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Originally posted by Gazrok
Until they make the alternatives cheaper and more practical....
VROOM! VROOM!
I'm constanly needing the ability to carry more than 5 passengers and lots of "gear", so had to get a van...
Originally posted by shbaz
It astounds you that people want to look cool?
Originally posted by Jamuhn
I agree Grady
Originally posted by shbaz
I agree,
Originally posted by TreyFlipAWS
Ok people, think about this realistically... sure it would be nice to have a hydrogen based economy, but are all of those big oil companies out there really going to let this happen? The oil industry is a multi-billion dollar industry. With a hydrogen based economy, all of those big oil companies will go out of business. With all the power that these huge companies have, I hardly see a hydrogen based economy in the near future.
Well, that "my dick is bigger than yours" might have something to do with it.
Originally posted by Jamuhn
I agree Grady, they are a big nuisance, and a waste of everything, they serve no purpose for most people.
Originally posted by E_T
Well, that "my dick is bigger than yours" might have something to do with it. Or basing from world events they use those to substitute lack of brains.
I agree there are people who need big cars for hauling things or people but for most people they're completely groundless.
Conspicuous consumption is a term introduced by Thorstein Veblen, the American economist. Conspicuous consumption or pathological purchasing is a symptom observed in individuals in any society where over-consumption has become a social norm or expectation. The term is not used to describe such personal disorders as eating disorders, but is generally reserved for those forms of consumption that seem to be fully motivated by social factors.
It has been discussed widely since the 1960s, including most often as a form of addiction arising from consumerism but also from productivism where this encourages the production of excess unwanted goods, which must be consumed to justify continued production. More recently it has been implicated as a cause of obesity, and of some mental illness especially bulimia. Some consider it to be a world health problem, especially in developed nations. Political movements, e.g. the Greens, have specifically criticized waste-promoting policies (e.g. the dirty subsidy) that encourage over-consumption.
More scientifically, those who use this term often believe that consumer behavior can be analyzed using models developed in clinics funded to treat other substance dependencies. Best practices used in behavioral modification clinics, in this view, can yield new approaches for treating such pathological consumer behavior.
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Group behaviors subvert reward relationships developed over longer terms through a process of meme-contagion, whereby excitement passes among individuals by the exchange of artifacts, symbols and language related to loosely directed, often purposeless hedonic excitement - a "frenzy" as observed in many animal species.
en.wikipedia.org...
Thorstein Veblen:
Conspicuous Consumption, 1902
It is obviously not necessary that a given object of expenditure should be exclusively wasteful in order to come in under the category of conspicuous waste. An article may be useful and wasteful both, and its utility to the consumer may be made up of use and waste in the most varying proportions. Consumable goods, and even productive goods generally show the two elements in combination, as constituents of their utility; although, in a general way, the element of waste tends to predominate in articles of consumption, while the contrary is true of articles designed for productive use. Even in articles which appear at first glance to serve for pure ostentation only, it is always possible to detect the presence of some, at least ostensible, useful purpose; and on the other hand, even in special machinery and tools contrived for some particular industrial process, as well as in the rudest appliances of human industry, the traces of conspicuous waste, or at least of the habit of ostentation, usually become evident on a close scrutiny. It would be hazardous to assert that a useful purpose is ever absent from the utility of any article or of any service, however obviously its prime purpose and chief element is conspicuous waste; and it would be only less hazardous to assert of any primarily useful product that the element of waste is in no way concerned in its value, immediately or remotely.
www.fordham.edu...