Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
HELP WANTED – Griff Tannen’s Hoverboard Emporium
HELP WANTED – Griff Tannen’s Hoverboard Emporium
Apr 7, 2025 5:44 AM

Hey McFly! Put on your self-drying jacket and your self-tying shoes, because I’ve got a job offer you can’t refuse!

Hi, I’m Griff Tannen and my business, Griff Tannen’s Hoverboard Emporium is looking for part-time sales clerks. You probably know me from that time I smashed into the courthouse and was instantly sentenced to jail:

That’s me. I wasn’t really framed.

You might think of that as my lowest moment. It was certainly humbling. But now I look back at that day with gratitude, because it gave me the insight for this fine sales establishment.

But don’t just take my word for it, my business partner (and rabbi) Dr. Kirzner can help explain my business model:

there are likely to exist, at any given time, a multitude of opportunities that have not yet been taken advantage of. Sellers may have sold for prices lower than the prices which were in fact obtainable…. Buyers may have bought for prices higher than the lowest prices needed to secure what they are buying…. The existence of these opportunities opens up a scope for decision-making that does not depend, in principle, upon Robbinsian [means-end] economizing at all. What our decision maker without means needs to arrive at the best decision is simply to know where these unexploited opportunities exist. All he needs is to discover where buyers have been paying too much and where sellers have been receiving too little and to bridge the gap by offering to buy for a little more and to sell for a little less. To discover these unexploited opportunities requires alertness. Calculation will not help, and economizing and optimizing will not of themselves yield this knowledge.

Dr. Kirzner was going to wear two ties at the same time today, but then he remembered that he’d look like this:

What a dweeb!

So anyway, after I got out of jail, I was certainly “without means.” But I saw an unexploited business opportunity, and after some convincing, old grandpa Biff put up the cash for me to open this business.

You see, I realized that day that there is a whole demographic of potential hoverboard consumers out there who don’t realize that those cheap Mattel boards don’t work on water. Okay, so maybe it wasn’t my personal insight, but I’m the one who saw the opportunity for profit. That makes me the true entrepreneur. And anyways, the gang broke up after we got jailed, so I figured the idea was fair game.

You see, during my time in the slammer, I came up with the business idea for Griff Tannen’s Hoverboard Emporium. So long as there are snoopy, troublemaking teenagers and their crazy inventor friends joyriding to the present from the 1980s with their girlfriends, there will be a market for someone who can bridge the gap of imperfect information.

As much as I really wanted to bash in the back of Marty McFly’s head with my extendable baseball bat that day, I now am able to see things from his perspective. A little sympathy helped me consider his self-interest as well as my own.

I realized that if I ing to the present from the 1980s, I wouldn’t know anything about hoverboards. If I walked into the random toy store, they’d have those pink and orange Mattel boards on display, but how I would I know that you have to go to a sporting goods store to get a Pitt Bull? How would I know that those boards don’t work on water?

So at Griff Tannen’s Hoverboard Emporium, we sell every kind of hoverboard. And our best sellers are the boards with mini jet engines that can fly across, for example, a man-made lake in the town square. We buy them for a little more than the sellers typically get, and then we sell them for a little less to time travelers would expect to pay, if they could even find them in the first place.

GET BACK TO WORK, SLACKERS!

What was that? Oh, don’t mind him. That’s just Mr. Strickland, our store manager. He gets a bit overzealous about his job (“power tends to corrupt,” after all), but he means well. He’s really taken our HR director Lester DeKoster‘s philosophy to heart: “Work is the form in which we make ourselves useful to others.”

Here at Griff Tannen’s Hoverboard Emporium, serving the es first. We serve the needs of others and each other, and in exchange we all take home a paycheck.

So don’t be chicken! Apply today!

