I actually think a RP presidency would be good for America. I can't imagine how a long-term libertarian US would work, but for even 2 terms, RP would pave the way for 3rd party candidates. And at the least, he's very candid in his views, something not a single presidential contender for at least the past few decades can be accused of.And the loudness of money is partially why we need someone like RP in office. He pretty much has the guts to stand up for his beliefs (as exemplified by his voting records), so I think he'd deflate a lot of the special-interest types floating around Washington.
12/27/2007 1:59:43 AM
Yes.He'll save the environment through strong private property laws.Because you know, Georgia Pacific truly cares about the quality of its land and its habitability by other species.
12/27/2007 2:06:46 AM
Actually, if you look at the major US corporations who are doing WELL:Subaru has the first zero impact plant in the world, and its here in the US. They built it not because it saves the trees, but because it will save them an ENORMOUS amount of money over the life of the plant. No worries of cleanup costs, federal regulations or any of that. Plus they have massively lower energy costs.Toyota has similar plans for enhancing most if not all of their US plants.Microsoft will be a carbon neutral company in the next 10 years (thats the plan anyway)Just as has been predicted by most market people, when the market makes enviro-friendly tech affordable, it will be adopted. Federal mandates will only slow and stagnate the process of development and implementation.To say that strong property laws won't help the environment is a little head-in-the-sand ish (no pun intended there ) For your example of Georgia Pacific we are talking about chemical storage safety. Being that a spill or mishandling of such material could affect ground water, and the surrounding property, it would certainly be within the realm of those laws, and would be much more clearcut in how it would be dealt with in the court systems.You have to realize too that today we know far more about the ecological impact of industrial waste, and learn more everyday, making the property law route more and more justified in dealing with it.
12/27/2007 2:26:50 AM
12/27/2007 9:07:18 AM
Neither Subaru or Toyota are major US corporations. They are Japanese, which have been miles ahead of US companies as far as green technology goes, for years. A major part of this being that Japan is a small island and they have to become more efficient/clean or the country turns into a huge cesspool of pollution like LA.
12/27/2007 10:01:15 AM
Free in their context.Don't be retarded.
12/27/2007 11:16:39 AM
free in what context? the only context I can provide is the context of me paying hundreds of dollars a month to the fed, and never seeing even a fraction of it in return....let's not even get started on paying SS taxes that I will, in all likelyhood, never see at all.you're the one who's being retarded guy.[Edited on December 27, 2007 at 11:40 AM. Reason : .]
12/27/2007 11:39:57 AM
Yes but in the context of being poor, services received are payed by wealthier citizens.The idea behind what I'm saying is that people receiving more then they pay want to willing give it up thinking they'll gain more, when in fact, they end up loosing more.Dig?
12/27/2007 11:47:34 AM
Most of the things the fed collects taxes for would be better run at the state level.....for example, it doesn't make sense to me for fed taxes to be collected from all states just to have portions of that divvied up in the congress, in the form of earmarks or appropriations, just to be given back to certain congressional districts or states. Cut out the middle man, and its a win win....states can do what they deem necessary with the funds, and the individual taxpayer has a bigger say in the process.
