9/20/2008 9:37:51 PM
9/20/2008 11:55:41 PM
Appearently you didn't look at the graphs that well. It was millitary spending during the Reagan/Bush era that drove the deficit up, not Carter. Even LBJs "great society" (the source of the Democratic reputation for handouts) didn't drive up deficits that much. It took a fiscal conservative, with a strong belief in less government, to do that. So, "The Big Lie" continues - the one that says that Democrats are big spenders, and the Republicans are fiscally conservative, and for less government. The problem is that data for the last 50 years just doesn't bear that out. In the Reagan era there was a theory that he was driving up the deficit on purpose so that liberals would no longer have the option of overspending. Reagan created both an enduring ideology, and an enduring debt. Overall, the graphs speak for themselves:http://zfacts.com/p/318.htmlhttp://www.die.net/musings/national_debt/[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 12:55 AM. Reason : *~<]Bo]
9/21/2008 12:54:42 AM
name one government program/regulation that works effectively... and gohopefully after our taxes go up to support bail outs, we can get more tax rebates to bail the taxpayers out as well[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 8:45 AM. Reason : awesome]
9/21/2008 8:40:53 AM
^^ you don't get it, do you? I wasn't saying Carter spent a bunch. I was saying Carter's policies FUCKED OUR ECONOMY, which reduced tax incomes. durrr. what a fucking tool.
9/21/2008 7:52:13 PM
^Hey, you can call names all you want, at least I post some data to back up what I say ... You talk a lot, but don't back up shit.
9/21/2008 9:17:33 PM
So I'm just wondering if everyone is aware that Bill Clinton's term was when the most deregulation occurred? And to whoever was saying that the problem is that there hasn't been enough govt intervention and it's needed now....and whoever said that I can't possibly be saying that something that happened in the 30s is responsible for the mess today..?? Um...yes. It is. Nevermind Fannie and Freddie, but Social Security, Welfare....all those things are the govt trying to make things 'fair' and look what's it gotten us.
9/22/2008 5:47:37 PM
^ding ding dingcouldn't have said it better myself
9/22/2008 11:24:21 PM
9/22/2008 11:26:39 PM
mytwocents:
9/23/2008 8:02:29 AM
I learned a long time ago that the vast majority of people can't be persuaded to change their opinion on issues like these. I actually find it quite fascinating the way in which fallacies are used in such numbers for such important issues and no one is immune to using this as their method of attempted persuasion. This goes for all sides of every issue and everyone is guilty of it...politicians happen to be among the worst abusers of it but unfortunately most people out there treat their political views like they do their religion and that's a very dangerous thing.I'm not suggesting that anyone take my opinion as gospel but at least my arguments are more sound than others being that they involve actual facts. Clinton really did have the bigger hand in deregulation. That's a fact. Fannie and Freddie were created because back in the day someone thought it was every American's 'right' to own a home along with the right to free speech. I can't see those two being of equal value but clearly FDR did. The government also decided that it is everyone's right to not have to work if your skills or means didn't allow for you to have the job that you felt you deserved.I hear people blaming Bush and his administration for the reason our economy is where it is now and there's no facts. What has President Bush and his administration actually done in the last 8 years that has lead to the state our economy is in now? And it clearly must have been something HUGE because for something to bring our economy to it's knees in that short of amount of time, some major economic decisions must have been made...I'm just asking what those were.]]
9/23/2008 5:05:37 PM
I still dont understand why dems dont love bush. He has been a spending hound and is taking us closer to govt controlled everything... liberal utopia.. whats the problem fellas?
9/23/2008 5:10:59 PM
^ maybe because that's not a "liberal utopia"That's just a characterature of what Liberalism actually means and what Liberals actually want that Conservatives try to use as a weapon
9/23/2008 5:28:29 PM
ok, what is a liberal utopia to you?
9/23/2008 5:42:16 PM
well, to start with - a government that is responsible with tax payers money. Disregarding what they actually do with the money for a moment, we can all agree that no government, conservative or liberal, should play fast and loose with tax dollars, as is happening now. I'll also remind you that "liberal spending programs" are supposed to benefit the population at large, not funnel billions of dollars into selective, supposedly private industry.