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Bolsonaro versus Brazil’s elites
In his book Sovereignty (1955), the French philosopher Bertrand de Jouvenel observed that one of the significant phenomena in the construction of the modern state was the concentration of the means munication in the hands of a few. The e was an asymmetrical distribution of power. According to De Jouvenel, the more the political power was concentrated in the bureaucracy’s hands, the more inaccessible became the means munication for ordinary people. In this way, much of the media became part...
Sentimentalism in the Church: a modern epidemic
Involvement in the Christian Church should never be characterized by self-centeredness. Christianity, by definition, is a religion that emphasizes sacrifice and selflessness. However, a recent shift towards religious sentimentalism raises questions about the desire for truth in the modern-day. In his article “A Church drowning in sentimentalism”, Samuel Gregg, Acton’s Director of Research, writes about the dangerous trend toward sentimentalism in present-day Christianity. Gregg begins by introducing a term for sentimentalism: Affectus per solam, which means: “By Feelings Alone.” Affectus...
Luther’s challenge to the conscience of the West
Yesterday was Reformation Day, the 501st anniversary of Martin Luther’s issuing the 95 Theses. Luther’s95 Theses sparked the Protestant Reformation and changed Christianity forever. But the theses has also had an effect on just about every religion in the world. Joseph Loconte explains what the 95 Theses did for religious freedom and how they have contributed to the formation of the ideal of religious liberty in the West: The papal bull of 1520 municating Martin Luther from the Catholic Church...
Radio Free Acton: The story of Arthur Vandenberg; Russell Kirk’s horror fiction
On this episode of Radio Free Acton, Gleaves Whitney, Director of Grand Valley State University’s Howenstein Center for Presidential Studies, talks with Hank Meijer, Co-Chairman and CEO of US supermarket chain Meijer, about the story of Arthur Vandenberg (1884-1951), a US senator from Michiganwho became one of the founders of modern US foreign policy. Then, Bruce Edward Walker speaks with Ben Lockerd, Professor of English at Grand Valley State University, about the horror fiction of Russell Kirk. Check out these...
5 facts about Reformation Day
While most people know today as Halloween, for millions of Christians October 31, 2018 is also the 501st anniversary of Reformation Day. Here are five facts about the Protestant holiday: 1. Reformation Day celebrates Martin Luther’s nailing his ninety-five theses to the church door Wittenberg, Germany on October 31, 1517. (Some scholars debate whether he posted them to the door then, later in November, or whether he even posted them at all.) By posting them to the church door—which was...
This machine trades Halloween candy for Reese’s cups – and teaches us about trade
Have you ever been disappointed by the candy you received from trick-or-treating? Not a sucker for jawbreakers? Think Smarties are dumb? Do Jolly Ranchers leave you sour? You now have two options: Either one will maximize your happiness and benefit others – one of them aiding soldiers overseas. Reese’s has invented a machine that will let you exchange your unwanted Halloween haul for Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups. Simply deposit your “disappointment” in the slot and receive an equivalent bulk of...
In the wake of socialism, Venezuela’s black-market capitalists meet community needs
The Venezuelan people continue to struggle and sufferunder the weight of severe socialist policies—facing increased poverty and hunger, swelling suicide rates, and widespread social unrest. Yet even as its president admits to anationwide economic emergency, the government continues to celebrate the very drivers behind the collapse,blaminglow oil prices and “global capitalism,” instead. Meanwhile, amid the turmoil and desperation, Venezuela’s localcapitalism is beginning to emerge as a solution to the woes of socialism. According to Patricia Laya at Bloomberg, the country...
The economy is booming! Or is it?
The economy is booming. Since the market crash in 2008, the rate of unemployment is at an all-time low, with the latest study showing an unemployment rate of 3.7 percent. In the second quarter of 2018, GDP increased 4.2 percent and in the third quarter, 3.5 percent. While all of these are sure signs that the economy is doing well, some problems remain, and it doesn’t look like they’ll go away any time soon. In a new article written for...
Video: Margarita Mooney, how socialism warps the human heart
Of all the speeches at the Acton Institute’s 2018 annual dinner, perhaps the one bined the greatest emotional impact and intellectual heft into the fewest minutes came from Margarita Mooney. The associate professor at Princeton Seminary, Acton University alumna, and decades-long visitor munist Cuba gave the invocation after a five-minute-long discussion about how socialism crushes the human spirit, violates personal dignity, and reduces people to selling themselves in prostitution for survival when all other businesses are prohibited. Mooney recounts the...
Rev. Robert Sirico on the eternal significance of work
At Acton’s 28th Annual Dinner, Rev. Robert A. Sirico, co-founder and president of the Acton Institute, spoke about the eternal significance of work. Sirico states that serving God and participating in the market are not separate efforts. Rather, engagement in the market can lead to generosity, service, and the reduction of poverty. Work, too, should be seen as bringing more than just profit to people’s lives. “This mundane existence,” says Sirico, “whereby people earn sufficient resources to support their families,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved