12/20/2011 2:26:11 PM
12/20/2011 2:30:27 PM
Paul is to the left of Obama on foreign policy, which happens to be a key lynchpin for the GOP. It doesn't matter how much they hate Obama if Paul is even worse in their eyes on one of the GOP's most important issues. They wont support Obama, but they wont feel compelled to get off their asses and vote against him either. Reminder, again, PPP found only 9% would vote for Paul if their guy lost. That's not a meaningless statistic, and Paul is among the worst for that part of the poll.He's not one of them and they know it, and since they're a party that operates almost entirely on us-vs-them dynamics, they'll be far more likely to just stay home and bitch to anyone who'll listen. It takes enthusiasm to vote, and they wont have enthusiasm if they switched the TV off months ago because they couldn't handle Paul discussing the concept of blowback, or suggesting gay people aren't subhuman. You're oh so willing to believe Democrats feeling disenfranchised will gladly switch to Paul (who is complete anathema to liberals outside of foreign policy and the drug war) but can't even imagine a Republican feeling disenfranchised just staying home. You either have access to some information nobody else does, or your optimism for Paul is seriously clouding your judgement.
12/20/2011 2:40:13 PM
12/20/2011 2:56:56 PM
12/20/2011 3:13:28 PM
Where are all the liberals who say bring every soldier home from every foreign country in which they are stationed? What liberal could you possibly hear saying, "The hungry African kid is not our military's problem. The victim of ethnic cleansing in Eastern Europe is not our military's problem. The small, innocent, minding-its-own-business nation invaded by that large nation is not our military's problem. The drug lords coming to power in that nation to our South is not our military's problem. The rape victim who must marry her rapist after getting her clitoris cut off is not our military's problem. That group of fledgling feminists killed while protesting their tyrant is not our military's problem. Our military is for our borders, and our people, period. Our military does nothing abroad except kick-ass in our most urgent (and not pre-emptive) defense, and then come home without nation-building."Show me a liberal who would say that, and I'll submit the point. That's non-interventionism.
12/20/2011 3:30:48 PM
^^Big businesses spend big money on lobbying to influence regulation in their favor. Dramatically reducing the scope of the government will effectively limit how much influence can be bought.Yea, economies of scale help certain industries create a competitive advantage. But so does influencing regulation in your favor. Lowering the barriers to entry and increasing new business contenders' ability to compete should have a net effect of increasing value to the consumer and regulating fair market prices. Furthermore, Economies of scale are affected by regulation, they are intertwined and not mutually exclusive.You've got to realize the big businesses are investing $billions influencing regulation and taxation in their favor. Not necessary trying to end it. For example, I have a client who's a big dog at Ernst and Young, he's told me several stories of how GE's tax department are the elite of the elite in twisting tax law and lobbying so they pay nothing.Are you contending that the "circular reasoning" that money from big corporations used to buy political influence is not making the playing field unfair? That it is not preventing the free market to function correctly?I've come to the conclusion that there is an emerging shift within the GOP... Mainly with the younger generation who are slanted towards a much more non-interventionist foreign policy. Is that a leftist position? Maybe. Are there still a large group of Repub's that are warhawks and xenophobes? Yes. However, IMO, most of these people will still come out in droves to vote against Obama.Ron Paul has a legitimate chance to change the course of our country. I stand for his principles of liberty and I implore you to reevaluate your positions so we can start making progress in the right direction.[Edited on December 20, 2011 at 3:40 PM. Reason : ;]
12/20/2011 3:38:04 PM
Okay so I'm gathering that liberals occasionally support using the military to stop genocide, famine, or mass rape whereas Paul is against that too. Any other way in which they differ?
12/20/2011 3:48:04 PM
12/20/2011 4:01:20 PM
12/20/2011 4:03:28 PM
12/20/2011 6:46:38 PM
12/20/2011 6:49:19 PM
It's a vote to kill shitty, unproductive jobs.I saw a bumper sticker today that said something like, "Save jobs, stop the cuts". Want to save jobs? Keep the money in the private sector. Stop taking money from real businesses that improve our lives and giving it to incompetent bureaucrats. Stop giving it to police that trample our rights and throw us in jail for doing drugs. Stop giving it to the military so they can maintain an overseas empire.Yeah, people are going to be out of a job initially, and they'll have to retool. Sucks, but you can't leech off the productive class forever.[Edited on December 20, 2011 at 6:50 PM. Reason : ]
12/20/2011 6:49:33 PM
You mean the private sector that has been increasingly hoarding and concentrating wealth for the past few decades?Do you seriously not pay attention to ANY of the data that you come across?We've given the private sector some of the lowest tax rates and regulatory environment in decades, and they aren't doing very much to "save jobs." It's not only naive to think that the reason unemployment is so high is because the private sector doesn't have the money, it is ignorant of reality.The tech boom of the late 90s that gave us google and facebook was done under higher taxes and stiffer regulation than what exists now. The problem isn't that the private sector doesn't have money, and giving them more money is obviously not the solution.
12/20/2011 6:56:34 PM
12/20/2011 6:58:27 PM
12/20/2011 7:01:30 PM
12/20/2011 7:02:20 PM
12/20/2011 7:04:34 PM
12/20/2011 7:04:49 PM
12/20/2011 7:05:07 PM
12/20/2011 7:08:05 PM
12/20/2011 8:06:41 PM
I honestly think that Ron Paul is doing so well simply because of his economic principles. He's been preaching and the Federal Reserve, the creation of financial bubbles and inflation for years. People are finally seeing that he is right and he is the only candidate with real solutions.
12/20/2011 8:16:15 PM
12/20/2011 10:16:19 PM
Is he wrong? If he's wrong, shouldn't the Fed print up a few hundred trillion of stimulus? That'll really get the economy moving.
