Q3 earnings call
#81
Line Holder

Joined: Feb 2020
Posts: 1,177
Likes: 305
#82
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 12,524
Likes: 1,112
#85
Can't abide NAI
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 12,078
Likes: 15
From: Douglas Aerospace post production Flight Test & Work Around Engineering bulletin dissembler
Now we tell insiders to buy their bonds. Say, a bankrupt Argentina. Then the Vonpusengropenfurher bails them out. The bond traders get rich(er). Sure it is only a fraction of what it costs the taxpayer, but who cares, we're rich in a bond fund that made no sense otherwise.
Ironically, Argentina has Universal Health Care. Our government is shut down because we can not afford to help our own citizens with health care costs.
But bringing this back to Delta and profits, the US dollar is down 13% relative the Euro (and most everything else) this year. In real terms that 13% decline in our value makes the dollar cheap and lowers Delta's expenses in the short term. In the longer term it is inflationary, once oil gets back to average, airplane parts and even labor, once we figure out that the prices of our Porsches track the Euro (and tariffs).
Energy, yes to all the above. We will find a way to use it. Cheapest is fusion. There is this enormous fusion reaction in the middle of our solar system. All you have to do is plop down a few silicate panels and start collecting what's falling on the Earth every day. Just catch what's already here. That's the most bang for buck.
Be happy to save the slightly under a trillion in oil & gas subsidies every year. We could use $600bn from that to help Americans avoid becoming street folks with their first major medical expense AND put the left over $200BN back on the Treasury's balance sheet. Maybe if there were no oil and gas subsidies we improve traffic and road wear by using trains for interstate transportation and save the diesel for the last mile. Heck, they might even discover that last mile delivery works a lot better with electric (reliable & no maintenance) trucks.
#86
Can't abide NAI
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 12,078
Likes: 15
From: Douglas Aerospace post production Flight Test & Work Around Engineering bulletin dissembler
Yes, but they still kill fish and make it impossible to defend against submarines.
Russia could drive a sub right up to Washington DC and drop off videotapes of Epstein instead of plan A which is to nuke us from orbit.
Russia could drive a sub right up to Washington DC and drop off videotapes of Epstein instead of plan A which is to nuke us from orbit.
#87
Line Holder
Joined: Nov 2024
Posts: 286
Likes: 187
Yes.
Now we tell insiders to buy their bonds. Say, a bankrupt Argentina. Then the Vonpusengropenfurher bails them out. The bond traders get rich(er). Sure it is only a fraction of what it costs the taxpayer, but who cares, we're rich in a bond fund that made no sense otherwise.
Ironically, Argentina has Universal Health Care. Our government is shut down because we can not afford to help our own citizens with health care costs.
But bringing this back to Delta and profits, the US dollar is down 13% relative the Euro (and most everything else) this year. In real terms that 13% decline in our value makes the dollar cheap and lowers Delta's expenses in the short term. In the longer term it is inflationary, once oil gets back to average, airplane parts and even labor, once we figure out that the prices of our Porsches track the Euro (and tariffs).
Energy, yes to all the above. We will find a way to use it. Cheapest is fusion. There is this enormous fusion reaction in the middle of our solar system. All you have to do is plop down a few silicate panels and start collecting what's falling on the Earth every day. Just catch what's already here. That's the most bang for buck.
Be happy to save the slightly under a trillion in oil & gas subsidies every year. We could use $600bn from that to help Americans avoid becoming street folks with their first major medical expense AND put the left over $200BN back on the Treasury's balance sheet. Maybe if there were no oil and gas subsidies we improve traffic and road wear by using trains for interstate transportation and save the diesel for the last mile. Heck, they might even discover that last mile delivery works a lot better with electric (reliable & no maintenance) trucks.
Now we tell insiders to buy their bonds. Say, a bankrupt Argentina. Then the Vonpusengropenfurher bails them out. The bond traders get rich(er). Sure it is only a fraction of what it costs the taxpayer, but who cares, we're rich in a bond fund that made no sense otherwise.
Ironically, Argentina has Universal Health Care. Our government is shut down because we can not afford to help our own citizens with health care costs.
