10/19/2008 9:31:37 PM
bullshit. they didn't earn their money. they stole it off the backs of the people.
10/19/2008 10:45:27 PM
10/20/2008 3:46:32 AM
The term 'Goldwater' Republican isn't a label you should be proud as it carries the implication that you are so bound to your ideology, that the destruction of wester civilization and indeed all of humanity itself is acceptable so long as it includes the destruction of you 'immoral enemy.' He wasn't as hardcore a conservative as say William F. Buckley, but the man was pretty dead set in his opposition to communism to a degree that was actually harmful to US interests.Furthermore, libertarianism had died before with the great depression only to make a roaring comeback when the American public couldn't stomach appeasing communism and increasing state welfare at a time when the American economy was heading towards stagnation.
10/20/2008 12:33:44 PM
10/20/2008 12:45:41 PM
Rejected MAD and aggressively pursued n+1 with regards to nuclear arms and that active arms race with the Soviet Union. This after government and pentagon reports indicating:1) A nuclear war with even first strike is not winnable.2) Any Missile shield could be defeated by adding more nuclear weapons to an arsenal and thus reducing the likely hood of not being able to respond to a first strike with overwhelming force.Conservative hard line thought absolutely rejected any type of conversation or communication with the Soviet Union, including the Hot Line between Moscow and DC (opposed by Goldwater, btw) on the basis that communism was godless and evil and the only policy that the US should pursue was that of winning the cold war.
10/20/2008 12:53:15 PM
^Works for me; we're still here, and we DID win the cold war
10/20/2008 1:22:26 PM
I think you're ignoring the Goldwater of his later years, who mellowed out and advocated limited government with social tolerance. The same Barry Goldwater that advocated giving Jerry Falwell a swift kick in the ass.I don't necessarily think you can ignore that, especially given the fact that he made those comments just as the religious right was beginning to become ascendant.
10/20/2008 1:30:34 PM
Regardless, foreign policy is my most significant area of contention with Goldwater. I'm not saying he was wrong all the way around, and SandSanta's depiction is hyperbolic, but he was more to the extreme in foreign policy than I find suitable.
10/20/2008 1:42:28 PM
Well thats true, but Goldwater isn't necessarily known for his later years as he is for being a strong voice of the conservative movement during his prime.We did eventually win the cold war but we won it without firing a single shot. That pretty much was the foreign policy advocated by 'liberals' where as the hawks within the right were screaming for the US to oppose communism, militarily, wherever possible.
10/20/2008 1:44:24 PM
10/20/2008 1:46:08 PM
Yes, however, when its sold to congress and the American public its labeled as 'Missile Defense Shield' or some other grand patriotic name. Thats what they vote for, thats what they want.
10/20/2008 1:48:32 PM
I don't think the McCain campaign realizes the extent to which they are hemorrhaging moderate libertarians and how statements like, "NoVa is not the real Virginia" are doing them no favors.There are times like when I saw the video of McCain at A.E. Smith diner that I remember, hey I used to love this guy. Then I remember that he picked Sarah Palin, and the fire of my hatred for the populist right boils over to the point where I can't help but think screw it.If my only choice is between the pitch-fork wielding peasants or sherry swilling socialists, I'll cast my lot with the socialists. At least they are better conversation.[Edited on October 20, 2008 at 2:48 PM. Reason : .]
10/20/2008 2:45:43 PM
I read this article earlier and figured this place would explode once they got ahold of it.So has anyone bothered to explain why the deregulation of financial markets is a good thing? First Asia in the late 90s, now this. All I see in here is a lot of talk about the only other option being some massive socialist state (come on, you people aren't that dense), as if the only options are rational libertarianism and totalitarianism (which is apparently anything to the left of Ron Paul).So my question is: how would have even more deregulated financial markets have prevented this from happening? Please provide a real world answer, not some Ayn Rand "well, if people all acted in rational self interest like a true ubermensch..." thing. The opening of the article is right, libertarians who refuse to reconsider that maybe we do need checks on the market (not state-run markets, stop being stupid) aren't any different than Marxists who refuse to see the flaw in their ideological world view after seeing some derivation of it wreak havoc on the world.[Edited on October 20, 2008 at 3:32 PM. Reason : .]
10/20/2008 3:31:30 PM
So, what about liberals who refuse to see the danger of moral hazard in creating GSEs with implicit government backing and a political mandate to maximize home ownership at all costs?Oh wait, right. Only libertarians are ever asked to defend their policies.
10/20/2008 4:10:29 PM
I somehow doubt the mandate was to maximize ownership "at all costs." They still had to compete in the private market, and their bottom line depended on it.
10/20/2008 4:15:26 PM
GSE's aren't inherently different then regular lenders because they don't really carry a government-backed guarantee. They are privately operated and still responsible to their investors. Thats the entire point of the enterprise, a seemingly government back institution that gives investors confidence to lend money at lower rates then they otherwise would. The financial meltdown can't really be pinned on GSE's or even the admirable goal on increasing home ownership. Rather, extremely high return rates on credit that generated profit of up to 20% (higher with larger portfolios) creating a demand for mortgage backed securities that couldn't possibly be satiated by selling loans only to qualifying buyers triggered the situation now.
