10/20/2008 11:26:46 PM
I might be wrong, but I think the trend in many European countries, especially those whose economies are struggling, is to lower taxes on businesses in order to stimulate economic activity.
10/20/2008 11:27:21 PM
^^^ There are multiple graphs at the link i posted, which are you referring to?
10/20/2008 11:27:34 PM
10/20/2008 11:42:22 PM
10/21/2008 12:57:40 AM
I think I'm starting to understand how things work.We all share the basic idea that America should be the land of opportunity. The argument could be made that "land of opportunity" is nothing more than an advertising slogan created to lure cheap labor across the Atlantic many years ago. But anyway, regardless of how unrealistic the "opportunity" bit is, it's still an integral part of our national identity. And we truly want opportunity for all. However, the doors of opportunity slam shut in the face of certain realities--like poverty.In an effort to alleviate poverty and promote opportunity, we've taken action in a number of directions. We give incentives to big businesses in the hopes of creating jobs. We provide public education. We give some folks healthcare. We distribute foodstamps. We give money directly to folks who need it. And on and on...Our efforts are not in vain. Conditions have improved. However, we still debate on how high or low the basic standard of living should be, whether or not our efforts are effectively spreading opportunity, and whether or not our efforts are maximized in terms of efficiency.For example, foodstamps are great, but they don't go very far when they're used to buy nutritionless crap and when they're used at stores owned by hardcore opportunists. Public education is great, but it struggles if you're not going to fund it: some teachers are great, but many are not and we could weed them out if the job entailed more than $30,000/year. Welfare checks are good, but they're often mismanaged, just like the tax cuts and incentives to businesses don't seem to do the trick.So it's all tied up in the government where party politics, abstract theory, and individual egos twist everything into an impotent mess. And the motivation to agree on what to do and how to do it isn't particularly high cause the folks who suffer (the children) don't have the vote.(To be clear, the wealthy are getting wealthier on programs intended to help the poor. I mean, we're spending a whole lot of money and the results don't reconcile...sure, there are inefficiencies...but come on...how many times are we gonna incentivize a manufacturing plant and then get all confused when the jobs don't pay shit and dry up altogether after the incentive period ends?)[Edited on October 21, 2008 at 2:03 AM. Reason : sss]
10/21/2008 1:57:59 AM
10/21/2008 9:25:55 AM
10/21/2008 10:26:15 AM
A lot of the problems with our public education system occured when the Federal gov't started meddling around.
10/21/2008 11:35:47 AM
I feel the same way with other industries.. esp healthcare. So MORE govt isnt the answer, imo.
10/21/2008 11:41:49 AM
^^ How should the government retreat from the Public Education systems in the states?Just curious.
10/21/2008 11:58:51 AM
The hilarity inherent here is that Healthcare costs pales in comparison to Congressional earmarks for a ton of other things. You guys rant and rail against free healthcare, a program I view as being for the national good, yet where are the threads against farm subsidies, business subsidies, billion dollar highway projects, and 'defense' spending on two wars that have no real end?This country is far more socialist then you think, yet you rant and rave against the one socialist program thats actually useful. I'm personally for reducing government as much as possible and increasing state legislative power to handle local economic and social issues rather then trying to find a Federal solution to everything. I actually don't even want the Federal government to provide any type of welfare and social security- welfare being better handled by state and local governments as a social net, and personal retirement better being handled by the general populace (provided that they are given education on how to do so).The only thing I personally see as being necessary is healthcare specifically because employer provided healthcare unnecessarily burdens corporations and ultimately reduces my paycheck more then if government provided healthcare. Which, by the way, wouldn't require more taxes if all the other garbage programs were cut.Don't look for either candidate addressing any of this though.[Edited on October 21, 2008 at 12:04 PM. Reason : >.<]
10/21/2008 12:04:03 PM
I agree with alot of what you said santa. But i disagree again with healthcare being "free". Its ridiculous on one acccount and a recipe for disaster on another.A direct buyer-seller market is the answer to healthcare. Instead you have thirdparty currently which leads to three main problems, which will only worsen with furthering the reach of govt.1. Fraud, leading to financial waste2. Lack of choice and control, leading to frustration3. Lack of personal responsiblity, leading to bad healthI believe most of this is solved if we can get back to a buyer-seller market. In order to do so we have to shift responsiblity back to individuals, which is bucking the trend the nation seems to be moving in. Instead we have a system where individuals have little information on the cost or quality of thier healthcare, have no financial incentives for wise consumption, and have thier decisions made for them.Newt gingrich, once said that the decision in 1943 to go to a third party system turned health care into a rental car. THe problem is, almost no one washed a rental car. And almost no one feels personally responsible for their own health in our current system.
