The budget battles Is discussion possible?
#301
Posted 2011-June-22, 23:22
With this said, their Ayn Randian view of how the country should be run is one I very much disagree with. Certainly it would save money if we didn't provide any health care to seniors or disabled people and left them to fend for themselves. It would save money if we drastically shrank our military and pulled out of world affairs. It would save money if we eliminated all government enforcement of equal rights laws, eliminated all government food and health inspections, and so forth. Ron Paul and son have endorsed all these ideas. Personally I wouldn't want to live in a country where the old and disabled are dying on the streets, where private companies are free to pursue racist and sexist policies, and where companies are free to make the calculation that a few people dying from lax safety practices is better for their bottom line than being responsible.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#302
Posted 2011-June-23, 05:49
blackshoe, on 2011-June-22, 17:26, said:
blackshoe, on 2011-June-22, 17:26, said:
Winston never stated that everything that he disagrees with is a "fairy tale" or "dogma".
Rather, he suggested that some of Paul's beliefs are so silly that they not only deserve to be critiqued but mocked as well and cited two specific examples:
1. Returning to the gold standard
2. Abolishing the Fed
I think that Winston's behavior is appropriate.
"Mocking" outlandish positions is a perfectly acceptable form of social sanction. There are other options like shunning or violence. However, people often say that laughter is the best medicine.
#303
Posted 2011-June-23, 06:27
Whichever sides does it, strict reliance upon ideology and dogma to provide solutions is stupid.
I submit three radical ideas that each side should adopt as starting points for discussions:
1) Steve Jobs is not John Galt.
2) Hillary Clinton is not the madonna.
3) It is the 21st century.
#304
Posted 2011-June-23, 06:30
awm, on 2011-June-22, 23:14, said:
It is perfectly fair for my taxes to be proportionately higher than those of folks who've had a harder time of it. I think I've worked hard, but so have those people. Many of my advantages arose from blind chance, such as growing up in a family that valued both education and enterprise tremendously. And I've been lucky to avoid random catastrophies, as well as the potential consequences of foolish things I did as a young man. Others have not.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#305
Posted 2011-June-23, 06:35
Winstonm, on 2011-June-23, 06:27, said:
Whichever sides does it, strict reliance upon ideology and dogma to provide solutions is stupid.
I couldn't agree more.
Fareed Zakaria discussed this very point in Time magazine: How Today's Conservatism Lost Touch with Reality
Quote
Those on both the right and left who insist on foisting their cockamamie schemes on the rest of us, based on their unproven theories, represent two sides of the very same coin. In fact the claimed benefits of the tax policies that today's congress imposes on the US are not only unproven: they've been disproven by the reality of the past decade.
This post has been edited by PassedOut: 2011-June-23, 14:22
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#306
Posted 2011-June-23, 07:34
The error being made IMO is the idea that what we have experienced is a run-of-the-mill recession based on the business cycle rather than a credit/debt event that has more in common with the Great Depression than any minor business fluctuation.
The primary concern right now must be jobs. There can be no prolonged or sustained recovery with 16% underemployed or unemployed. The wealthiest have been able to take advantage of the worldwide wage arbitrage. It surely must be time to take back part of the windfall and create jobs here at home. The crumbling airports, bridges, highways, and dams call out for federal intervention.
Boeing will just have to make do with less gravy - and build fewer wasteful drones.
#307
Posted 2011-June-23, 07:44
A party lead by president A (called party a) started wars, ruined the state finances and left country in a messy state with an economic crisis going on.
So a new president let 's call him B is elected, and his party has a small majority , but they can hardly act freely because of wars that are going on and because the government is short of money.
President A had 8 years to mess things up and since president B did not clean that mess up within 2 years, at the "intermediate" elections some followers of president B lose their parliament seats. Now president B is blocked by party A, because he does not have a majority any more.
Is the next step the election of a president c supported by party A, to mess up things even more?
#308
Posted 2011-June-23, 07:57
Winstonm, on 2011-June-23, 07:34, said:
Yes, take that money and build up the infrastructure. It's way past time for some nation building at home.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#309
Posted 2011-June-23, 09:05
awm, on 2011-June-22, 23:14, said:
i should have been more specific... that is, of course, what i meant
PassedOut, on 2011-June-23, 07:57, said:
if i were dictator, this would be one of my plans...
awm, on 2011-June-22, 23:22, said:
demagogue much?