9/23/2008 5:47:19 PM
I agree with your first statement. I think its a great goal, but very naive. When its not your money, people tend to be loose with it. That is why a smaller, less power govt is a better answer. imo.However, I feel that many well intentioned programs end up creating dependency and breed worthlessness and lack of responsiblity and waste.I, as a fiscal conservative, feel its morally wrong to take from anyone to give to another without thier consent. I also feel you have to have consequences, not rewards, for bad decisions and bad behavior. I believe in less govt and more freedom. One set of rules for all. Govt isnt the answer for my daily problems, just creates more of them.I see more waste in my business from what has come out of these good programs. Total lack of responsiblity and rewards for doing the wrong thing.
9/23/2008 6:04:17 PM
and that's all fine. sounds good - i don't completely agree with you, but you've spelled out the basics for a fiscal conservative. However, you're being disingenuous, and frankly just an asshole, when you try to suggest that anywhere in the liberal agenda is the iron-fisted nationalization of industries like banking, housing, airlines, and auto manufacturing.
9/23/2008 6:21:25 PM
I didnt mean to imply that at all. Im just saying that libs are for more govt control, less consequences, and bigger govt.. in general. correct?Right now they are trying to throw in 30billion to help american car companies refit thier plants. And what voting block does that help them with?For me agent, this is THE issue. All the other stuff doesnt matter if we cant afford anything. That is why I get so mad at these new spending and entitlements proposed bc its just buying votes now and letting future generations deal with paying for it. They simply dont have the best interests of the country at heart. imo[Edited on September 23, 2008 at 6:36 PM. Reason : .]
9/23/2008 6:33:07 PM
so now "THE" issue is not that we're giving $1 Trillion to the financial sector, but maybe there will be a few billion going to the automakers? No, i don't think the automakers deserve any money any more than the banks do. maybe even less so. The automakers deserve to go under if they can't make their cars competitive with the Asians and Germans. but again, you're being disingenuous to turn this entire clusterfuck into a problem with Democrats trying to funnel some money to certain core constituents, as wrong as that may be
9/23/2008 8:36:35 PM
The government should give us each $2,333.33 instead.
9/23/2008 8:39:27 PM
eyedrb:
9/24/2008 1:16:04 AM
9/24/2008 1:24:00 AM
how cute. you actually think that public education is about education.
9/24/2008 1:25:17 AM
no agent THE issue is spending and the fiscal solvency of this country. The fact that in the middle of a spending orgy of money we dont have... they are adding on more to buy some votes. Its total bs. Raising taxes isnt the answer, that hurts everyday americans. Cutting spending IS the answer. Which will never happen when politicians put thier agenda before the countries.
9/24/2008 9:18:25 AM
^^I suggest you quit attending a public university then.
9/24/2008 10:04:24 AM
university != public education. nice try, though.
9/24/2008 11:34:12 AM
yeah, you're right. The $1500 we paid in tuition each semester completely covered the entire cost of providing the education. Those private schools who charge $25,000 are just pocketing the rest of the money
9/24/2008 11:35:53 AM
tell me. does everyone go to a university? nope. case closed.
9/24/2008 11:37:24 AM
I honestly haven't completely made up my mind on the issue, but I think this op-ed makes a very good point. Someone please dismantle it.http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122212948811465427.html
9/24/2008 1:56:14 PM
exactly. the only "deregulation" that led to this was the push to give loans to people who had no business getting them
9/24/2008 2:01:11 PM
9/24/2008 2:45:17 PM
^ CDS are not securities, but contracts.Also, CDS, themselves, are not at the root of the cause. It is the lack of collateral that AIG provisioned for each one. There is little reason why they should not be able to be in the CDS market provided there are enforced capital requirements for the CDS they enter into.On a side note, it is not deregulation or a lack of regulation that is to blame. On the contrary, it can be said that there is almost too much, albeit ineffectual, regulation. Banks must report to a plethora of regulatory bodies, both state and federal. It is often said that too many regulators often means no one is truly regulating. Compare our system with the U.K.'s single-body regulatory framework (the FSA) and it is clear ours is way too muddied. The NYT article below puts this a little more succinctly....
9/24/2008 4:40:05 PM