Title: | Soapbox. Just Soapbox. |
Notice: | No more new notes |
Moderator: | WAHOO::LEVESQUE ONS |
Created: | Thu Nov 17 1994 |
Last Modified: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 862 |
Total number of notes: | 339684 |
The antithesis of Fun Facts
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
119.1 | POLAR::RICHARDSON | The Quintessential Gruntling | Wed Nov 30 1994 10:40 | 1 | |
Perhaps the plethora of tater tot equations belong here. | |||||
119.2 | ANNECY::HUMAN | I came, I saw, I conked out | Wed Nov 30 1994 10:41 | 1 | |
How many tater tots does it take for Carl Sagan to say "Bbillions" | |||||
119.3 | confused | KERNEL::MVD03::newberyp | Wed Nov 30 1994 10:41 | 3 | |
what does antithesis mean????? Paul | |||||
119.4 | ANNECY::HUMAN | I came, I saw, I conked out | Wed Nov 30 1994 10:41 | 1 | |
Damn! missed it! | |||||
119.5 | ODIXIE::CIAROCHI | One Less Dog | Wed Nov 30 1994 13:38 | 2 | |
Most masters candidates would rather just get a degree and forego the work. They would be considered antithesis. | |||||
119.6 | Thanks for the smile! | TROOA::TRP109::Chris | ...plays well with other children | Wed Nov 30 1994 17:29 | 1 |
<----- {chuckle chuckle} | |||||
119.7 | That's RRRRIGHT! Give him the _antidote_! | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Dec 01 1994 00:10 | 1 |
A large percentage of contestants on the quiz show "Beat the Reaper" die. | |||||
119.8 | Pyramid Petunia | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | One hand clapping | Thu Dec 01 1994 10:20 | 4 |
Your radio station replaying "Beat the Reaper" re-runs or are you a Firesign Theatre fan, Mr. Regnad Kcin? Dan | |||||
119.9 | And he's right... | GAAS::BRAUCHER | Wed Dec 07 1994 10:51 | 6 | |
Koop, at Hillary's kick-off of the weight-loss program : "Americans are too big." bb | |||||
119.10 | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | Wed Dec 07 1994 12:37 | 1 | ||
Ya, but I thought the issue waas weight... | |||||
119.12 | a gem of a fack | HBAHBA::HAAS | bugged | Wed Aug 02 1995 16:00 | 0 |
119.13 | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Aug 02 1995 17:11 | 1 | |
So does that make you a Japanese-Irish Jew? | |||||
119.14 | Talk Hard | SNOFS1::DAVISM | Happy Harry Hard On | Mon Aug 28 1995 01:15 | 3 |
The world will end in 30 seconds.... 30-29-28-27-26..... | |||||
119.15 | Talk Hard | SNOFS1::DAVISM | Happy Harry Hard On | Mon Aug 28 1995 01:15 | 3 |
4-3-2-1..... I've been wrong before !!! Sorry :*) | |||||
119.16 | DEVLPR::DKILLORAN | Danimal | Tue Aug 29 1995 12:55 | 5 | |
<-------- DAM YOU! You went and got me all excited for nothing! | |||||
119.17 | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the heat is on | Tue Aug 29 1995 14:27 | 1 | |
sounds like a personal problem to me | |||||
119.18 | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Been complimented by a toady lately? | Tue Aug 29 1995 14:51 | 8 | |
re: .166 >DAM YOU! Hoover???????? | |||||
119.19 | GIDDAY::BURT | DPD (tm) | Tue Aug 29 1995 20:07 | 8 | |
Re .16 Now *that* is grim! :^} \C | |||||
119.20 | POLAR::RICHARDSON | CPU Cycler | Tue Nov 07 1995 18:56 | 3 | |
about 20,000 people die from Cobra bites in India each year. Yikes! | |||||
119.21 | For Billy Boy's delight... | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Been complimented by a toady lately? | Wed Nov 08 1995 09:15 | 4 |
Ban Cobras!!! | |||||
119.22 | DASHER::RALSTON | The human mind is neuter | Fri Jan 05 1996 16:51 | 64 | |
