^^ Demonstrates pretty convincingly that the Obama hate is much greater than the Bush hate, despite your claims that they are equal.
1/27/2010 10:24:31 AM
^ it's a combination of the bad-ish economy, and modern day politics I think.[Edited on January 27, 2010 at 11:37 AM. Reason : ]
1/27/2010 11:37:17 AM
http://www.wral.com/news/state/story/6903052/
1/28/2010 11:16:17 AM
why are trains getting so much attention.when was the last time anyone rode a train?
1/28/2010 11:45:08 AM
I'm mostly just jealous of train systems in other parts of the world.
1/28/2010 11:53:17 AM
keeping up with the chongses will pull us out of the recession
1/28/2010 12:04:26 PM
no but stimulus spending might (or atleast thats the goal)and spending that money on transportation infrastructure is probably better than what a lot of it has been spent on.[Edited on January 28, 2010 at 12:34 PM. Reason : most importantly its money coming to NC!]
1/28/2010 12:33:22 PM
If there's going to be any kind of stimulus, and there shouldn't be, it has to be spent in some way that is going to increase productivity. Roads that are going to make it substantially easier for suppliers to get goods to retailers, for instance, would be better than some useless public park pork project.
1/28/2010 12:36:59 PM
^I don't necessarily disagree with you, stimulus money is meant for stimulating the economy, but some of our nations greatest parks were built using new deal money back in the 30s
1/28/2010 12:44:41 PM
^^shipping goods via the rail is about 1000 times more efficient from an energy point of view than using a truck on the interstate. An expansion of our current rail system is definitely needed.
1/28/2010 1:11:08 PM
That's probably true, I was just giving an example of something that I would consider "productive." We don't want to be giving out stimulus money for consumption.
1/28/2010 1:21:53 PM
Commercial shipping by rail is a viable market, but passenger rail doesn't work in 99% of America. Our city planning has created far too much sprawl. Passenger rail only works when everything is in walking distance of a station. Unless the stations are already there, cities will develop without consideration for "walking-distance".Also, car-travel is extremely cheap and reliable here.
1/28/2010 1:45:14 PM
^Do you think rail travel between cities (ie. Charlotte to Raleigh to DC) is viable?
1/28/2010 2:02:19 PM
Depends on a lot of things, but I'm pretty sure it wouldn't be financially self-sustaining. Consider the following conditions in Switzerland, a country where rail-travel works well:-Highways are more often two-lane, and roads are narrower so often you will have to pull over to let someone pass.-Traffic congestion is a lot more severe due to less lanes, less parking spaces.-Cars cost about 25% more to purchase and 150% more to operate (adjusted for exchange)-Drivers license standards are much higher. You need expensive training, and permit limitations are harsher.-There are a lot more sidewalks. There are also a lot of bike, scooter, and/or pedestrian-only roads. There are also a lot more pedestrians. Lots of bike storage also.-Citiy growth has incorporated the rail system: businesses are built near stations, or near rail-bus stops (a lot of cities have rail-trolley networks within the city).-Rail passes come in many forms. Most people have year-long passes purchased from the government, heavily subsidized so they're cheap. These passes often incorporate bus travel as well.-There are some very fast inter-metro trains, travelling from 100-160mph-Rail travel is much more rigidly managed and scheduled, so it's more reliable[Edited on January 29, 2010 at 9:32 AM. Reason : .]
1/29/2010 9:30:02 AM
1/29/2010 11:08:00 AM
i heard obama was oil wrestling a crowd of republicans today and did pretty well
1/29/2010 4:16:09 PM
1/29/2010 5:39:36 PM
I know myself and several other people, before the election, discussed how a system like England where the PM has to face frank questioning from the parliament might help us out. It looks like Obama, perhaps because he had little choice, was forced into this type of dialog:
1/29/2010 10:03:06 PM
I just read something about that a couple of hours ago, good on him for doing that. It is precisely the sort of congressional interaction that he was lacking in his first year and which will make him more successful in the future if he keeps it up.Personally, I prefer a deadlocked congress but from a pure politics perspective, this is what he needs to keep up.
1/29/2010 10:43:30 PM
I kind of wonder though if the Republicans are playing him though… by pretending to go along with his conciliatory actions, only to throw it back in his face later on.It’s something I would expect either side to do in this situation, but maybe change is afoot?