But bringing this back to Delta and profits, the US dollar is down 13% relative the Euro (and most everything else) this year. In real terms that 13% decline in our value makes the dollar cheap and lowers Delta's expenses in the short term. In the longer term it is inflationary, once oil gets back to average, airplane parts and even labor, once we figure out that the prices of our Porsches track the Euro (and tariffs).
Energy, yes to all the above. We will find a way to use it. Cheapest is fusion. There is this enormous fusion reaction in the middle of our solar system. All you have to do is plop down a few silicate panels and start collecting what's falling on the Earth every day. Just catch what's already here. That's the most bang for buck.
Be happy to save the slightly under a trillion in oil & gas subsidies every year. We could use $600bn from that to help Americans avoid becoming street folks with their first major medical expense AND put the left over $200BN back on the Treasury's balance sheet. Maybe if there were no oil and gas subsidies we improve traffic and road wear by using trains for interstate transportation and save the diesel for the last mile. Heck, they might even discover that last mile delivery works a lot better with electric (reliable & no maintenance) trucks.
same thing with health insurance. The health insurance industry isn’t going to let the market be deregulated like it was when healthcare was actually affordable. Energy same thing. More regulation = more expense = more serfdom.
#89
Bus driver
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 899
Likes: 10
Yes.
Now we tell insiders to buy their bonds. Say, a bankrupt Argentina. Then the Vonpusengropenfurher bails them out. The bond traders get rich(er). Sure it is only a fraction of what it costs the taxpayer, but who cares, we're rich in a bond fund that made no sense otherwise.
Ironically, Argentina has Universal Health Care. Our government is shut down because we can not afford to help our own citizens with health care costs.
But bringing this back to Delta and profits, the US dollar is down 13% relative the Euro (and most everything else) this year. In real terms that 13% decline in our value makes the dollar cheap and lowers Delta's expenses in the short term. In the longer term it is inflationary, once oil gets back to average, airplane parts and even labor, once we figure out that the prices of our Porsches track the Euro (and tariffs).
Energy, yes to all the above. We will find a way to use it. Cheapest is fusion. There is this enormous fusion reaction in the middle of our solar system. All you have to do is plop down a few silicate panels and start collecting what's falling on the Earth every day. Just catch what's already here. That's the most bang for buck.
Be happy to save the slightly under a trillion in oil & gas subsidies every year. We could use $600bn from that to help Americans avoid becoming street folks with their first major medical expense AND put the left over $200BN back on the Treasury's balance sheet. Maybe if there were no oil and gas subsidies we improve traffic and road wear by using trains for interstate transportation and save the diesel for the last mile. Heck, they might even discover that last mile delivery works a lot better with electric (reliable & no maintenance) trucks.
Now we tell insiders to buy their bonds. Say, a bankrupt Argentina. Then the Vonpusengropenfurher bails them out. The bond traders get rich(er). Sure it is only a fraction of what it costs the taxpayer, but who cares, we're rich in a bond fund that made no sense otherwise.
Ironically, Argentina has Universal Health Care. Our government is shut down because we can not afford to help our own citizens with health care costs.
But bringing this back to Delta and profits, the US dollar is down 13% relative the Euro (and most everything else) this year. In real terms that 13% decline in our value makes the dollar cheap and lowers Delta's expenses in the short term. In the longer term it is inflationary, once oil gets back to average, airplane parts and even labor, once we figure out that the prices of our Porsches track the Euro (and tariffs).
Energy, yes to all the above. We will find a way to use it. Cheapest is fusion. There is this enormous fusion reaction in the middle of our solar system. All you have to do is plop down a few silicate panels and start collecting what's falling on the Earth every day. Just catch what's already here. That's the most bang for buck.
Be happy to save the slightly under a trillion in oil & gas subsidies every year. We could use $600bn from that to help Americans avoid becoming street folks with their first major medical expense AND put the left over $200BN back on the Treasury's balance sheet. Maybe if there were no oil and gas subsidies we improve traffic and road wear by using trains for interstate transportation and save the diesel for the last mile. Heck, they might even discover that last mile delivery works a lot better with electric (reliable & no maintenance) trucks.
Oops, sorry CC folks, meant to log onto APC!
#90
Line Holder
Joined: Nov 2024
Posts: 286
Likes: 187
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post