12/27/2007 12:02:58 PM
Except that most state's can't afford to maintain their highways much less provide consistent care across the board.You'd then have a situation where the richest states provided much better services then the poorer states, and especially the very poorest states. Without a federal government playing cop, these states could also then exert influence to continue to improve their situation. These sort of trends lead to economic spirals that don't have an out.See: Detriot for an example of a possible reality of that sort of system.And again, the poor get the shaft, and the rich continue unabated. I just love this wonderful irony of supporting Ron Paul and libertarians in general.ps- you fall into the class that would be adversely affected. pss- These arguments were made a hundred and twenty years ago.[Edited on December 27, 2007 at 12:59 PM. Reason : >.<]
12/27/2007 12:58:52 PM
retard, highways are federally funded. no one (not even Dr Paul) wants to remove the highway system from federal control, that WOULD be disasterous.Funny, Detroit happened with the Fed being there. I thought thats supposed to be your example of what happens if its not? What about New Orleans for the past 75 years? Or for that matter most of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, Kansas, West Virginia?According to you, none of these states should be in the predicaments they are because the fed is there for them. Oh wait, no, they aren't. The poor ALREADY GET THE SHAFT.You don't seem to understand that the poorest states have their federal funds vaccumed out to other places, which is, in several instances, why they have been poor states for so long. If you leave the money within the state, it will give most (especially the ones I listed) more money to work with per capita. It will also require the states to stop relying on federal bail outs to get by and will force them to deal with their own problems.If you scale back federal gov't, they at least get LESS of the shaft, and are more empowered to do something about it.As for the "These arguments were made a hundred and twenty years ago."You act like that's inherently a BAD thing. Lots has changed over the last century that makes those arguments much more powerful in practice. You have much more gender and race equality in the work place, far better nationwide infrastructure for everything from power to transportation, a more sound and diversified economy and a more stable population.Your argument almost parallels what happened with the dot-com bubble. That somehow because we are in a new age, old tenants of sound business practice no longer apply. Which is not only not true, but everytime we as a country have drastically deviated from our founding principles, we've gotten ourselves into pretty deep shit as a result.[Edited on December 27, 2007 at 1:23 PM. Reason : .]
12/27/2007 1:21:10 PM
12/27/2007 1:30:48 PM
Well in the current system, the economically viable states support a standard of services in less economically viable states.In your system said states would fend for themselves and they'd have to drastically rollback state government provided services. Population and wealth aren't in linear proportion. Yes, more population supports more public money, but in reality it supports a lot more public money.Compare the fiscal budgets of California and North Dakota, for instance.Federal funding, in theory, distributes money in a way to maintain a national standard of sorts. We could argue and nitpick how effectively (or not effectively) it does that but returning to a more primitive form of government is not going to make poverty and the social issues associated with it go away, its simple going to remove any tools we have to deal with it at a national level.Now, you could argue that States fending for themselves is an ideal situation as successful models would be duplicated, but economically speaking those states would then be competing not only with other states, but other nations that have absolutely no trouble using central governments to dictate their own policies. The global economy is too complicated to make State vs Federal arguments on economic terms.Social issues such as abortion, on the other hand, maybe.
12/27/2007 2:14:00 PM
12/27/2007 2:32:17 PM
12/27/2007 2:57:00 PM
12/27/2007 9:01:11 PM
so, then, what about budget intake? Is that fairly even? If so, then it stands to reason that, you know, the states are getting fucked by a middle-man in there somewhere...Moreover, looking at it "by state" is deceptive for the purposes of population. If bumfuck nowhere is getting a bridge to nowhere, I'd hardly call that a "plus" for big government
12/27/2007 9:04:04 PM
You can be as bitter as you want to be about government but don't for one second fool yourself into thinking the common man has a prayer under a libertarian system.
12/27/2007 9:09:36 PM
So then, how did we get our current system, exactly? The gentle benevolence of the elite? Blind luck? Do please, enlighten us ignorant peasants as to how we managed not to regress into a permanent feudal state despite far less government 100 years ago. Or how we even managed to establish the status quo, as, according to you, the elite would control everything without it.
12/27/2007 9:14:46 PM
EasyWe had this same fucking argument a hundred and twenty odd years ago.States rights faggots lost.Empire was born.WWIWWII + influx of jewsgrats, you now live in the richest nation on the planet.in a nut shell.
12/27/2007 9:20:09 PM
Somehow I'm inclined to believe you're oversimplifying a bit.
12/27/2007 9:24:52 PM
A few things may have happened in addition but I mean.
12/27/2007 9:25:51 PM
actually, the "States rights faggots" didn't lose. They had the anti-States rights faggots beat the shit out of them and them force them to accept it. There is a distinct difference.
