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Discussion starter · #22 · (Edited)
NPR had the nerve to report that most Uber driver's feel the pay is fair.. Really? Who have the spoken to? Have they visited this forum. Smh.
Yeah... this forum, which reaches maybe .04% - scratch that... maybe 4% of drivers in the US (~20,000 members here vs. at least 500,000 drivers in the US).

THIS forum is made up of the MINORITY of drivers who take the time to get involved, learn more about Uber/Lyft and participate in the conversation BECAUSE they are displeased (or curious). WE are the vocal minority... but a minority nonetheless.

It's no coincidence that as reporters and researchers from everywhere in the US go out and talk to RANDOMLY selected drivers they hear much less discontent than is displayed here in UP.n. That doesn't mean that we here are 'wrong' or that the majority are 'right'... it just means that (as with most things political/personal/financial) the majority are not particularly knowledgeable or well informed... becuase most poeple are just too busy trying to live their life and support their family.

Regardless: it's not a fault of NPR
(which has made it it's mission to highlight the big picture, which is the end-run gig economy companies are making around the Fair Labor & Standards Act (FLSA) by classifying workers as Independent Contractors).

Just my opinion.
 
Generally NPR is left of center. In reporting on huge conglomerates, generally they are anywhere from neutral to against. Someone said NPR will toe TNCs company line. Overall that is unlikely to bear out (on average). They may say things, report on things, that agree with those companies, but, left of center means overall, you will see the net effect of their content will be center (neutral) to negative. So, overall, for drivers who are against Uber on UP, NPR is actually kind of like their voice on average.
NPR lockstep supports politically correct and crony corporatization of "new tech" and "progressive" businesses, whereas they hold complete disdain or outright hate for traditional American business.

What this means is that you will never hear a story of them criticizing an industry that appears to support their socialistic/fascistic idea of how things ought to be.

Uber and Lyft are "progress" toward a world without icky cars and even ickier drivers, so Uber and Lyft will get NPR's full support. You and I and the rest of the Uber/Lyft driver cadre are only standing in the way of NPR-approved "progress."
 
You can't refer to yourself as 'Bostonian Bison'
whilst sitting on your bum in Marco in January -
as your Beantown Brethren shiver in the northern climes.
POST # 17/Michael - Cleveland: You can
take the Bison
out of Boston, but you CAN'T take The
Bostonian out of The Bison!

Ungulate: Cocoanut Postcard anyone ?
 
Discussion starter · #26 ·
NPR lockstep supports politically correct and crony corporatization of "new tech" and "progressive" businesses, whereas they hold complete disdain or outright hate for traditional American business.

What this means is that you will never hear a story of them criticizing an industry that appears to support their socialistic/fascistic idea of how things ought to be.

Uber and Lyft are "progress" toward a world without icky cars and even ickier drivers, so Uber and Lyft will get NPR's full support. You and I and the rest of the Uber/Lyft driver cadre are only standing in the way of NPR-approved "progress."
LOL! Spoken like someone who just makes stuff up to support their own worldview.
Fortunately, the reality of the evidience in NPR reporting says otherwise, as they tear into the gig economy billion dollar babies one at a time.
 
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I don't agree with everything that is on NPR, but I listen to NPR a few hours a month. I don't agree with everything that is on Fox News but I watch Fox News a few hours a month. Same thing with CNN, MSNBC, BBC, etc. I try to do that for music too (though it is a little harder for music because for some of them, you are like, you call this music? For politics, you don't think You call this politics? Because it IS politics!).

No time to watch and listen to every spectrum of people and their news? Try proportionally cutting down, say, limiting to one hour each month for each channel/station. Rather than completely ignore some and watching only one or two (I do realize most people do this).

If one is open minded yet rational, and only let rational reasonings dictate his beliefs and positions rather than emotions, then one won't be afraid of watching or listening to the other side's views for fear of being emotionally brainwashed.
I have NPR on most of the day. I never turn on Fox and don't really care to, as I doubt I'd agree with much that's on there, either, and watch no TV on most days. I am not afraid of opinions that differ from my own, but I am trained to spot bias, and I can tell you NPR is absurdly liberal in bias. If you can't see it, it's almost certainly because you agree with the bias and thus can't even see that it is there.
 
Discussion starter · #29 ·
I have NPR on most of the day. I never turn on Fox and don't really care to, as I doubt I'd agree with much that's on there, either, and watch no TV on most days. I am not afraid of opinions that differ from my own, but I am trained to spot bias, and I can tell you NPR is absurdly liberal in bias. If you can't see it, it's almost certainly because you agree with the bias and thus can't even see that it is there.
Adults know that having an opinion or reaching a conclusion is not the same thing as being biased.
bi·ased: unfairly prejudiced for or against someone or something​
 
Yeah... this forum, which reaches maybe .04% of drivers in the US (~20,000 members here vs. at least 500,000 drivers in the US).

THIS forum is made up of the MINORITY of drivers who take the time to get involved, learn more about Uber/Lyft and participate in the conversation BECAUSE they are displeased (or curious). WE are the vocal minority... but a minority nonetheless.

It's no coincidence that as reporters and researchers from everywhere in the US go out and talk to RANDOMLY selected drivers they hear much less discontent than is displayed here in UP.n. That doesn't mean that we here are 'wrong' or that the majority are 'right'... it just means that (as with most things political/personal/financial) the majority are not particularly knowledgeable or well informed... becuase most poeple are just too busy trying to live their life and support their family.

Regardless: it's not a fault of NPR
(which has made it it's mission to highlight the big picture, which is the end-run gig economy companies are making around the Fair Labor & Standards Act (FLSA) by classifying workers as Independent Contractors).

Just my opinion.
You meant 0.04% or 4.00%?
 
Uber conveniently bombard their way into communities promising drivers one thing and made those of us who were in this early subject to fines and having our cars impounded. We were the face of Uber in the early days who provided an efficient service that was almost always met by sincere thankfulness. Uber is just a west coast douchbag company that does nothing for the local economies of drivers under the guise of progress and disruption. It actually punishes longterm drivers by being loyal and by pushing those subprime car loans onto people who had budgeted money for bills each month...especially in the early days. There's no social responsibility with these people.
I agree with you on most of your points, but Lyft is a West Coast company....Uber started on the East coast.
 
OK...we can play around with the exact starting point if you want. Uber didn't become RELEVANT until the launch in San Francisco.

https://newsroom.uber.com/ubers-founding/
Uber certainly is a West coast company in it's headquarters now, but really Lyft fits the Left (West) coast liberal agenda that an NPR likes, better than the corporate East coast style of an Uber....is all I am saying. : )
 
Discussion starter · #39 · (Edited)
Uber started on the East coast.
That's misleading. The Uber brainsotming started in Paris, France...
the testing of the system (with just 3 black cars) was done in NYC -
but the roll-out was in San Fransisco.

Regardless... the important difference (in my view), is that Uber started out as a Black Car service...
while Lyft started from the ground up as a peer-to-peer service.
I think THAT is what defines the culture difference between the two. <shrug>
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