6/15/2011 2:13:46 PM
6/15/2011 2:45:40 PM
I dont think he is advocating people go back to being dirt poor at all. Just that you grease the gears that gave you the industrial revolution that increased SOL for all and see what developments they produce next that changes our lives. The NEXT revolution, so to speak.^as for regulations, why is there a belief that if the govt doesnt protect them people wont lookout for themselves? Yes, I think some regulations are needed, but you cannot be naive to think they cannot be harmful either. As I mentioned in another thread, alot of these regulations RESTRICT competition and INCREASE price... its effects on consumers are not, sometimes, the primary driver for some of these rules/regs/mandates but the exercise of political favor.Some jobs are risky or are undesirable so they carry a wage premium than other jobs. Economist call these compensating differentials. Now lets assume you have two identical factories making the same product in competition. One factory is air conditioning and the other does not. The air conditioning does not really make the factory more productive relative to the cost of the air conditioner, but it does provide the workers a nicer/comfortable place to work. The factory without an air conditioner will have to pay its workers MORE to attract them away from the air conditioned factory. At some point the wage differential becomes too great the compnay will just put in air conditioning. A true market pressure.Now, lets say that air conditioning was just invented and is this great new product and the dogooders in govt decided to make every factory install this into their factories to "benefit the workers". What is the result? unemployment. The factories that cant afford the new mandate will either go under, or lay off people to pay for the new cost. Others will pay for the mandate at the expense of increased wages or expansion of their business. And there would still be people who would want to work in a factory without air vs not working at all.btw air conditioning is MUCH more prevelant in the US than poorer Europe. You see this is an easy to understand example of how these mandates/reg affect employment and business. Lets just substituted air conditioning with health care, etc.
6/15/2011 3:16:50 PM
6/15/2011 3:48:06 PM
How do you feel about minimum wage? I'd consider that a harmful regulation. Henry Hazlitt put it pretty simply: http://athousandscreamingrabbits.com/2010/06/17/henry-hazlitt-minimum-wage/
6/15/2011 3:58:42 PM
He goes on and on and on about how harmful the minimum wage is, but doesn't produce any concrete evidence. Much like eyedrb above, he creates overly simplistic hypotheticals using worker A, employed at wage X, working for employer Z whom happens to have air conditioning blah blah blah. Simplistic hypotheticals are WAY overused on this board!!!!! People arguing ideologies (which have been beat to death) instead of reality. Its just boring and tiring to me.so how do I feel about minimum wage? It will only actually decrease employment if it is raised to extremely high levels -- levels that we are no where near approaching right now. I mean do you actually think that if the US did away with the min. wage we would suddenly see only 5% unemployment? I'd say no. There are much larger factors at play in determining employment, even in low wage workers. Specifically I'd say the overall health of the economy, the amount of disposable income of the average person, really anything that creates demand for goods/services that low wage workers produce. http://emlab.berkeley.edu/~card/papers/njmin-aer.pdf
6/15/2011 6:46:10 PM
What would constitute concrete proof, for you? I'm guessing that double digit unemployment isn't enough?Do you think it should be illegal for a person to work for less than 7.25 an hour? Why should I not be able to work for 7.00 an hour?
6/15/2011 6:51:37 PM
that would be great proof if you can establish a causal link
6/15/2011 6:58:17 PM
A study similar to the one I posted would atleast help to convince me.I'm saying that the sole cause of our double digit unemployment is NOT the minimum wage. Instead its low demand for workers since the economy has slowed. Employers don't just start hiring people because they are cheaper to hire -- They hire when they have a need (ie demand for their product has increased so they have more work that needs to be done)I'm not going to argue over the specific minimum wage and where it should be, especially a difference of $0.25. I also think that there should likely be some exceptions for dependants who are working or part-time workers. But Yes, I do believe it should be illegal to pay a worker less than a fair wage.
6/15/2011 7:06:30 PM
Here's your proof: there are people working for less than 7.25 an hour, but they're doing so illegally. We all know this is the case, and I think it's evident enough that I don't need to drag someone onto TWW to verify it. That establishes that there are people willing to work for less than 7.25, but are unable to do so through legal means due to the minimum wage laws. If working at those rates were not illegal, more people would be doing it, but since it's illegal, they'd rather just depend on handouts than risk getting hammered by the IRS.
