartbeat.