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  • Casual Articles - Franchise Rule Staff Report RF511003-1 at the FTC completely flawed

    Ten Ways To Ensure Your Business Success in 2006
    It's a bright and shining new year, and you've got a clean slate. What will you do with this opportunity?Here are some ways to ensure your business success this year:1. Keep your business moving forwardIf you haven't set your goals for 2006, decide what you want NOW. Take out a notebook, put today's date on the top of the page and write out your business goals.While you're at it, you may as well create some goals for self
    ing resembling Truth, Justice or the American Way or the contrived notion of supporting free markets.

    What is the Federal Trade Commission’s justification for further rule making in franchising and specifically in this letter on a comment made, found on page 21 of the special franchise report concerning “Cost-Effective” nature of the disclosure documents themselves. My concerns come from many different directions and the costs associated with them. Including o

    What Are the Best Franchise Business Opportunities?
    There are many would-be entrepreneurs who never start their own business because of the risks involved. With any business start-up there is a risk of failure; choosing a well designed franchise business greatly reduces that risk. The best franchise business opportunities are those with a proven track record of helping novice entrepreneurs start and stabilize an exact copy of an already proven business plan. After all, if you already knew what you we
    Having been in the franchising industry for some time now, I always find it fascinating when a regulator arbitrarily decides that we need more laws. As if we do not have enough laws impeding commerce there is always some regulator somewhere who says we need more rules. I cannot think of any reason why unless maybe the work for Al Queda and want to cripple America’s economic might; no maybe they do not work for the International Terrorists group. Maybe they just want to insure job security now and later when the get a real job in the private sector defending businesses against the insanity of government regulations?

    So you think I am anti-consumer? No, not even close, I love my customers and I do not wish to over charge them to make up for all the money I spend in complying with bogus regulations, which help no free man or free enterprise entrepreneur or corporation. It is for this reason that I am commenting on the Use of the words “Cost-Effective” when discussing the current Franchise Disclosure Documents in the Federal Trade Commission’s report on franchising.

    I first would like to formally announce that entrepreneurs when commenting on public regulatory policy should in fact forgo the niceties and compliments that so often accompany letters to the Federal Trade Commission. I do not believe they are deserved, I sincerely hope the Commission understands the absurdity of the bureaucracy they create and purport as Justice. I believe professionalism and respect must be earned, I do not feel the commission has ever earned that, nor do I believe they are capable of earning such respect after 15 years of studying the Franchising Division of the Federal Trade Commission. In my opinion the Federal Trade Commission’s Franchising Division Efforts to the common good of America would better be classified as far closer to International Terrorism than anything resembling Truth, Justice or the American Way or the contrived notion of supporting free markets.

    What is the Federal Trade Commission’s justification for further rule making in franchising and specifically in this letter on a comment made, found on page 21 of the special franchise report concerning “Cost-Effective” nature of the disclosure documents themselves. My concerns come from many different directions and the costs associated with them. Including ov

    How to Gain Knowledge and Obtain Power in Business
    Knowledge is not intelligence. Knowledge is something you obtain after repeatedly performing a skill or being trained in a skill. Knowledge has nothing to do with intelligence. You can have an IQ of 212 but you would never have the knowledge about everything there is to know.But how do you obtain knowledge? Do you read books? Do you watch videos and attend seminars? Do you enroll in training courses? Do you communicate with people who have t
    o insure job security now and later when the get a real job in the private sector defending businesses against the insanity of government regulations?

    So you think I am anti-consumer? No, not even close, I love my customers and I do not wish to over charge them to make up for all the money I spend in complying with bogus regulations, which help no free man or free enterprise entrepreneur or corporation. It is for this reason that I am commenting on the Use of the words “Cost-Effective” when discussing the current Franchise Disclosure Documents in the Federal Trade Commission’s report on franchising.

    I first would like to formally announce that entrepreneurs when commenting on public regulatory policy should in fact forgo the niceties and compliments that so often accompany letters to the Federal Trade Commission. I do not believe they are deserved, I sincerely hope the Commission understands the absurdity of the bureaucracy they create and purport as Justice. I believe professionalism and respect must be earned, I do not feel the commission has ever earned that, nor do I believe they are capable of earning such respect after 15 years of studying the Franchising Division of the Federal Trade Commission. In my opinion the Federal Trade Commission’s Franchising Division Efforts to the common good of America would better be classified as far closer to International Terrorism than anything resembling Truth, Justice or the American Way or the contrived notion of supporting free markets.

