1/4/2010 11:59:45 PM
I guess that is normal. The more capitalist a country is, the more popular it is (j/k).
1/5/2010 12:05:19 AM
This is only natural, I think.Americans have become more xenophobic and protectionist over the past decade, which is going to make other countries dislike us.But as those other countries develop, they’re going to be able to challenge us in our last great stronghold, the creative fields. It becomes increasingly more likely that the next google, microsoft, or Apple is going to come out of India or Brazil (but not China, because their culture hates creativity) as time goes on.
1/5/2010 12:09:06 AM
It's a lot easier to be the good guy when your big competition is the Soviets.On top of that, I'm sure that many emerging markets view us as the enemy of capitalism after the financial meltdown.
1/5/2010 12:31:28 AM
1/5/2010 12:31:53 AM
The chinese aren’t xenophobic in the same sense.
1/5/2010 12:44:21 AM
1/5/2010 2:34:21 AM
Let's look at some realities here:China is pouring money into Africa and South America, which may do something to explain South Africa and Brazil's affinity, such as it is, for that nation.India is only naturally going to side with rivals of Pakistan -- in this case, Iran.None of this has much to do with the fundamentals of American foreign policy, at least insofar as it has existed for decades now. I personally favor working much, much harder to buddy up with India, as well as combating Chinese influence in Latin America and Africa, but such action would represent a radical shift.You may notice that I have ignored Turkey. That's because I'm not particularly pleased with the Turks and would rather not speak about their atrocities douchebaggery foreign policy.
1/5/2010 4:25:49 AM
We call ourselves "capitalist," but we're not. Sure, these other growing economies in Asia and Indonesia are "communist," but at least the governments there are smart enough to let entrepreneurs survive. There are so many taxes and regulations in the United States that it would be very difficult for any young person to go out on their own and start a business. It just doesn't happen anymore. Maybe those other countries don't have the same civil liberties, but they're definitely more economically free, and the people there are saving and producing - kind of like we used to do.
1/5/2010 8:37:22 AM
*losing
1/5/2010 9:20:56 AM
1/5/2010 1:37:13 PM
1/5/2010 8:11:36 PM
1/5/2010 9:17:33 PM
1/5/2010 9:25:17 PM
1/5/2010 9:35:08 PM
1/5/2010 9:47:19 PM
1/5/2010 10:12:42 PM
I think "Free World" is kind of a misnomer.....
1/5/2010 10:28:08 PM
1/6/2010 2:33:36 PM
1/6/2010 2:37:06 PM
its not just taxes, its labor and regulation and everything else. Its the same reasons textiles left and the same reasons the paper industry left. Automated manufacturing is the future of manufacturing in the us, if it has a future at all.
1/6/2010 2:49:15 PM
and im not saying blah blah get rid of minimum wage get rid of taxes get rid of regulation, im saying those things have an impact on business. We aren't going to get rid of them any time soon so those businesses probably wont come back any time soon.
1/6/2010 2:54:00 PM
1/6/2010 2:56:14 PM
i dont think anywhere here is arguing we should lower taxes or get rid of labor laws in order to keep shitty manufacturing jobs here. We should be fixing the education system to get people out of those jobs before they disapear and we should stop propping up the failed businesses that continue to use those manufacturing models.
1/6/2010 2:59:56 PM
Which has nothing do with government regulation, taxes, liberalism, or BARRACK HUSSIEN OBAMA.Rather, those are ancient American faults that have been around for decades.
1/6/2010 3:02:31 PM
taxes = larger government = more prone to abuse. My views on the subject come down to this: properly used, taxes could fix our education system, provide cheap, clean energy, and put this country into sound financial shape. The reality is they're just going to waste it on whatever the pet project of the week is.The auto bailouts and the bank bailouts are good examples. So is the healthcare disaster.I'd rather the money not go to the fed at all, and see it get put into private investment in new industries.
1/6/2010 3:13:29 PM
There is a complete lack of leadership in this country and all everyone cares to do about it is post on message boards. The result is people who actually know how to do shit start a business, take a shitload of money from the fed, and then laugh when the retards we've voted into office try to stop them with the most convoluted regulations and half-baked ideas (ex: cap and trade, Copenhagen climate summit).[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 3:21 PM. Reason : a]
1/6/2010 3:18:57 PM
hmm lets put a tax on poor people who heat their homes with fossil fuels and then give tax credits to our friends in the coal and oil industry!!!ooh ooh i've got a better one!!! Lets go jerk each other off over in europe instead of actually creating functional legislation! We could encourage businesses and individuals to generate their own power, but fuck that!!! We'd get less tax revenue if we did that!!!
1/6/2010 3:24:58 PM
NUCLEAR POWER?!?!??!?!?!??!?!?!?!??!? BUT THATS FUCKING EVIL MAGIC!! WE CANT HAVE THAT SHIT!!
1/6/2010 3:31:06 PM
America, Thou Art Loosed!