#310
Posted 2011-June-23, 16:41
luke warm, on 2011-June-23, 09:05, said:
AWM wrote
> Personally I wouldn't want to live in a country where the old and disabled are dying on the streets,
> where private companies are free to pursue racist and sexist policies, and where companies are free
> to make the calculation that a few people dying from lax safety practices is better for their
> bottom line than being responsible.
demagogue much?
As I recall, Ron Paul has specifically stated that the federal government doesn't have the authority to stop private companies from discriminating on the basis of race or sex.
If you'd like, I can dredge up some of his comments on OSHA, Medicaid, and social security...
#311
Posted 2011-June-23, 17:11
I had to agree. Seems simple when even the ones profiting from the system (and in a red state and ever redder city) find this system a poor choice for healthcare delivery.
#312
Posted 2011-June-23, 17:20
What would be the charge for electricity delivered from the Boeing Hoover Dam or the cost of traveling coast-to-coast on the Goldman Sachs Interstate Highay system, and what shape would the owners have those dams and roads?
Of course, the answer would be that if you didn't like it you could always use whale oil lamps and drive the back roads.
But to my way of thinking, progress is not made by walking backwards.
#313
Posted 2011-June-24, 15:32
Winstonm, on 2011-June-23, 17:11, said:
did he happen to mention how he wanted to be paid, or upon what basis? of course it's possible you have a doctor who has already paid off his student loans
#314
Posted 2011-June-24, 16:10
luke warm, on 2011-June-24, 15:32, said:
As a matter of fact we did talk about his student loans and the fee for service model. We also talked about liability insurance costs to physicians and the cost of administrating the current model.
There are better models available - not perfect but better. But we have to be willing to do something other than cloak ourselves in dogmatic rhetoric to get anything accomplished.
#315
Posted 2011-June-25, 06:14
i still think your doctor is in the minority, though
#316
Posted 2011-June-25, 13:01
Quote
That may be, but retaining a capitalistic-business model because some students chose medicine thinking they may acquire wealth is an unsatisfactory answer as well. Do we really want our healthcare to be run on the same business fundamentals as our automotive industry?
The wealthier should be able to opt out and drive their Lexus healthcare models, but for the bottom 95% of Americans, a genuinely usable public transportation system healthcare model would be nice.
#317
Posted 2011-June-26, 04:59
by Maxine Kumin
Never buy land on a slope, my father declared
the week before his heart gave out.
We bit down hard on a derelict dairy farm
of tilting fields, hills, humps and granite outcrops.
Never bet what you can't afford to lose,
he lectured. I bet my soul on a tortured horse
who never learned to love, but came to trust me.
Spend your money close to where you earn it,
he dictated. Nothing made him crosser
than wives who drove to New York to go shopping
when Philly stores had everything they needed.
This, the grab bag of immutable laws
circa 1940 when I was the last
child left at home to be admonished:
Only borrow what you know you can repay.
Your mother used to run up dress-shop bills
the size of the fifth Liberty Loan,
his private hyperbole. It took me years
to understand there'd been five loans
launched to finance the First World War,
the one he fought in, the war to end all wars.
What would this man who owed no man, who kept
his dollars folded in a rubber band,
have thought of credit cards, banking online?
Wars later, clear as water, I hear him say
reconcile your checkbook monthly, and oh!
always carry a clean handkerchief.
from Where I Live: New and Selected Poems 1990-2010. © W.W. Norton & Company, 2010. Reprinted with permission at The Writer's Almanac.
#318
Posted 2011-June-26, 09:41
#320
Posted 2011-June-26, 20:23
I don't live in the past, but it is perhaps useful to acknowledge that the attitude toward debt really was different. A mortgage was often the only debt a family had. In my family it had been paid off, at least by the time I was 13 or so and came to know of these things, and to the best of my knowledge my father never bought anything else on credit. I am not counting the small tabs at the grocery where I would be sent to get things without having to carry money. These tabs were paid in full by the end of the week.
Constant, and large, debt is now a way of life for many. It's a whole different way of looking at things, or at least it seems so to me.
Anyway, the remembered attitudes of Maxine Kumin's piece seemed familiar to me. I don't want to dwell on it.