^Thank God (not literally) the founders of this country actually kept in mind the idea of human selfishness acting against other human selfishness to produce a moderately successful system... Too bad though that our modern government ignores the majority of the principles this country was founded on.
10/1/2008 8:52:16 PM
This crisis resulted from our corrupt political system's influence on greedy big business and banks, which in turn panders to greedy American consumers with insufficient funds. I agree that Americans are suffering from a backwards philosophy that teaches material wealth is the ticket to happiness and success, but the American people will not change this outlook with the drop of a hat. After all, all people want to believe in themselves, their dreams, their ability to chase them, and their hope of catching them if they work hard enough. That hopeful idea is what America has always aspired too, and that idea represented our country's international identity not so long ago. Our current challenge is to accept the fact that our beloved path in the world has indeed wavered. This financial crisis isn't just about money, this crisis will show the strength and resolve of the most famous freedom-loving people on earth. If any nation in the world could recover, and recover quickly, it would be the United States of America. This nation was founded on the dream that all people have the right to be happy and reach for the stars, but that happy dream is slowly becoming a dark nightmare. This is just the beginning of things to come, and we need to put our best foot forward right now. We must reject any bailout bill that would put the majority of Americans at risk without reward. The true test of the greatness of any person or any nation is the ability to stand back up after getting knocked down. Barack Obama says that "we cannot fail" and he need not worry, because we won't fail to recognize the magnitude of this decision. This bailout will either meet the demands of the people, or it will go absolutely nowhere fast.[Edited on October 1, 2008 at 9:09 PM. Reason : -]
10/1/2008 8:58:31 PM
[Edited on October 1, 2008 at 9:17 PM. Reason : .]
10/1/2008 9:17:38 PM
Fucking traitors just voted for it.
10/1/2008 9:20:17 PM
i'm not really in a state of shock
10/1/2008 9:22:17 PM
I'll post the same thing here as I did in chitchat...If someone can read the following statement and still support the bailout, I consider them to be certifiably insane:
10/1/2008 9:25:15 PM
Nor am I (they haven't passed it yet, but it will be shortly). Like I said before, it's much of an opportunity at a power grab for the government for them to pass it up. Oddly we're now counting on the House to be the rational ones.
10/1/2008 9:26:29 PM
"and the american people via congress are now responsible for bailing out the banks""700 is not the real number...it may be more...it may be less"
10/1/2008 9:26:48 PM
10/1/2008 9:30:59 PM
haha i'm just the messenger! turn on the tv. any channel. cnbc is what i was quoting. now i'm perusing (not 100% the right word but i wanted to use it) all of my political networks to see whats what. i love getting the full scope. and by full scope, i mean, ofcourse, the full scope of bullshit.
10/1/2008 9:32:43 PM
10/1/2008 11:05:31 PM
^ easy solution: don't have anyi'm seriously considering that option because I fear what this country will be like in the 2nd half of this century.
10/1/2008 11:22:23 PM
That revolution idea is starting to sound pretty enticing.[Edited on October 1, 2008 at 11:37 PM. Reason : rewording]
10/1/2008 11:35:12 PM
they're already preparing for that
10/1/2008 11:37:26 PM
Revolution has been a consistently good idea since before this country's founding.Don't y'all act as if everything has suddenly gone to shit.
10/1/2008 11:44:33 PM
10/1/2008 11:46:25 PM
10/1/2008 11:49:01 PM
Anybody ever read A Canticle for Leibowitz? That's sort of the future I envision, but I'm a pessimist by nature.
10/1/2008 11:51:31 PM
^^ true, but if we switched to a mostly libertarianism system, that wouldn't guarantee things get better either. In the long run, it would even be the worst system to go with.[Edited on October 1, 2008 at 11:51 PM. Reason : ]
10/1/2008 11:51:40 PM
10/1/2008 11:54:01 PM
Yeah, I don't think a truly libertarian political and economic system would be the worst in the long run, quite the opposite actually.
10/1/2008 11:55:42 PM
10/1/2008 11:58:42 PM
The primitivists want to smash my laptop with a rock. The state capitalists want confiscate it because I duplicate bits. How do libertarians weigh in on this important issue?
10/1/2008 11:59:06 PM
^^^^ obviously I don't mean that...I mean a system that discourages scientific investment is terrible for humanity in the long run. Would libertarians have invested in the Manhattan project, Z-Machine, Iter, or projects like LHC? These are the types of research that will help us leave Earth. If we don't leave Earth, humanity will eventually die out, that'd be a terrible legacy for Libertarianism to leave behind.[Edited on October 1, 2008 at 11:59 PM. Reason : ]
10/1/2008 11:59:39 PM
Would libertarianism discourage research? I'm not so sure. If the right kind of libertarians took power, they'd basically chuck existing intellectual property laws out the window. I can hardly imagine of anything better for science. We then wouldn't have to stare down the barrel of gun to get those precious data packets.