6/15/2011 7:11:08 PM
6/15/2011 7:47:34 PM
6/15/2011 9:05:50 PM
6/16/2011 2:49:30 PM
The minimum wage law is just bad economics. Hazlitt explains it best in the article posted, and I won't go through the arguments over and over again. There's a more important point to be made, though.
6/16/2011 5:17:33 PM
6/16/2011 6:38:35 PM
6/16/2011 9:02:10 PM
6/16/2011 9:39:47 PM
6/16/2011 9:44:22 PM
i watched both debates yesterday on youtube and I have to say, I'm really starting to like Ron Paul. It seems to me like he is the only candidate that is getting back to the roots of a true Republican. He wants to get the Federal Government uninvolved as much as possible and make issues the States responsibility. Hello small government. I like his quote concerning the budget. "We should not be thinking 'what should we cut from the budget' but instead 'what should we keep?"i also like how he wants to make marriage a responsibility of the churches, not the government.i also like how he wants to quit being the world police and has more of an isolationist point of view. we need to be taking all this money in foreign aid and spending it here at home.
6/17/2011 8:32:37 AM
He wants to repeal the Civil Rights Act of '64. He thinks it was a mistake because people have the right to discriminate.
6/17/2011 9:48:11 AM
thanks for the heads up. i'll look into that.
6/17/2011 9:58:30 AM
I'm not sure why you're honing in on the Civil Rights act. That's not one of his most controversial positions, and we all know it isn't going to be repealed. Why not focus on some things that actually matter, like foreign policy, monetary policy, and budget issues? Those are the things that are actually going to effect your life. 1964 was a long time ago.
6/17/2011 11:21:46 AM
agreed!
6/17/2011 12:45:45 PM
6/17/2011 1:06:05 PM
It wasn't private business owners blasting people with fire hoses, dude. I'll give you one guess as to who those people worked for.
6/17/2011 1:08:00 PM
Did you read the article I posted where minimum wage had almost no effect on employment?
6/18/2011 2:01:21 PM
I read the study, but there's no way they would have been able to make that causal link anyway. It's not like you would raise the minimum wage and a bunch of people would get laid off. Most businesses would probably keep who they have on staff, but they would attempt to operate in a "leaner" than normal state, which means hiring fewer people over time. In some cases, it might have little or no immediate impact on employment. Long-term, however, the jobs that are worth much less than minimum wage will simply disappear or move to another country, which means higher unemployment.
6/18/2011 2:53:16 PM
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/06/19/bizarre-episode-steals-spotlight-at-major-gop-conference/
6/19/2011 11:04:29 PM
just saw the vid on youtube...pretty funny!!
6/20/2011 10:23:14 AM
Bump
11/17/2011 9:20:25 PM
I think I've watched all but the Cain/Gengrich CSPAN Lincoln/Douglas-style debate. I'm not sure how many more I will be watching, but I will definitely be watching the next two debates:November 19, 2011 Thanksgiving Family Forum5pm ET on CitizenLink.comLocation: First Federated Church in Des Moines, Iowa Sponsor: The Family LeaderNovember 22, 2011 8pm ET on CNNLocation: DAR Constitution Hall in Washington, DC Sponsor: CNN, The Heritage Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute[Edited on November 17, 2011 at 9:30 PM. Reason : http://www.2012presidentialelectionnews.com/2012-debate-schedule/2011-2012-primary-debate-schedule/]
11/17/2011 9:29:29 PM
THe Family Forum should be an easy one for Newt. He's got the most experience since he's had three of them!
11/17/2011 10:29:17 PM
Hard to believe these debates have been going on for over half a year now.Haven't heard Gary Johnson's name in a while.
11/18/2011 12:16:45 AM
Debates are to see if there are any republican candidates other than Romney.Since no one really likes Romney, Obama will trounce him in the regular election.
11/18/2011 12:35:03 AM
Not what the polls are saying ...
