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Guest jmatsu

How much sleep do you average?  

55 members have voted

  1. 1. How much sleep do you average?

    • 3 hours (zombie)
      1
    • 5 hours
      24
    • 7 hours
      24
    • 8+ hours (hybernation)
      6


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superfuture10

266.jpgLast Activity: today 04:14 AM

Viewing Thread GAY NlGGAZ @ 04:14 AM

this explains what happened to dum's "gay niggaz" thread. at least we still have milspex's immortal "minya sucks porno cock"

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denimdestroyedmylife user_online.gif

superfuture10

266.jpgLast Activity: today 04:14 AM

Viewing Thread GAY NlGGAZ @ 04:14 AM

this explains what happened to dum's "gay niggaz" thread. at least we still have milspex's immortal "minya sucks porno cock"

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i hope this thread dies off very very soon. the sarcasm can only last so much. ugh.

but that pic is fucking funny, he looks ridiculous with those zebras on. bahahaha. its just a great pic overall.

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A free market is a market where prices of goods and services are arranged completely by the mutual non-coerced consent of sellers and buyers, determined generally by the supply and demand law with no government interference in the regulation of costs, supply and demand. The opposite of a free market is a controlled market, where government sets or regulates prices directly or through regulating supply and/or demand.[1] Although a free market necessitates that government does not regulate supply, demand, and prices, it also requires the traders themselves do not coerce or mislead each other, so that all trades are morally voluntary.[2] This is not to be confused with a perfect market where individuals have perfect information and there is perfect competition.

The notion of a free market is closely associated with laissez-faire economic philosophy, which advocates approximating this condition in the real world by mostly confining government intervention in economic matters to regulating against force and fraud among market participants. Hence, with government force limited to a defensive role, government itself does not initiate force in the marketplace beyond levying taxes in order to fund the maintenance of the free marketplace. Some free market advocates oppose taxation as well, claiming that the market is better at providing all valuable services including defense and law, or that such services can be provided without direct taxation. Anarcho-capitalists, for example, would substitute arbitration agencies and private defense agencies.

While most economists regard the free market as a useful if simplistic model in developing economic policies to attain social goals, some regard the free market as a normative rather than descriptive concept, and claim that policies which deviate from the ideal free market solution are 'wrong' even if they are believed to have some immediate social benefit. Samuelson treated market failure as the exception to the general rule of efficient markets. But more recently the Greenwald-Stiglitz (1986) theorem [3] posits market failure as the norm, establishing "that government could potentially almost always improve upon the market's resource allocation." And the Sappington-Stiglitz theorem "establishes that an ideal government could do better running an enterprise itself than it could through privatization"[4] (Stiglitz 1994, 179).[5]

In political economics, one opposite extreme to the free market economy is the command economy, where decisions regarding production, distribution, and pricing are a matter of governmental control. Other opposites are the gift economy and the subsistence economy. The mixed economy is intermediate between these positions and is the preferred basis of socioeconomic policy for most countries and political parties.

In other words, a free market economy is "an economic system in which individuals, rather than government, make the majority of decisions regarding economic activities and transactions."[6] In social philosophy, a free market economy is a system for allocating goods within a society: purchasing power mediated by supply and demand within the market determines who gets what and what is produced, rather than the state. Early proponents of a free-market economy in 18th century Europe contrasted it with the medieval, early modern, and mercantilist economies which preceded it.

FREE WESTSIDE. RESTORE ORDER. SHIT.

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i hope this thread dies off very very soon. the sarcasm can only last so much. ugh.

but that pic is fucking funny, he looks ridiculous with those zebras on. bahahaha. its just a great pic overall.

Y U DIPPIN ALL IN DA KOOLAID WEN U AINT EVN KNO DA FLAVA HUH???

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nice, the typical generic response i knew i was going to get. mad neg rep, holla. im not trying to be hostile in any way possible, but its funny seeing everyone get worked up. amusment at its best.

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