    What is the Federal Trade Commission’s justification for further rule making in franchising and specifically in this letter on a comment made, found on page 21 of the special franchise report concerning “Cost-Effective” nature of the disclosure documents themselves. My concerns come from many different directions and the costs associated with them. Including o

    Laser Cutting Companies
    Since Theodore Maiman invented the first functional laser or LASER (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) in 1960, this device, which generates a strong, highly concentrated beam of single-wavelength light, has found several uses in different industries and in various fields including medicine, consumer electronics and information technology.Its most prominent industrial use is laser cutting. It is said that about $4.5 bill
    words “Cost-Effective” when discussing the current Franchise Disclosure Documents in the Federal Trade Commission’s report on franchising.

    I first would like to formally announce that entrepreneurs when commenting on public regulatory policy should in fact forgo the niceties and compliments that so often accompany letters to the Federal Trade Commission. I do not believe they are deserved, I sincerely hope the Commission understands the absurdity of the bureaucracy they create and purport as Justice. I believe professionalism and respect must be earned, I do not feel the commission has ever earned that, nor do I believe they are capable of earning such respect after 15 years of studying the Franchising Division of the Federal Trade Commission. In my opinion the Federal Trade Commission’s Franchising Division Efforts to the common good of America would better be classified as far closer to International Terrorism than anything resembling Truth, Justice or the American Way or the contrived notion of supporting free markets.

    What is the Federal Trade Commission’s justification for further rule making in franchising and specifically in this letter on a comment made, found on page 21 of the special franchise report concerning “Cost-Effective” nature of the disclosure documents themselves. My concerns come from many different directions and the costs associated with them. Including o

    Moses, Business And The 80/20 Rule
    What is the 80/20 Rule?More formally the 80/20 rule is also known as the Pareto Principle. To Quote Wikipedia: "The Pareto principle… known as the 80-20 rule, the law of the vital few…Business management thinker Joseph M. Juran suggested the principle and named it after Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto, who observed that 80% of income in Italy went to 20% of the population."We hear the 80/20 rule as it is applied to business and sale
    racy they create and purport as Justice. I believe professionalism and respect must be earned, I do not feel the commission has ever earned that, nor do I believe they are capable of earning such respect after 15 years of studying the Franchising Division of the Federal Trade Commission. In my opinion the Federal Trade Commission’s Franchising Division Efforts to the common good of America would better be classified as far closer to International Terrorism than anything resembling Truth, Justice or the American Way or the contrived notion of supporting free markets.

    What is the Federal Trade Commission’s justification for further rule making in franchising and specifically in this letter on a comment made, found on page 21 of the special franchise report concerning “Cost-Effective” nature of the disclosure documents themselves. My concerns come from many different directions and the costs associated with them. Including o

    9 Winter Driving Tips for Truckers
    There are no secrets when it comes to winter driving. If there's ice on the road, it's dangerous. The big truck flying past you at 55 mph when everyone else is crawling along at 15 or 20 mph doesn't have the inside track on the winter roadways. You're liable to see him in the median a few miles up the road.If you're driving on ice, you won't know it until you need to stop. It doesn't matter if you're in a sedan, a 4-wheel drive or a big rig:
    ing resembling Truth, Justice or the American Way or the contrived notion of supporting free markets.

    What is the Federal Trade Commission’s justification for further rule making in franchising and specifically in this letter on a comment made, found on page 21 of the special franchise report concerning “Cost-Effective” nature of the disclosure documents themselves. My concerns come from many different directions and the costs associated with them. Including over all costs to the country as a whole in economic factors such as; Tax Base Loss, Lack of Job Creation, Stifling of Innovation and cumulative effects of over disclosure, which are currently in play within the Franchise Rule. The real costs to franchisors in printing, ability to deliver, loss of proprietary information to competition, preparation, registration and up keep of these disclosures.

    I would also like to touch on the fact that all costs associated to the disclosure process and rules are passed on to the very consumer we are supposedly are trying to help, thus making a franchise purchase harder, less inviting and often unattainable. Every entrepreneur knows that through documented real world reality based reasoning and observation that there is no way in hell over disclosure requirements in franchising are cost effective. There is absolutely, positively no possible way in which anyone might conclude that this current franchise rule and the 200 plus pages of disclosure which are now required to stay within the bounds of compliance are necessary or in any way Cost-Effective in the franchising industry and if the Federal Trade Commission would wake up, they might be able to see the absurdity of their over regulations. Think about it.

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