or you can change it for the better
5/18/2007 12:11:12 PM
or for the worse
5/18/2007 12:12:21 PM
5/18/2007 12:26:35 PM
you know when somebody registered 6 days ago and they somehow know all about tww and its regular posters, its a pretty safe bet to assume its just another alias
5/18/2007 12:43:05 PM
>.<MisterGreen = PinkandBlack?[Edited on May 18, 2007 at 1:14 PM. Reason : .]
5/18/2007 1:03:05 PM
^^^ If you didnt give a shit about my politcal party, I am curious as to why you posted the quote of my reference to left-wing people and my username at the same time?But then again, you would just be contradicting yourself...and as we have all seen, you would NEVER do a thing like that...jackass And no - I am not an alias. I looked over TWW, particularly the Soap Box, for a few weeks before I bothered to join.[Edited on May 18, 2007 at 7:26 PM. Reason : .]
5/18/2007 7:26:02 PM
5/18/2007 7:50:25 PM
^ wait... you're trying to compare and contrast democracy with socialism?explain to me again, please, why anyone should pay attention to anything you say on this subject?
5/18/2007 9:08:30 PM
well, genius, considering that Kris was asking why democracy is all over the place, I think it's only fair to discuss democracy wrt to socialism. but hey, thanks for reading the thread genius. now shut the hell up
5/18/2007 9:11:06 PM
5/18/2007 10:19:56 PM
haha if we had true laissez faire capitalism, this school wouldnt exist
5/18/2007 10:45:40 PM
^Probably not...but a better one would.
5/18/2007 11:02:46 PM
5/18/2007 11:24:39 PM
5/19/2007 1:03:55 AM
Yes, jacking yourself in the ass would be a good idea, MsGreen. Your initial post contained the following quotation concerning the people you were getting these "ideas" from: "The people were extremely left-wing. . . ." Those are your words--not mine. My point was why would I or anybody else think that the United States could "benefit," as you posed the question, from the ideology of left-wing or right-wing extremists? Has this thought not occurred to you? V I invite you to pleasure yourself in a similar fashion. [Edited on May 19, 2007 at 1:28 AM. Reason : .]
5/19/2007 1:16:03 AM
so mature
5/19/2007 1:19:10 AM
hooksaw, we could go back and forth on this forever, but I think it's time to stop, considering you claim to be a grown adult yet still insult people by telling them to "jack themselves in the ass."grow up. [Edited on May 19, 2007 at 5:27 AM. Reason : .]
5/19/2007 5:27:06 AM
socialism is a fine idea... it'll never work though on a long term basis
5/19/2007 1:48:59 PM
5/19/2007 2:38:00 PM
5/19/2007 3:41:57 PM
it would never work. it's a stupid idea. it's something that the liberal hippies who protest everything want to put in place (directly or indirectly), while the rest of us are off working to make a living.
5/19/2007 4:46:19 PM
That's right, because liberal "hippies" don't work.
5/19/2007 4:55:37 PM
if you put forth effort to educate yourself and work hard than you can be extremely successful in America as it is. The people who would rather have things handed to them and be slack pieces of shit are usually the ones in favor of socialism.
5/19/2007 4:59:50 PM
Thanks for the sweeping, yet enlightened, generalization...
5/19/2007 5:07:30 PM
5/19/2007 6:08:50 PM
5/19/2007 6:33:13 PM
5/19/2007 7:19:58 PM
5/19/2007 7:53:27 PM
5/19/2007 10:48:46 PM
5/19/2007 11:55:40 PM
5/20/2007 2:46:40 AM
Concerning the McDonald's example, some of you seem to be forgetting that--unlike many other burger chains--the company has made a significant amount of its profits by selling real estate. I haven't seen this fact posted here, but it has been an integral part of McDonald's business model since Ray Kroc bought the company. FYI: As of just a few years ago, only about ten percent of McDonald's outlets met the company's own service standards. So, if McDonald's is "selling advice," it's doing a shitty job of getting its stores to buy into that advice.
5/20/2007 2:59:48 AM
5/20/2007 8:56:34 AM
5/20/2007 1:34:06 PM
5/20/2007 2:24:08 PM
5/20/2007 2:25:40 PM
no, will not happen, will never happen, and if it did it would not be as they imagine it...socialism/communism is a theoretical pipe dream only, in reality it's despotic and incredibly harshif someone really wants to live under such a system, they can move to one of the few remaining countries that are still limping along like a leper....I do agree that there needs to be a restructuring but it needs to be self initiated and not imposed by the government.I also think that I know best how to spend and earn my money, more so than anyone in an office thousands of miles away...and to be expected Kris came out of the wood work to blather on about the benefits of socialism....there aren't any, b/c the system does not function well in this place the rest of us call the real world...you talk about corruption... with socialism the corrupt don't have to answer to anyone, in a capitalist system the corrupt are answerable to several factors, one of which being the market.[Edited on May 21, 2007 at 12:35 PM. Reason : s]
5/21/2007 12:32:29 PM
"We're heading toward socialism, and nothing and no one can prevent it," said Venezuela's strongman president, Hugo Chavez, in a televised address in January. Mr. Chavez had won re-election the month before after a campaign in which he promised to more aggressively advance socialism in Venezuela. Included in this push is what Mr. Chavez calls land reform: the redistribution of Venezuela's arable land from large farms to cooperatives, often nothing more than squatter homesteads. The Chavez government encourages the practice by offering loans de facto grants, as they are regularly not repaid to co-ops. Mr. Chavez argues for land redistribution in his usual Marxist rhetoric of social equality and class struggle, but the Venezuelan government also hails the practice as an essential step toward agricultural self-sufficiency. The irony, if history is any guide, is that this kind of land reform promises to make Venezuela even more dependent on imported food. Mr. Chavez's brand of land reform is a proven failure, and in some cases, has led to disaster. One example that the Venezuelan leader is quite familiar with is Cuba, where the collective farming that Fidel Castro introduced proved ruinous. Land redistribution has been ongoing since 2005, and the results are starting to emerge already. By some estimates, Venezuelan farmers produced 8 percent less food in 2006 than in 2005. Sugar cane production in particular is down, in one northwestern state by 40 percent. Landowners are trying to sell their property, knowing that if the land is taken over by one of the cooperatives financed by the Chavez government, they will not be compensated. Also for fear of losing their property, large landowners are no longer investing any more than they need to in their farms. Even if they wanted to, farmers who own more than 100 acres are categorically denied loans by Venezuela's state banks, according to one farmer interviewed by the Wall Street Journal. Mr. Chavez may think that oil revenue will buoy his social agenda, as it does his diplomatic one. Despite high oil prices, however, Mr. Chavez has done little to reduce poverty in Venezuela. Land redistribution will be yet another failed policy, and a reminder that Latin American's retrograde Marxist left stubbornly refuses to learn from past mistakes. http://www.washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20070520-094056-6295r.htm
5/21/2007 3:55:53 PM
and his silencing dissenting voices (eg shutting the oldest television network in the country because it was often critical of him) isn't winning him many friends inside or out of the country
5/21/2007 4:00:53 PM
i feel sorry for Venezuelan's.... then again they are partly doing it to themselves (only partly tho)and we didnt help matters
5/21/2007 4:13:56 PM
^^^ an editorial by the illustrious Washington Times, eh?you suppose the Reverend Sun Myung Moon wrote that one himself?
5/21/2007 8:44:14 PM
If not then perhaps his secretary. So what?
5/21/2007 9:50:14 PM
^ [/thread]
5/22/2007 12:20:55 AM