1/6/2010 3:33:27 PM
1/7/2010 1:31:22 PM
I dont know, I think looking at some of the pending or passed legislation is pretty reasonable. Saying "hey you cant possibly critique that legislation until 10 years from now" is pretty weak. The auto industry bailouts were a complete waste of tax payer money in order to prop up a US industry that needs desperately to change. I mean if you want some facts, how about GM's stock price? How about that they cant find anyone to buy their worthless assets? GM was bound for bankruptcy long before they got bailed out and, as expected, the bailout did nothing to prevent the bankruptcy. So why give them they money? It was the same with the banks. They had tons of bad assets and instead of letting the big guys fail and letting the strong banks pick their bones for the good bits, the fed bailed them out. These already huge banks used that money to consolidate the industry to the point where we now have fewer and much larger banks. So if someone happens again its bound to be even worse. We had the opportunity to replace the "too big to fail" guys with smaller banks that would have had much less individual influence in politics, and much more need to compete over customers. Then lets take a look at cap and trade. Supposed to fix carbon emmissions and increase green power production, except that it starts out by handing off freebies to random oil and coal producers. The system for distribution is based on who has the best lobbiests. Add to that that it effectively taxes anyone who has to heat their homes with fossil fuels. Many of whom cant afford to pay their current bills, let alone upgrade to more efficient systems. It also doesn't count nuclear among the "green" power sources, despite the fact that its the only type of power source capable of actually replacing coal and oil. And then everyone heads of to europe where they sit around and do nothing all day. If the US wanted to end carbon emissions its really fucking easy and it starts with credits for individuals and businesses to install wind/solar/geothermal systems. Not the garbage couple thousand here, couple thousand there things we have now, but serious credits. Like 100% of cost on a system up to 150% of capacity. Combine that with forcing local power distributors to allow these people to put excess power on the grid for sale or credit. Phase out oil/coal with nuclear plants. Everyone generates the power they need. When wind/solar doesn't work, nuclear handles the load. There are only a few people in congress even willing to talk about nuclear, the rest are all either idiots or belong to coal/oil. Hell, even Obama, who I had such high hopes for, has completely put off nuclear. This guy is supposed to be science over bullshit, but I haven't seen it.And then theres the mother of all disasters, our current healthcare bill. It was poorly thoughtout from the start. Adding more insurance wont fix the insurance problem. The cost problem starts at the point of care, not at the insurance companies. I havent seen any plans designed to tackle costs. Only the public option plan and the expand medicare plan, both of which add to the deficit and dont touch on the issue of cost. Its much easier to say "well, if the EVIL INSURANCE COMPANIES wont pay for it then the government will!!" then to say "well, that hospital charged $500 to have tv in the room, maybe we should fix all these little costs" or "this country is so unhealthly because of our massive corn subsidies and lack of exercise".And thats not even mentioning our education system which completely fails the poor or our wellfare system that gives them just enough to stay alive long enough to vote.Politicians wont get votes for long term fixes because it means short term sacrifices.
1/7/2010 3:51:41 PM
hahahhaha hooksaw w/ the winning reference
1/7/2010 11:48:00 PM
Let loose the dogs of war "Free World"
1/8/2010 12:10:42 AM
1/8/2010 12:29:41 AM
^Closing of Yucca Mountain was really the big thing that painted him as anti-nuclear, even if he isn't entirely against nuclear power.[Edited on January 8, 2010 at 12:31 AM. Reason : .]
1/8/2010 12:31:12 AM
1/8/2010 8:17:37 AM
1/8/2010 12:32:38 PM
I think the great untapped resource of the United States is the land that could be used for agricultural purposes. Now, for the past 30 years or so, agriculture hasn't exactly been booming. I think that will change. There's a good chance that food prices are going to go way up in the future.http://business.asiaone.com/Business/My%2BMoney/Opinion/Story/A1Story20100106-190014.htmlIn that article, Jim Rogers talks about how there will be food shortages in 2010. He's been very bullish on commodities, and he has a good track record.
1/8/2010 12:40:18 PM
Arguably we do aerospace stuff better than anybody else.But yeah, not really that much.
1/8/2010 1:32:15 PM
Compensation is dictated by productivity, which is a product of technology, education, liberty, and capital accumulation. Therefore, other countries can rise to our standard of living, but there is nothing they can do short of war that can reduce our productivity and thus standard of living. All they can do is affect the margins, such as driving up the price of resources (nothing we can do to stop them short of war) or shifting market power within our own society (poorer manufacturers, wealthier miners, lower interest rates on Government Bonds, etc).
1/8/2010 1:46:43 PM
1/8/2010 1:58:54 PM
It's about time we loosed them. Captivity sucks. Especially when your name is "the free world".
1/8/2010 2:13:06 PM
1/8/2010 3:02:52 PM
Actually I'm pretty sure that outside of Congress and insurance companies, nobody in the country thinks that healthcare bill is worth the paper its written on.
1/8/2010 3:04:53 PM
Consider it loost.
1/9/2010 12:50:24 PM