10/2/2008 12:03:04 AM
^ where would funding come from for the projects though? Right now taxes and the gov. funds them, isn't that antithetical in libertarian ideology?And this is probably another reason we'd never go down the L path too far. Once the gov. starts to fund one thing for the good of the people, it's a slippery slop to the gov. we have today. L just isn't stable for the way people are.[Edited on October 2, 2008 at 12:05 AM. Reason : ]
10/2/2008 12:04:32 AM
What makes you think that a libertarian system would deter scientific advancement. Hell, most of the really significant breakthroughs are funded by tons and tons of sources, not just the government. The Hughes foundation is making and funding some of the most important medical research going today. The most famous and generous scientific grants are not government sponsored, they come from places like the MacArthur foundation. If it has significant promise it'll be funded either by a charitable organization or from individuals or corporations with long term vision and money to fund it. You act like there was no R&D before the FDA.
10/2/2008 12:04:59 AM
this bailout saved the economy from depression and will put an ease on the credit crunch so that any american can own a home. Its the American dream. If you have a problem with this bailout then I have already supplied a list of the better places so you can pick one and leave. Also note that all the better places have much bigger governments than ours...
10/2/2008 12:06:24 AM
10/2/2008 12:09:33 AM
10/2/2008 12:11:12 AM
Meh, Celera was beating the HGP to the punch for quite some time. It happens. Large Hadron Collider is a pretty special case.
10/2/2008 12:11:26 AM
Y'all know I'll be donating to the Singularity Institute and such if ever get money. But then, I'm a nut.For lulz, here's Cato's take on the matter:http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=6168
10/2/2008 12:14:47 AM
Government has a role in funding research for sure. I'm pretty small government, but I see only benefits from funding scientific research. Honestly, what is the percentage of the federal budget spent on this? I'm pretty sure it is fairly minuscule.
10/2/2008 12:18:45 AM
I never post in the soap box because Im just not that smart as far as politics go.What I do know about simple math is this:According to the 2000 Census, there are around 150 million people in the workforce (age 16 and up). Our so called representatives just asked every single working American to write a $6000 check to companies that were out to fuck them in the first place.Feel free to pick this apart if my logic is flawed.
10/2/2008 12:19:03 AM
^^^^^http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/infbrief/nsf08320/30 billion of the 49 billion spent in the US came from the government.The vast majority of the rest of private funding went to biological research (medicine, IOW).Which means if you assume industry has the same relative bend, you're not going to find much private investment in theoretical physics.^^ True, but as I said earlier...
10/2/2008 12:21:28 AM
I love the Cato Institute.
10/2/2008 12:23:46 AM
10/2/2008 12:27:02 AM
^yeah... but...http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/infbrief/nsf08317Of the type of research i was describe, the gov. outspends private industry by almost 4:1. For application and development though, private industry outspends by 4:1, and is 95% of all private industry expenditures. It's clear they'd rather let tax payers fund the potentially fruitless endeavors, while private industry reaps the $$$ benefit in the applications and development (not that this is a bad thing... the point is they are hesitant on funding what might just be pipe dreams).
10/2/2008 12:57:21 AM
10/2/2008 1:11:13 AM
^^ Well, it's definitely possible a world with libertarian governments would eschew projects such as the LHC. That'd make me sad, but I don't know if it'd be the worst of all possible outcomes. The pipe dreams would likely eventually become worth funding, as corporate research advanced science overall. We'd definitely get off this rock. Folks are already trying to commercialize space.All this talk makes me think of Gibson's all-powerful corporations. I don't believe I want that future. Let's skip the vat-grown ninja assassins.
10/2/2008 1:24:26 AM
10/2/2008 12:43:36 PM
10/2/2008 12:45:41 PM
10/2/2008 1:52:06 PM
2:1The House passes this even crappier bill...
10/2/2008 2:05:30 PM
^I tell ya...the speed with which politicians on both sides are pushing passage and the extra crap they are tacking onto the original piece of garbage is making this whole thing stink to high heaven.
10/2/2008 5:39:36 PM
some of the extra shat that got addedhttp://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/10/02/bailout.pork/index.htmlsome of it is so off the wall, like ending excise taxes for VI and Puerto Rico WTF???its gonna take a brick through congress's window before they get the message.
10/2/2008 8:18:33 PM
I need a Ron Paul fix....
10/2/2008 8:22:13 PM
From the Motley Fool...http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2008/10/02/dear-wall-street-were-watching-you.aspx
10/3/2008 11:02:34 AM
10/3/2008 12:33:11 PM
Voting now,http://www.cnn.com/video/live/live.html?stream=stream3 .Looks like it'll pass so far, 104-40.
10/3/2008 1:13:13 PM