12/20/2011 11:00:08 PM
Wayne: Hey Tiny who's posting tonight?Tiny: We got the jolly green giants and moronWayne: Moron, is he any good?Tiny: No, he sucks.Wayne: Oh, so it's not just a clever nameDude your posts don't make any fucking sense. Societies collapse under socialism. Grow up already, the liberal shit is fine on college campuses but it makes you look like an idiot when you get in the real world.
12/21/2011 3:03:53 AM
^^That would cause hyperinflationunlike the Paultards, we have a sense of balance^The "real world" does not mean "the megachurch"
12/21/2011 3:40:54 AM
12/21/2011 7:18:27 AM
i know this is OLD, but I giggled a bit at Paul's appearance on Leno the other night where he said Bachmann really hates the muslims and then said Santorum hates the gays and the muslims. There was a bit of comedic timing there that I didn't expect.
12/21/2011 10:20:22 AM
yeah that was a great interview
12/21/2011 10:53:30 AM
12/21/2011 11:38:45 AM
12/21/2011 11:47:45 AM
Do you really think that taking money from the producers, giving it back to consumers with the intention for them to give it back to the producers is an efficient way of managing our economy?
12/21/2011 11:48:58 AM
During a liquidity trap, yes, absolutely.I assume by "producers" you mean the very rich who have lots of capital, even though every person who works is a producer as well.Working class consumers spend a higher percentage of their income than the upper class. If you take liquidity from that upper class and move it to the lower class (possibly through handouts, but public works programs are preferable for their multiplier effect), that money will have a much higher chance of being spent. Once that money's being spent, demand increases, and the private sector has incentive to start expanding again, which means demand starts expanding on its own, independent of the government. At the end of the day, everybody's richer, even the "producers" from whom money was taken earlier, than if no action had been taken and the economy was left to stagnate for 5 or 10 more years.[Edited on December 21, 2011 at 12:00 PM. Reason : .]
12/21/2011 11:58:07 AM
12/21/2011 11:59:53 AM
12/21/2011 12:03:39 PM
12/21/2011 12:09:31 PM
Is there not a risk of people becoming dependent on these entitlements?You set a pretty risky precedent when you basically tell society: "Too broke to buy products? Here's some free money, now go out and shop!"What happens when you end the hand outs?Is the capital hoarding due to low demand? Or is it because at the moment it's too risky due to potential taxation and regulation?IMO, the big savior to our economy will be technology and innovation. This is how value is created and the standard of living is increased. How can we stimulate that? IMO, cheaper energy. Not to get off topic, but I think this is where nuclear power and domestic drilling/mining can be very beneficial.
12/21/2011 12:15:18 PM
12/21/2011 12:18:39 PM
12/21/2011 12:23:07 PM
12/21/2011 12:24:43 PM
12/21/2011 12:34:10 PM
Your solution operates under the premise that the government can accomplish this with efficiency and without corruption.Unfortunately, whenever the government dolls out money, a power grab scenario is created and special interests nibble, nip and lobby to get more than their fair share of the entitlement pie.I contend that it's practically impossible for the government to do this efficiently. In a true free market this redistribution of wealth and value takes care of itself.Unfortunately, given the current system, we are a far cry from true free market capitalism.
12/21/2011 12:41:49 PM
Oh so your trump card is "government is inherently capable of doing a good thing, markets are capable of everything". Okay. That's a very nuanced and substantial opinion that contributes a lot to this conversation and opens up many new avenues for this conversation to take. Thanks for that. I was worried this conversation was way too dogmatic and ideological but you've made sure we stay pragmatic.[Edited on December 21, 2011 at 12:44 PM. Reason : .]
12/21/2011 12:43:45 PM
Do you honestly think the government is altruistic? That the policy and legislation passed do not get manipulated by power hungry special interests? When you reduce the size and scope of the central government, the ability to buy influence is greatly diminished. The only power in our land that can legally detain you, steal your money, or mandate your behavior is the government. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. And, IMO, granting more power/entitlements/spending to the gov't hurts your liberties as an individual.Markets are simply the emergent organization of individual interactions.When the rights of individuals are protected, and government doesn't create artificial protections, bubbles, or incentives; markets reward producers who create value, punishes malinvestments and allows risk to function as a regulator of behavior.The big reason we are in a economic mess is because of government and the fed meddling with the markets. I am simply not confident that the government can effectively handle the ideas you are advocating.
12/21/2011 12:58:41 PM
12/21/2011 2:00:23 PM
I'm trying hard to be more patient than I have been lately, and I'm not even harping on Socialism now, what I'm talking about now is strictly how to make Capitalism not run itself into the ground. So basically I'm arguing from the standpoint of a liberal, not a leftist, so this is very painful for me....
12/21/2011 2:05:30 PM
I'm going to write-in a vote for FDR.That crippled bastard would mop the floor with todays Democrats[Edited on December 21, 2011 at 3:00 PM. Reason : ]
12/21/2011 2:59:54 PM
The bottom line is that we have fundamental differences on where we hold personal responsibility and how important liberty is... You think the state should redistribute wealth and be responsible for the welfare of society. I think the individual should buck the fuck up, learn how to serve the market and stand on their own two feet.I played the corporate cog game where I pissed away 40-50hours a week in return for a steady paycheck. I was miserable, so what did I decide to do? I honed a skill-set and did what I had to do to monetize my skills by bringing them to market.I want to point out, and you can call me stupid or noble, that I quit my job. I didn't dick off to get fired so I can collect unemployment. I quit because I think parasitic living is shameful.
12/21/2011 3:45:30 PM
12/21/2011 6:38:47 PM