11/18/2011 1:04:34 PM
lawl at the first four and a half minutes of the family forum debate http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aY8Zw5NzUXQ
11/20/2011 11:42:16 PM
11/21/2011 10:39:25 AM
Got another debate coming up in about hour:http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2011/12/can-gingrich-stay-positive-will-romney-go-negative-a-preview-of-saturdays-yahooabc-debate/
12/10/2011 7:55:56 PM
na[Edited on December 10, 2011 at 8:07 PM. Reason : wrong thread]
12/10/2011 8:06:53 PM
michelle bachmans' mom was gay?
12/10/2011 10:28:08 PM
Romney offered a 10 k bet at last nights debate, which is probably bad messing throwing around that kind of money when you're trying to win over people in this economy, but the Huntsman campaign made an ad taking him up on that bet:
12/11/2011 2:23:33 PM
LOL @ Newt's "I was in the private sector". Even he knew he was being laughed at, not laughed with.
12/11/2011 4:47:54 PM
Again, even after every internet poll had Ron Paul leading the debate, there was not one single mention of his name in the post debate coverage. Not even in passing. Like he was invisible the entire time.
12/12/2011 9:05:06 AM
^Probably because we don't nominate the GOP candidate using an online vote. Most of the polls I've been looking at have placed Paul between 5% and 10% almost this entire race. When he starts showing movement, they'll probably talk more about him.
12/12/2011 9:30:32 AM
Yeah, we can automatically ignore anyone at 16-18% in IA, and 15-17% in NH.Instead, let's talk about Perry (9% IA, 2%NH) or Bachmann (9% IA, 2% NH).National polls are nearly irrelevant. Even so, Paul is still third nationally, by RCP average (where all my other numbers came from).http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2012/president/us/republican_presidential_nomination-1452.htmlI don't predict a Paul win overall, but I am going to vote for him, regardless. I'm dying for him just to win Iowa, simply for the political theater that would ensue. That is within the realm of possibility.I don't even agree with him on most things. I think he's dead wrong on a lot. But he believes in the rule of law, and that puts him in a class all by himself.
12/12/2011 10:15:40 AM
Perry lead the GOP nomination for almost a month and was the first one to find a way to knock Romney out of the lead for the nomination. He's relevant because he was the first to "break through", but also crashed hard. There are lessons to learn from Perry, good and bad, so he's in relevant to the discussion.Bachmann is the founder and leader of the House Tea Party Caucus which is largely responsible for the election results in 2010, or at least that is how it is seen. For that, alone, she is relevant to the discussion.Ron Paul has never risen above 10% nationally (according to RCP), has lost 1 presidential campaign as a Libertarian, he served as a campaign advisor for another failed GOP candidate, and lost the GOP nomination in 2008. He may be statistically significant in some individual states, but he also won a few state straw polls in 2008 for the nomination, if memory serves correctly. When Ron Paul can get more than 10% of the voting Republicans to acknowledge he could be their guy, maybe I'll be more willing to agree with your sentiments. Until then, he has a track record of being a good congressman with very educated domestic policies that doesn't appeal to the nation as a president. THAT is why he isn't being mentioned by the main stream media.^Best you could argue is that FOX News gave him 12% at one point in time over the past two months, but all the previously stated facts still exist. As a candidate, which is what they are talking about, he isn't incredibly viable. ]
12/12/2011 10:37:03 AM
Anybody with those IA and NH numbers ought to be covered. Period.Paul is kind of a long shot. But his chances are still better than Perry or Bachmann. Neither of them has a hope or a prayer in IA or NH, and that means they're done.Ron Paul could win Iowa. That's just a fact. If he gets 5-8% more in the polls (unlike nationally, his NH and IA numbers have been increasing) and/or a snowstorm on election day, it's very possible.[Edited on December 12, 2011 at 10:56 AM. Reason : a]
12/12/2011 10:56:04 AM
I can't wait until Newt implodes and Santorum emerges as the next flavor of the month. Because he's the candidate the Tea Party deserves, but not the one they need right now. So they'll choose him because he's one of them. Because he's not Romney. He's a christian warrior, a true believer. A conservative crusader.
12/12/2011 11:40:09 AM
mmm, santorum as the flavor of the month.
12/12/2011 11:50:53 AM
that's fucking disgusting
12/12/2011 12:00:13 PM