10/21/2008 12:20:25 PM
i'm a socio-capitalistbut if i had to choose between the two, i'd say socialist
10/21/2008 12:21:24 PM
10/21/2008 12:24:04 PM
hitler posed no immediate threat to the united states, but that fucking war monger FDR got involved
10/21/2008 12:29:04 PM
^Are you comparing the War in Iraq to WWII?
10/21/2008 12:43:53 PM
10/21/2008 12:44:56 PM
^like Iran?
10/21/2008 12:47:36 PM
10/21/2008 1:16:30 PM
^^Yes, I get that. And I agree that money doesn't fix everything. Of all the money spent on education, it seems very little makes it into the hands of our teachers. Are you willing to agree that we don't pay our teachers enough?
10/21/2008 1:30:21 PM
10/21/2008 1:31:03 PM
brid, I agree SOME arent paid enough, some are overpaid. I really like the idea of vouchers, I think that opens up competition in schools will improve pay and get results in the classroom.
10/21/2008 1:36:41 PM
10/21/2008 1:40:06 PM
Education needs to seriously handled by States as it currently is.I don't know what you'd do about shitty states though. I suppose move?
10/21/2008 4:53:50 PM
moving is exactly what people would do, and it's what they should do. Just as we stop buying DVD players from a company that makes a shitty player, people would stop living in states with shitty education systems. The state would then either devolve or fix the problem in order to attract residents and businesses
10/21/2008 5:48:46 PM
10/21/2008 5:49:04 PM
you guys realize the govt spends more in healthcare than defense.
10/21/2008 6:18:56 PM
I didn't realize that. Mainly because it isn't true.It might have been true 5 years ago, but not anymore. Thanks, W.http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/
10/21/2008 6:24:13 PM
from your link, unless im reading it wrong.Healthcare 958.2 BDefense 806 B
10/21/2008 6:38:17 PM
10/21/2008 6:44:34 PM
well, it depends on which column you are looking at. The total column, yes, healthcare is more. Federal, however, spends more on defense.
10/21/2008 6:45:04 PM
10/21/2008 6:45:50 PM
well, he is...
10/21/2008 6:48:00 PM
0[Edited on October 21, 2008 at 6:52 PM. Reason : .]
10/21/2008 6:52:06 PM
10/21/2008 8:24:46 PM
10/21/2008 8:58:17 PM
nice rebuttal. Yes, let's have one monolithic, bureaucratic educational system that fails to meet anyone's needs and that has no competition to make it better, as opposed to having 50 systems, which though they may be different, serve the needs of their people far better and actually provide a system to determine which practices are best. Moreover, let's not have a system that encourages improvement. Good work
10/21/2008 9:02:24 PM
Didn't expect you to see it.
10/21/2008 9:15:11 PM
I think the option to buy a different DVD player and to pack up and move the entire family to a different state are rather two different things. Don't you agree?
10/21/2008 9:58:28 PM
10/21/2008 10:03:46 PM
yes. it grows because there is no alternative.and no, buying a DVD player is not entirely different than packing and moving to an area where your children might actually succeed. if anything, people's decisions on where to live might be more heavily influenced by the schools.
10/21/2008 10:10:04 PM
10/21/2008 11:04:56 PM
With these charges of socialism flying, Jon Stewart dug up footage of McCain saying that wealthy people should pay higher taxes because they can afford them. This was at a town hall setting in response to an audience member asking in frustration why her brother, a doctor, should have to pay higher taxes. Lol.
10/21/2008 11:14:26 PM
10/22/2008 5:16:00 AM
10/22/2008 7:22:21 AM
10/22/2008 11:50:18 AM
^^ Education systems vary fairly drastically state-by-state, and if your mechanism of competition is that parents will move their students, this can happen too (although most people don't have the resources and/or ability to just move like you people seem to think).
10/22/2008 11:55:52 AM
Schools vary by district within a city, even. People with the means to do so (and I emphasize this point specifically) routinely will choose their neighborhood based upon the quality of the schools.So it's not simply some myth that parents don't regularly choose where to live based upon the education system - generally, any parent with the means to do so already does.Thus, the objection is not whether this happens, but of what happens to those who lack the means of doing so (i.e., lower-income families).
10/22/2008 12:07:13 PM
^ Finally somebody gets it.aaronburro, pull out a pad and take notes.
10/22/2008 12:37:04 PM