9/14/2008 1:39:11 AM
no the prebate is a compromise, aimed at defusing the idea that the poor will pay more than they do. (which is nothing)They are using the poverty line as the reference point. He asked me personally if I felt you can assume what the average american needs to survive. I answered it.
9/14/2008 1:39:36 AM
I'd say that's a fair assertion, then. so, moron, why do you hate equality?
9/14/2008 1:42:36 AM
9/14/2008 1:47:59 AM
Im sorry to turn your thread into a fairtax debate boone. Burro. With the fairtax the incentive will be to work. The more you work, the more you make. If you get a job making 10/hr, well you take home 10/hr. People at all levels would see an instant increase in thier income. Now some hourly jobs look like an alternative to doing nothing. Since american citizens will be the only ones eligible for the prebate, now there is a benefit for becoming a citizen, as opposed to now. Since EVERYONE in this country will be paying into the pot, you instantly double the amount of federal tax payers overnight, which will increase revenues. You no longer tax working or saving, which will give those responsible more wealth and make them less prone to financial disasters and need for govt intervention. Not to mention job growth from teh influx of companies moving INTO the country. And finally equality. One set of rules for all. No longer will politicians fuck with peoples income simply to pander for votes.no moron, I want to take politics out of peoples personal property. Its one thing if a greedy company charges too much. People have a choice not to buy thier product. Its another thing for a politician to promise a group of people someone elses property for votes.. then seize that property against the owners will. Big difference.At least with a fairtax Ive made the decision to spend my money.. not some senator looknig for power.[Edited on September 14, 2008 at 1:56 AM. Reason : .]
9/14/2008 1:50:37 AM
9/14/2008 1:55:22 AM
9/14/2008 2:00:34 AM
Oh noes, Tree disagrees!
9/14/2008 7:28:41 AM
9/14/2008 12:02:48 PM
I'm not sure how you could say "liberals were correct about Iraq" since so many voted for invasion (Clinton? Edwards? Kerry? etc).
9/14/2008 12:27:27 PM
No Democrats that I knew of supported the war.[Edited on September 14, 2008 at 12:32 PM. Reason : that I knew personally.]
9/14/2008 12:32:32 PM
"Nobody I know voted for Nixon!"Seriously, support for the war was - unfortunately - around 70% when we went in. I'm pretty sure Democrats/liberals make up more than 30% of the voting population - ergo, it stands to reason that there was a significant contingent of them cheering this war from the start who bailed once the political winds turned south.But don't take my word for it - let's go to the tapes:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_Resolution_to_Authorize_the_Use_of_United_States_Armed_Forces_Against_Iraq#PassageIn the House... Y N A NVRepublican 215 6 0 2Democratic 81 126 0 1Independent 0 1 0 0TOTALS 296 133 0 3And the Senate: Y N NV Republican 48 1 0Democratic 29 21 0Independent 0 1 0TOTALS 77 23 0Hm - that number for Democrats sure looks a lot higher than "zero", now doesn't it?
9/14/2008 1:31:34 PM
Which TWW liberals were for the war?
9/14/2008 1:55:34 PM
i made a post in January '03 expressing my disapproval of the war, so I could have a record of my feelings before everything turned to shit. .... Then they started purging TWW of posts more than couple years old
9/14/2008 2:17:03 PM
9/14/2008 2:36:17 PM
9/14/2008 2:42:54 PM
9/14/2008 2:49:44 PM
^^So, what, TSB is a parallel world now? The debates in TSB were all indeed hypotheticals that had no bearing on real-world actors and events? The Democrats out in the real world are simply bizzaro-world counterparts of TWW?Besides which, trying to use your ancillary introduction as a post-hoc means of limiting the scope is weaksauce. As is trying to hem in the lines around anyone whose brazen stupidity has caused you to grimace every time you see them post. I doubt you're so charitable to your opponents to grant them the same.
9/14/2008 2:52:44 PM
Alright, if there's a need to get nitpicky, then when did "Democrat" get brought into the discussion?This is about liberals.Unfortunately, many Democrats took a very conservative stance on the Iraq War in anticipation of the 2004 elections. If only they'd listened to the liberals.
9/14/2008 3:01:39 PM
So, what? John Edwards isn't a liberal? John Kerry? (Dozens of others?) Some, surely are not - Joe Lieberman and Hillary Clinton come to mind. But the fact is, plenty of those we'd call "liberals" signed onto this war. (Hell, plenty of liberal pundits signed on as well.)The fact is, there were plenty of chumps of all ideological stripes - and liberals were far from exempt on this one. Sure, plenty of liberals denounced this as a boondoggle from the start - as did plenty of libertarians and even a few conservatives. But the fact is, plenty of liberals signed on to this venture for whatever reason too. So it seems inappropriate to call this one a, "We told you so." I'd call this one a wash.