12/27/2007 9:27:05 PM
^^ I mean that even by your own "nutshell" history, you're overselling your whole, "Under libertopia, the common man doesn't have a chance" meme. Obviously, they had a little more influence into policy than you're conceding is otherwise possible if we got from point A (then) to point B (now).
12/27/2007 9:30:03 PM
How exactly am I overselling 'libertopia' (what the hell does this even mean?)
12/27/2007 9:48:17 PM
No, you're overselling the notion that under the libertarian utopia ("libertopia") the common man wouldn't stand a chance. Obviously, we had a lot less government 100 years ago, and even given the chronology you lay out, it would seem that your assertion that, "the common man wouldn't have a prayer" is an overstatement.
12/27/2007 9:52:13 PM
SandSanta: from your own sourcehttp://www.taxfoundation.org/taxdata/show/287.htmlFederal spending per capita. You'll notice that the least populated and wealthiest states are all in the top ten. And that the states with the lowest income, most poverty stricken regions (notably, the ones I pointed out) are all FAR down the list.Yes these states get more money than they pay in, No its still not even close to proportional to the rich states. So yes it's still a fucking vaccuum effect. Tell me how many years you've spent in MS, Lousiana and Alabama?HAHAHAHAH GOD I LOVE WHEN YOU TALK OUT OF YOUR ASS.
12/27/2007 9:56:10 PM
^^^Well, you're acting as if Ron Paul somehow gets elected, he'd actually singlehandedly turn the US into some sort of socio-economic free-for-all nation. What will likely happen and what needs to happen is that the unchecked growth in the federal government takes a few steps in the opposite direction.[Edited on December 27, 2007 at 9:56 PM. Reason : sddf]
12/27/2007 9:56:23 PM
12/27/2007 10:00:26 PM
^^Exactly Bobby, exactly. Its not that anything will change or reverse. It's that things will slow down their expansion and come into a little more balance.
12/27/2007 10:04:28 PM
12/27/2007 10:19:49 PM
dude, you apparently still dont comprehend that its the PER CAPITA dollar that matters, not the total state expenditure. Which is why the data I pointed to does matter.You have poor states with a LOT of people in them. By your theory, the poor states should be getting more money PER INDIVIDUAL since they are the ones that need help, but instead the wealthier states get more tax dollar spent on them per person.Your argument is equivalent to saying that China is the best country in the world because they have the highest (insert numerical value here). Completely ignoring the fact that the have a billion citizens.Also, I've never voted republican before, I've never supported the reagan ideal of trickle down economics, and I never supported the current administration. I think a large majority of the Ron Paul supporters would say the same.And the entire point of this is, even IF your argument was correct (which its not), then we should be seeing the poor states rise out of the slums and become more balanced with the rest of the nation. But instead they fall further and further behind. Rich get richer, poor get poorer.[Edited on December 27, 2007 at 10:48 PM. Reason : .]
12/27/2007 10:45:53 PM
I would make an exception for Alaska b.c you would have to pay me to live there also.
12/27/2007 10:50:54 PM
12/27/2007 11:01:06 PM
That only makes my point even more validLook at the charts for the sales tax collections by state (there is no correlation, some of the poorest states pay the most per capita, some of the richest pay the least)Or the ones for gross tax collections (poorest states have the least obviously, but its a FAR greater disparity than the federal funding gap)http://www.taxfoundation.org/taxdata/show/279.htmlSame for income tax, property tax and most of the other state taxes. Based on that, the poor states should be recieving far more federal aid to "balance out". But its not even close.So my point still stands. All the federal aid in the world hasn't helped these states raise themselves out of poverty. If anything, they have depressed the ability of people to bring themselves out of poverty.Try getting a bank loan for a small business in California, New York, Mississippi and Alabama. You will see light years difference. The interest rates in the latter two states will be considerably higher, the chances of even getting approved will be MUCH lower, and the startup failure rate is significantly higher. One of the best ways to promote more business risk is to lessen federal aid and promote an open market.[Edited on December 27, 2007 at 11:22 PM. Reason : .]