Taken from: http://www.infi.net/~redtape/bureau.html In 1993, the nation's regulatory system cost Americans $581 billion -- about $5,900 per household per year. Other fun facts: The annual cost of federal regulation is projected to rise to $662 billion by the year 2000. ("CEOs Call for Sweeping Reform of U.S. Government Regulation," PR Newswire, June 21, 1994, citing Thomas D. Hopkins, "Costs of Regulations: Filling the Gaps," Reg. Info. Service Center, Aug. 1992) If the hours spent complying with the tax code were put to productive work, they'd represent the entire annual outputs of the U.S. auto, truck and aircraft industries. (The Dallas Morning News, June 30, 1994) "The Lord's Prayer is 66 words, the Gettysburg Address is 286 words, and there are 1,322 words in the Declaration of Independence. Yet, government regulations on the sale of cabbage total 26,911 words." (Letter from David McIntosh [former member of V.P. Quayle's Council on Competitiveness] to Grover C. Norquist, Oct. 13, 1992) Between 1987 and 1992, the federal paperwork burden increased 261% to nearly seven billion hours, according to the GAO, with tax requirements comprising most of that burden. And regulatory costs tend to hit small business harder than larger companies which "often welcome new regulations because they know the regulations will help consolidate their market share and wipe out small business competitors." (Karen Kerrigan, president of the Small Business Survival Committee, Investor's Business Daily, Sept. 8, 1994) "President Clinton's first year saw the most regulatory activity since President Carter's last. The page total for 1993 of the Federal Register was 69,608 pages, the third highest total of all time . . . [And] from 1988 to 1992 regulatory staffing increased by over 20 percent to almost 125,000 employees. Under President Clinton, the largest number of Federal bureaucrats ever, 128,615 people, were called for to run his Federal regulatory apparatus." (Statement by Congressman Tom Delay [R-TX], Congressional Record, May 12, 1994) And then there's the human cost... Excerpted from the Wall Street Journal, Sept. 16, 1994. Bill Pierce, owner of a Cincinnati engineering firm "let his salaried employees, most in their 50s, set their own schedules. All they had to do was work 80 hours every two weeks. If they chose to work fewer hours for less pay, or more for straight time, that was fine. Mr. Pierce says the employees, with annual salaries of $45,000 to $70,000, treasured the system's flexibility. Enter the Department of Labor. . . it filed a lawsuit in federal court in January 1989 accusing him of flouting an obscure provision of the 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act. In a new interpretation of that law, it argued that any salaried employee docked for unpaid leave in increments of less than one day automatically becomes an hourly worker. It ordered him to pay nearly $50,000 in back wages, penalties and interest. Mr. Pierce says he spent a small fortune in legal fees and thousands of hours fighting the department's charges. His business suffered, and he began letting his employees go. In early 1992, a judge ruled he owed only $3,100. But by then, he says, he was broke. He says he laid off his last employee last December. | |||||
119.23 | SCASS1::EDITEX::MOORE | ALittleOfMazePassagesTwisty | Mon Jan 08 1996 01:31 | 3 | |
<--- and there are over 7,000,000 words in Title 26. Go figure. | |||||
119.24 | SMURF::KAZIGIAN | No good deed goes unpunished. | Mon May 19 1997 13:39 | 5 | |
PopUp Video on VH1 reports that it takes longer for humans to decompose nowadays because of all of the preservatives in our food. Marc | |||||
119.25 | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Conformity is freedom | Mon May 19 1997 14:10 | 1 | |
VH1, a great source for news and facts. | |||||
119.26 | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | Mon May 19 1997 14:12 | 1 | ||
particularly when delivered during a video of Talking Heads. | |||||
119.27 | I'm crushed! | BULEAN::BANKS | Goose Cooker | Mon May 19 1997 14:18 | 1 |
But, if you can't trust Pop-Up Videos, who can you trust? | |||||
119.28 | SMURF::KAZIGIAN | No good deed goes unpunished. | Mon May 19 1997 14:22 | 5 | |
RE: 119.25 Hey, Binder and EDP are not always available ;-) Marc | |||||
119.29 | MRPTH1::16.34.80.132::slab | [email protected] | Mon May 19 1997 15:13 | 5 | |
RE: .28 Take it to note 11!! |