9/14/2008 3:08:46 PM
REVISIONIST HISTORY!1Really, though. Do you not remember the debates? Do you not remember how partisan even the national debates were, and how the Democrats had to rationalize the crap out of voting to allow the war? How they fed us lines like "I was merely authorizing the possibility of force, not directly authorizing it," and whatnot?
9/14/2008 3:12:16 PM
Such as applying capital and investments to non-incorporated businesses. I don't see why, if corporate taxes are so astronomical, investers don't just move their money into other types of ownership.
9/14/2008 3:13:52 PM
9/14/2008 3:17:58 PM
9/14/2008 3:21:37 PM
I was thinking it was a liability issue; I just wasn't sure if there were other aspects to it as well.As for switching ownership, I was thinking there were other more ethical options; however, I guess not, if trying to avoid both liability and taxes.
9/14/2008 3:28:39 PM
wow, Boone is backpedaling like a French army battalion in this thread
9/14/2008 8:04:53 PM
9/14/2008 8:08:21 PM
Let me add a few. Here are the most obvious points:5. Eugenics: duh, our country has been overrun by the feeble-minded6. Jimmy Carter: great president7. Sea Level: worldwide, its been falling since June. also, B.O. started healing the planet then8. Surge in Iraq: not reducing violence at allI don't need to back up these claims with any evidence, because the truth is so painfully evident. If you disagree, you must have been home schooled by your inbred family from West Virginia.
9/15/2008 1:17:57 PM
IN SOVIET RUSSIA, LIBERALS WERE FOR THE WARI don't even know where to begin addressing this.
9/15/2008 4:04:54 PM
9/15/2008 4:41:13 PM
JUST THROW THE FLAG INTO THE FIREPLACE
9/15/2008 4:44:16 PM
9/15/2008 6:46:32 PM
9/16/2008 8:56:15 AM
http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/undergod/2008/09/church_of_england_apologizes_t.htmlSorry, Darwin!Oh, and #Whatever: CAFE standards.
9/17/2008 4:05:09 PM
9/17/2008 4:08:16 PM
Option #1 is reactive. Option #2 isn't on the table.
9/17/2008 4:10:09 PM
And how exactly are CAFE standards, then? Last I recall, the people howling most about them have been... auto-workers unions! Not exactly conservative enclaves, last I checked. Ask any mainstream economist which policy is more effective at reducing demand - CAFE standards or a fuel tax - and it's not even going to be a debate. You're going to see almost near-consensus on the latter.So, what - liberals "told us so" at policies of marginal effectiveness, compared to simple laws of supply and demand?[Edited on September 17, 2008 at 4:15 PM. Reason : .]
9/17/2008 4:14:29 PM
CAFE is absolutely on the table.It's already in effect, and it was just recently raised.Meanwhile, if raising the gas tax isn't political suicide, then nothing is.
9/17/2008 4:17:13 PM
So, let's go back to the scoreboard.We've planned on slowly ratcheting up CAFE standards over the next decade or two.Meanwhile, fuel prices have caused dramatic changes in car-purchase and car-driving behavior over the course of a few years.Yeah. You really told us so there. It's a policy of marginal effectiveness at best and incomprehensibly inefficient compared to more direct options, but it passed, so you told us so. Ignore the fact that the market is already working on the problem far more effectively than CAFE ever will.Next up: Liberals told us that the sun rises and the earth is round.
9/17/2008 4:21:54 PM
CAFE is the biggest crock of shit ever. WTG California douches
9/17/2008 4:26:30 PM
What about pay-per-mile auto insurance?
9/17/2008 4:33:27 PM
9/17/2008 5:26:09 PM
9/18/2008 8:33:35 AM
They never taught me about jokes in school. (I'm from WV)
9/18/2008 9:15:25 AM
DrSteveChaos:
9/18/2008 9:23:54 AM
9/18/2008 9:25:43 AM
9/18/2008 10:30:56 AM
^ We will just have to disagree. I don't consider the state we are currently in a "successful" energy, or national security, or economic policy.Republican presidents have turned a blind eye to this problem for 30 years, even encouraging consumption through SUV fuel exemptions. Rather than reduce dependance of foreign oil they, and their partners in business, promoted consumption as "good for business" - even in the face of the national security risks. Even their strategy for easing those national security risks revolved around consumption - "We'll buy oil, and stick it in a hole in the ground until we are desperate for it." Would a little effort on the demand side have hurt? Sometimes I don't think the Republicans can see past their nose, or farther than the next income statement anyway."The problem with vision is that it takes thirty years to figure out who's got it."
9/18/2008 1:09:17 PM
9/18/2008 1:21:10 PM
you notice the dems dont talk about FISA much...lol
9/18/2008 11:18:28 PM