1/29/2010 10:47:20 PM
It's not. It's politics. barring a massive alien invasion it will never change and doubtful it will change then. If you don't want to get into arguments, if you don't want to have disagreements, if you don't want to play politics, don't run for office.If a politician of President Obama's caliber is worth his salt, he's playing the GOP just as much as they're playing him.]
1/30/2010 9:21:02 AM
Goldman Sachs was Obama's 2nd biggest donor in 2008 $994,000. Goldman got paid off first in the bail-out. Progressives losing faith in Obama?Video Link:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OaIzrZg5cV8[Edited on January 30, 2010 at 9:31 AM. Reason : .]
1/30/2010 9:31:07 AM
the bank bailout was Bush....
1/30/2010 10:17:51 AM
...but the oversight of the bailout was Obama. and...
1/30/2010 10:30:03 AM
^ look no further than Rahm Emanuel. He’s Obama’s Dick Cheney.
1/30/2010 10:56:47 AM
At the time of the bailouts republicans and democrats were tied for control of the Senate and the Democrats had a sizable majority in the house. Tarp and other congressional actions could not have taken place without wide support from Democrats, including Obama (a senator at the time). As such, I see no problem with blaming Obama for the bailouts, he voted for them, and they would not have passed had he not done so.
1/30/2010 11:06:19 AM
blaming him to support who? Few people really opposed the bailouts, and neither of the mainstream political ideologies were obviously against the bailout.
1/30/2010 12:04:15 PM
1/30/2010 12:28:46 PM
by people, I meant politicians
1/30/2010 12:35:07 PM
OH! I think you can see why I would be confused.
1/30/2010 12:40:12 PM
Obama casually chatting with the commentators during this Duke-Georgetown game is pretty cool, I must admitnothing to do with his credibility but I didn't feel like it deserved its own thread
1/30/2010 2:26:04 PM
1/30/2010 4:33:56 PM
Yes - Clearly, now that the supreme court has lifted campaign contribution limits from corporations, those corporations will now oust the very politicians that bailed them out. This is truth is definitely self-evident and requires no additional explanation to make one whit of sense.
1/30/2010 4:58:38 PM
1/30/2010 7:21:14 PM
1/30/2010 7:25:30 PM
1/30/2010 7:29:36 PM
I don't want to imply that they would vote for those politicians. I was pointing out that without some kind of rationale, there's no ASSUMING they WOULDN'T.
1/30/2010 7:44:11 PM
2/1/2010 12:21:47 AM
^ It is a little funny, and very sad, to watch the Pentagon try to guess what idiotic politicians will ask them to do in the future, then try to plan for it... Silly rabbit, trix are for megalomaniacs.
2/1/2010 9:15:17 AM
2/2/2010 9:01:53 PM
"We need to stand up to the special interests, bring Republicans and Democrats together, and pass the farm bill immediately," Barack Obama http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/archives/2010/02/quote_of_the_decade.php
2/3/2010 6:38:27 PM
^ you realize that quote was from 2007, it seems like?
2/3/2010 10:34:51 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100205/ap_on_bi_ge/us_health_care_overhaulQuite a change in tone, now that he realizes his plan is going to fail.
2/5/2010 2:13:32 PM
2/6/2010 10:12:00 AM
^
2/6/2010 10:38:59 AM
I assume it's the same chart that shows all the people who gave up looking for a job under Bush, too.It's a nebulous number. Seriously-- if you're going to bring it up to support your case, cite it.
2/6/2010 10:22:41 PM
And come to think of it, you didn't read the fine print. This is jobs lost, not unemployment. People giving up their search would only impact the latter.
2/7/2010 10:47:12 AM
^The problem for the democrats is convincing voters in November that any progress in the economy was due to their actions...or did the economy improve in spite of the policies of Obama and his congress.
2/7/2010 10:57:38 AM
I think that'll be easy to do. He passed the stimulus, the economy improved. It's post hoc, but w/e.You all talk about the stimulus as if it were a given that it was a failure. 1) just because it didn't keep unemployment at 8%, doesn't mean it didn't help. 2) The majority of stimulus spending is completely non-controversial. Imagine where we'd be today if the states hadn't been bailed-out, and I don't think anyone's complaining about the billions in tax cuts. The only controversial parts are the infrastructure-type spending, and the only non-extreme-libertarian critique to that is that infrastructure-spending is a slower form of stimulus than many would've liked.[Edited on February 7, 2010 at 11:16 AM. Reason : ]
2/7/2010 11:12:41 AM
2/7/2010 10:28:26 PM