12/27/2007 11:18:32 PM
12/27/2007 11:39:19 PM
12/28/2007 12:29:19 AM
I held an internship (data entry bs, but still good conversations loan officers), and had an Aunt that worked for CitiGroup International branch in Turkey that dealt with VC type high risk loans for not just rural, but third world development. First and foremost, arguing with data from small towns and rural regions vs large, established markets on face value is silly. Of course its easier to get loans in a bigger city and as a result more loans are handed out. However, if I can come up with a solid business case for a Coffee shop in Elizabeth City, I'd have as much chance of getting a loan for it as I would a Coffee shop in Charlotte - key phrase being solid business case. There's no extra form that needs to be stamped by five different people. In fact, there are loans geared specifically for starting businesses in rural areas as well as special considerations that maybe granted by local and state government. We can't argue the fine points of these types of loans as it differs from region to region based on a wide variety of factors. All I can say is that its a lot easier to get a loan today then it was ten years ago, regardless of location and the money is there provided you can guarantee a ROI.
12/28/2007 1:28:01 AM
anybody see Paul's reaction to Bhutto's death? I can't watch it now, but it seems to be creating quite the stir. Objective summary anyone?
12/28/2007 10:43:20 AM
"...we've been supporting the Musharraf government, and hes a military dictator who overthrew an elected government. We just gave him 10 billion dollars over the last 7 years - hes only supported by 8% of the people and that does annoy some people. And theres so many factions over there - theres the bhutto faction, musharraf faction etc- and it just gives incentives for people to resort to violence and im opposed to that. We dont need to be further involved over there, we shouldnt have been supporting this military dictator anyway..."i typed that from the cnn video. its a fade in/fade out type audio so thats all they have posted.
12/28/2007 10:52:00 AM
huh, alot of people seem to be really twisting his words....like always i suppose
12/28/2007 11:22:59 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJm8XNIjf4kRon Paul on CNN's Situation Room talking about Bhutto.
12/28/2007 11:33:35 AM
Ron Paul's speech sounded 1000x more intelligent and more thoughtful then President Bush's standard"the terrorists that blew up the prime minister woman is evil and wants to destroy democracy and freedom in Pakistan. USA #1"
12/28/2007 12:08:31 PM
I cringed yesterday when I heard a Pakistani guy say that the elections had to go on or else "the terrorists would win"
12/28/2007 12:21:18 PM
funny thing is the US brokered a deal to get Bhutto back into pakistan only to create the illusion that they had a working democracy.....they were still backing musharev (sp?) to win the election. This puts quite a damper on that...the US positions on these matters are comical. Musharev took power in a coup and runs a democracy only in name.and what about Saudi Arabia? Some of the worst human rights violations take place there, they don't have anything near a democracy, but Bush was hesitant to even criticize the jailing of the woman who got raped....Why? because they play nice with the US. The gov could care less if any given country is a democracy, as long as they cooperate with us. they just use the democracy thing as a basis for anything they want to do. The whole thing is a joke really.[Edited on December 28, 2007 at 1:04 PM. Reason : .]
12/28/2007 1:03:55 PM
the man has the worst negative rating of any of them....like 75% of his own party view him in a negative light...damn...
12/30/2007 7:15:39 PM
And yet, plenty of non-Republicans seem to love the guy. Hell, maybe he's doing something right...
12/30/2007 8:47:39 PM
12/30/2007 11:12:07 PM
Hey lookIsolationismYou'd think after two world wars we'd stop talking about it.BUT THATS NOT THE REASON THOSE WARS STARTEDright right.Just about how we should return to the gold standard as well, eh?
12/31/2007 12:07:36 PM
^What are you even talking about, now?
12/31/2007 12:11:00 PM