The Service Was Meh
Thursday, June 25, 2009
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The Zagats zero in on the restaurant businesses weakest link:
Over the years that we've spent surveying hundreds of thousands of
diners, one fact becomes clear: Service is *the* weak link in the
restaurant industry. How do we know? Roughly 70% of all complaints we
receive relate to service. Collectively, complaints about food prices,
noise, crowding, smoking, and even parking make up only 30%.
The Service Was Meh
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
The Service Was Meh
[Source: Media News]
The Service Was Meh
[Source: News Leader]
posted by 71353 @ 6:29 PM, ,
Bill O'Reilly fantasized, on the air, about getting his hands on Dr. Tillman
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O'Reilly really wanted to get his hands on Tillman. Media Matters found the clip:
Just a figure of speech? Yeah. Wink, wink.
Bill O'Reilly fantasized, on the air, about getting his hands on Dr. Tillman
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
Bill O'Reilly fantasized, on the air, about getting his hands on Dr. Tillman
[Source: News Paper]
Bill O'Reilly fantasized, on the air, about getting his hands on Dr. Tillman
[Source: Mexico News]
Bill O'Reilly fantasized, on the air, about getting his hands on Dr. Tillman
[Source: Television News]
Bill O'Reilly fantasized, on the air, about getting his hands on Dr. Tillman
[Source: Onion News]
posted by 71353 @ 5:52 PM, ,
Shuffleboard in Puducherry
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Steve Herzfeld managed an admirably inventive end-run around high healthcare costs for his Parkinson's- and Alzheimer's-afflicted parents. After in-home care was no longer possible, he priced American nursing homes, but found that the cheapest acceptable option was still $6,000. So he sent them to India. Quality elderly care in Puducherry cost less than his father's fixed income. According to the Guardian:
[In India, Herzfeld] could give his parents a much higher standard of care than would have been possible in the US for his father's income of $2,000 (£1,200) a month. In India that paid for their rent, a team of carers—a cook, a valet for his father, nurses to be with his mother 12 hours a day, six days a week, a physiotherapist and a masseuse—and drugs (costing a fifth of US prices), and also allowed them to put some money away...."In India, they really like older people," says Herzfeld, describing how the staff seemed to regard his parents as their own family.
Of course, the care was inexpensive because a couple thousand bucks goes further in Puducherry than it might in, say, Fort Lauderdale. Herzfeld, though, apparently believes that it was cheap because elderly care in America is greedily overpriced by providers. He vents about about healthcare and the profit motive:
[Herzfeld] believes that India could teach the US and UK a lot about care of the elderly. "In America, healthcare is done for profit, so that skews the whole thing and makes it very inhuman in its values," he says.
I try not to begrudge a man his fantasies, but the idea that the nurses, valets, and masseuses of Puducherry were doing it all out of the goodness of their hearts—rather than the goodness of their paychecks—is condescending. It was simple outsourcing, not subcontinental altruism, that saved Steve Herzfeld so much money.
In Reason's May 2009 print edition, Ronald Bailey wrote about the outsourcing of hip replacement.
Shuffleboard in Puducherry
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
Shuffleboard in Puducherry
[Source: Kenosha News]
Shuffleboard in Puducherry
[Source: Abc 7 News]
Shuffleboard in Puducherry
[Source: News Article]
Shuffleboard in Puducherry
[Source: Chocolate News]
posted by 71353 @ 5:21 PM, ,
O'Reilly compared murdered doctor Tiller to a Nazi, called him a "baby killer," and warned of "Judgment Day"
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[T]here's no other person who bears as much responsibility for the characterization of Tiller as a savage on the loose, killing babies willy-nilly thanks to the collusion of would-be sophisticated cultural elites, a bought-and-paid-for governor and scofflaw secular journalists. Tiller's name first appeared on "The Factor" on Feb. 25, 2005. Since then, O'Reilly and his guest hosts have brought up the doctor on 28 more episodes, including as recently as April 27 of this year. Almost invariably, Tiller is described as "Tiller the Baby Killer."
Tiller, O'Reilly likes to say, "destroys fetuses for just about any reason right up until the birth date for $5,000." He's guilty of "Nazi stuff," said O'Reilly on June 8, 2005; a moral equivalent to NAMBLA and al-Qaida, he suggested on March 15, 2006. "This is the kind of stuff happened in Mao's China, Hitler's Germany, Stalin's Soviet Union," said O'Reilly on Nov. 9, 2006.
O'Reilly has also frequently linked Tiller to his longtime obsession, child molestation and rape. Because a young teenager who received an abortion from Tiller could, by definition, have been a victim of statutory rape, O'Reilly frequently suggested that the clinic was covering up for child rapists (rather than teenage boyfriends) by refusing to release records on the abortions performed.
Jed Lewison has the video from some of those 29 segments:
O'Reilly compared murdered doctor Tiller to a Nazi, called him a "baby killer," and warned of "Judgment Day"
[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]
O'Reilly compared murdered doctor Tiller to a Nazi, called him a "baby killer," and warned of "Judgment Day"
[Source: Cbs News]
O'Reilly compared murdered doctor Tiller to a Nazi, called him a "baby killer," and warned of "Judgment Day"
[Source: Murder News]
O'Reilly compared murdered doctor Tiller to a Nazi, called him a "baby killer," and warned of "Judgment Day"
[Source: Daily News]
O'Reilly compared murdered doctor Tiller to a Nazi, called him a "baby killer," and warned of "Judgment Day"
[Source: News Argus]
posted by 71353 @ 5:09 PM, ,
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