10/20/2008 4:42:30 PM
10/20/2008 4:46:47 PM
10/20/2008 5:09:59 PM
10/20/2008 7:58:19 PM
i know. how dare he cite one of the guys who wrote the fucking Constitution as an authority on it. what a crazy man
10/20/2008 8:10:49 PM
Well hell, if we're going to bring all of Madison's actions into the debate, let's talk about his acceptance of the National Bank, then tell me he took a hard line on the elastic clause.So burro-- how do you reconcile his acceptance of a national bank with his supposed hard line on the elastic clause?[Edited on October 20, 2008 at 8:20 PM. Reason : ]
10/20/2008 8:16:04 PM
10/20/2008 8:31:46 PM
10/20/2008 8:43:14 PM
10/20/2008 9:30:47 PM
10/20/2008 10:25:08 PM
10/20/2008 10:39:11 PM
10/20/2008 11:11:43 PM
10/21/2008 9:44:00 AM
I would like to reiterate that compared to FDR or any other actual socialist, Obama is a friggin' libertarian. Even his socalled nationalization of healthcare is not at all nationalization; it is nothing more than opressively regulated capitalism, which I would call a major victory of libertarianism; even its enemies have conceeded the death of socialism. What I refuse to understand is how its supposed defenders, George Bush, have morally bankrupted themselves by forcibly nationalizing nine US banks.
10/21/2008 10:33:46 AM
10/21/2008 11:23:25 AM
10/21/2008 11:27:21 AM
But it only works when it is fast, I would suggest. Democracies only make sweeping changes quickly, so there is not enough time for the backlash to hit its mark. As such, attempting to socialize an industry slowely should not work, in theory. They will regulate the hell out of it but be arrested before they get to their desired next step. Try to remember, this is how we got our current health care system. As such, more of the same will product more of the same, which is no change at all.
10/21/2008 11:34:58 AM
Government investment in banks is actually the worst kind of socialism. There's no amount of verbal sugar coating thats going to change the fact that our financial system is now quite nationalized.
10/21/2008 12:08:17 PM
10/21/2008 6:43:12 PM
10/21/2008 7:34:51 PM
So if it was "as soon as the ink dried", why did it take 150 years for your interpretation to be put into practice?Might I perhaps suggest some ink that dries just a little faster?Meanwhile, even taking Hamilton's expansive view of the GW clause, this taxing and spending still applies within the context of the Necessary and Proper powers to accomplish the explicitly enumerated ends listed below. Not that things like written law or logic have stood in the way of your interpretation thus so far.The fact is, you still can't find a limiting case to your very, very expansive interpretation of the GW clause. You can't give us a definition, and you can't even cite a Court case. So when will you explain to us just why those enumerated powers supposedly subsumed by the GW clause exist, instead of just pronouncing libertarians as stupid and wrong? (And let's not even get to the number of arguments you simply feel it beneath you to address - carry on with simply telling yourself that you're right and libertarians are just not getting it.)[Edited on October 21, 2008 at 8:00 PM. Reason : .]
10/21/2008 7:55:29 PM
10/21/2008 8:27:13 PM
10/21/2008 8:57:18 PM
you may be at a loss for words, so I'll choose one for you: pwnt
10/21/2008 9:02:51 PM
"to promote the General Welfare" is not a delegation of power to the gov't. It is only a statement of purpose of the Constitution.If you think those words are a license for the federal gov't to do whatever it wants in order to promote the general welfare, then its powers would be unlimited. We would no longer need amendements, since politicians and judges can amend the Constitution by fiat. We would be at the mercy of politicians, and only their good intentions to limit what gov't can do to us.
10/21/2008 10:11:23 PM
I missed the point where our argument moved from debating a loose interpretation of the elastic clause to specifically debating the general welfare clause.Oh well. I gave you a solid characterization of Hamilton's view of the general welfare clause. He was very much for the inclusion of the general welfare clause as an enumerated power. I'm sorry that you're so selective when it comes to which founding father I can and cannot cite, but it'd be great if you'd at least address it.Also, you've yet to cite any judicial precedence for why Hamilton was wrong. Surely the courts rejected the atrocious general-welfare-clause-as-an-enumerated-power argument prior to the 20th century.And as an aside-- I'd like to point out that your argument isn't "OMG WRONG." Your argument was one side (the losing side, but I digress) of a debate that's as old as the Constitution. The fact that you're taking one side of a historical debate, and claiming that the other side is absolutely wrong, and then cherry-picking historical tid-bits as evidence, speaks volumes about your preference for ideology over intellectual honesty. Such is Libertarianism, though.^^You don't even know what we're talking about.
10/21/2008 10:35:37 PM
10/21/2008 11:10:26 PM
Really, though. Did I miss something?Where did you cite precedence for a rejection of the general welfare clause as an enumerated power? You keep giving me snotty responses explaining that you already have, but I can't find anything.That it took until the 20th century to affirm it doesn't invalidate it.Lots of bits and pieces of the Constitution weren't settled until the 20th century-- does that invalidate these things? I mean, where did the US SC get off overturning Plessy? Our original interpretation of the 14th Amendment was crystal clear. (And speaking of which-- I just realized that I've been sucked into a debate that presupposes the validity of originalism. I'll play ball, but let the record show that originalism is lame, and pointless)
10/21/2008 11:42:39 PM
10/22/2008 12:01:42 AM