By the end of the movie you are rooting for Douglas and then he just dies.
I watched that movie well over 20 times in my teens. One of those movies that doesn't get old.
Why? What was wrong with the ending?
By the end of the movie you are rooting for Douglas and then he just dies.
I watched that movie well over 20 times in my teens. One of those movies that doesn't get old.
great flick... i bought it twice on dvd back in the day. i'm a goober and thought i didn't own it until i brought home the 2nd copy and found the 1st a while later in my place. i wasn't even mad i owned 2 copies!
That movie got shafted by the Oscars if I'm not mistaken. PC police felt it wasnt the right tone given the LA riots
That same cons ution was the law of the land during your nostalgic 80s and 90s Los Angeles glory days when the United States was still a "great country." That said, I kind of find it odd you pick that particular era to celebrate when Los Angeles was basically a warzone due to the crack epidemic and the country was in recession.
Your points on Trump are valid, he is indeed a moron who has no business holding any sort of office and runs the White House as if he's still hosting his terrible reality show, but you're wrong about the perception that the US is some free-for-all hyper-capitalist country with zero regulations. On the economic freedom index, our economy is really no or more less regulated than other OECD countries, Germany included. In fact, unions hold a -load of power to the point where blue collar jobs still pay exceedingly well (Electricians, plumbers, carpenters, welders, and even the last few million remaining factory workers all make >40.00 per hours plus benefits).
What's probably affected the economic landscape for better or worse (depending your personal situation) is how large publicly traded corporations have shifted their business model to appeasing shareholders above all else, and usually over a fiscal quarter rather than over the long term. Basically, corporations will sell out long term growth (i.e. if said long term growth means a loss of profit in the short term, corporations won't commit in fear of scaring off shareholders), quality of goods and services, and civic responsibility (environmental concerns, buying up smaller businesses [which impact local communities] for no other reason except to absorb a compe or and increase market share, which increases stock values).
https://www.ft.com/content/b12be30e-...c-0cd3483b8b80The realisation has long been growing that modern governance, with its focus on the primacy of the shareholder, can deliver very perverse societal outcomes. As the US academic, Lynn Stout, has observed: “The pressure to keep share prices high drives public companies to adopt strategies that harm long-term returns: hollowing out their workforce; cutting back on product support and on research and development; taking on excessive risks and excessive leverage; selling vital assets and even engaging in wholesale fraud.”
^^^Europe isn't immune, but the reason you probably don't "feel" the impact as much as we do is because the amount of multibillion dollar corporations in the US far exceed the amount in Europe.
The shareholder primacy philosophy is what instigated all the outsourcing, since labor is often a firm's largest cost, translating into the destruction of Middle America's middle-class and the subsequent transition to a service economy, which in turn created fertile breeding ground for a populist mentality that eventually led to the nightmare we have in the Oval Office now. And why this demographic thinks corporate tax breaks are a good idea is beyond me. Yeah, in theory it sounds nice. Corporations can potentially use the extra revenue to hire more workers, but in reality, tax breaks are usually used for stock buybacks, which increase stock value and further enrich share holders. The "working man" sees none of it.The former GE boss, Jack Welch, has called shareholder value “the dumbest idea in the world” and nothing in law ordains it. There is but one way to superior returns, and that is helping businesses make excellent products that customers want to buy.
On China. Trump's nuclear tariff option is a silly idea, but something needs to be done about their nefarious trade practices. They blatantly steal intellectual property, dump, and have the worst quality control known to man.
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