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Thread: Regulations that hurt business (thesis idea for my wife's research paper)?

  1. #21

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    Here are a couple specific examples.

    How government regulations are putting small-scale meat processors out of business:

    http://www.foodrenegade.com/save-sma...aughterhouses/

    How government regulations force Americans to buy cars with worse gas mileage:

    http://www.hybridcars.com/environmen...ars-25323.html

    Idiocy of the FDA highlighted here:

    http://articles.latimes.com/1995-12-...ncer-detection

    Half the crisis in health care is caused by government restrictions on health care goods and services. You virtually cannot provide ANY health care service without a government permit.
    The proper concern of society is the preservation of individual freedom; the proper concern of the individual is the harmony of society.

    "Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow." - Byron

    "Who overcomes by force, hath overcome but half his foe." - Milton



  • #22

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    Well if you give specific example on some regulations in US that are bad I can tell you how it is done in Croatia, BIH and in EU (ERU only in general). Then you can give that to your wife and have her eternla gratitude. Happy time.Great success.
    So you gave up on this:
    H
    elp with documenting voting rights violations and election fraud abuses!?
    Shame. Nothing encourages crime than not punishing it. You are letting them get away with it.FAIL.


    Quote Originally Posted by orenbus View Post
    If I had to answer this question truthfully I'd probably piss a lot of people off lol, Barrex would be a better person to ask he doesn't seem to care lol.


  • #23
    Member Lucille's Avatar
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    The government is stealing our jobs!
    http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthr...aling-our-jobs!

    (http://www.nera.com/index.htm)

    What are the biggest offenders in terms of expensive regulations? MAPI, again:

    The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) imposes the largest number of regulations on the manufacturing sector with respect to number of regulations (972 regulations in total, including 122 major regulations), followed by the Departments of Transportation (880 regulations in total, including 69 major regulations), Labor (214 regulations in total, including 27 major regulations), and Energy (106 regulations in total, including 17 major regulations).

    The EPA also imposes the largest regulatory burden on the manufacturing sector with respect to cost of major regulations ($117 billion in constant 2010 dollars), followed by the Departments of Transportation ($25 billion in constant 2010 dollars), Health and Human Services ($10 billion in constant 2010 dollars), and Homeland Security ($7 billion in constant 2010 dollars).
    [...]
    China isn't stealing jobs and industries from the U.S.; American politicians are pushing them out the door.
    "The State, both in its genesis and by its primary intention, is purely anti-social. It is not based on the idea of natural rights, but on the idea that the individual has no rights except those that the State may provisionally grant him. It has always made justice costly and difficult of access, and has invariably held itself above justice and common morality whenever it could advantage itself by so doing."
    --Albert Jay Nock

  • #24

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    Regarding environmental regulations.

    When the Federal government set out to address the problem of environmental pollution (a problem that should have and could have been addressed by properly establishing property rights in air, water, etc.) it COULD have simply made it illegal to allow toxic subtances to migrate onto someone else's property. It would have required a few lines of statute and no regulations. Instead, they erected a permitting system whereby prior government permission is required to engage in almost any industrial activity, and a mind-boggling scheme of controls on activities are forced onto people as part of the permitting programs. This is true of the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, RCRA, and others. As a result, huge, permanent government bureaucracies were created and vast numbers of regulations have poured out upon the land. The cost has been staggering.
    The proper concern of society is the preservation of individual freedom; the proper concern of the individual is the harmony of society.

    "Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow." - Byron

    "Who overcomes by force, hath overcome but half his foe." - Milton

  • #25

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    Quote Originally Posted by enoch150 View Post
    The problem with doing a paper on something like Dodd-Frank is that, in order to write a paper on it, she would have to read it herself. What fun is that?

    Minimum wage laws increasing labor costs and pricing the lowest skilled labor out of the market, which can prevent them from learning on the job and gaining skills to advance, which could eventually lead to a skilled labor shortage. Probably can't make the case vs. western Europe, though.

    Or the subsidizing of one industry causing harm to another, such as import restrictions on steel making auto companies less competitive.
    Can you explain "Cant make the case vs western europe though" ?

  • #26

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    Quote Originally Posted by gwax23 View Post
    Can you explain "Cant make the case vs western europe though" ?
    Western Europe got minimum wages laws too.
    So you gave up on this:
    H
    elp with documenting voting rights violations and election fraud abuses!?
    Shame. Nothing encourages crime than not punishing it. You are letting them get away with it.FAIL.


    Quote Originally Posted by orenbus View Post
    If I had to answer this question truthfully I'd probably piss a lot of people off lol, Barrex would be a better person to ask he doesn't seem to care lol.


  • #27

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    Friggin' everything. I'm not any smarter than my employees and I'm sure as hell not better at fixing cars. I just have a lot more patience dealing with sales tax, tire tax, insurances by mandates, license fees, payroll tax, personal income taxes on my S-Corp, health insurance. Regulations enforce that regular people can never open a business, only masochists can. If I could do it all over again, I wouldn't do it. It's not worth it.

  • #28

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    I *think* the paper needs to involve international business, so it would have to be framed in order to show how certain regulations imposed on U.S. businesses hurts their competitiveness in the global market. I think the EPA regulations would be a good one.
    "I shall bring justice to Westeros. Every man shall reap what he has sown, from the highest lord to the lowest gutter rat. They have made my kingdom bleed, and I do not forget that."

    -Stannis Baratheon

  • #29

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    Gibson Guitar

    That story would be perfect, especially if you really research everything about it. Heck, even contact the company and ask if someone would look at some questions for the project.
    "The average person figures that the president tells the truth, the vice president tells the truth, the secretary of state tell the truth; and they don't. They don't. The founders understood that people would be flawed, that political leaders would not be the best of men … so they set forth the constitution. We don't follow the constitution in this country; had we done so in 2001 and 2002, the world would be a different place" - Karen Kwiatkowski

  • #30

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    OSHA is another good one...



    Even though the amount of deaths in the workplace decreased since OSHA's passing, it was declining at the exact same rate even prior.

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