11/20/2009 1:55:28 AM
yeah, right.next you'll be telling us a cat can push a watermelon out of a lake.
11/20/2009 1:57:56 AM
you've seen the picsit can happen [old]
11/20/2009 2:04:04 AM
11/20/2009 9:21:27 AM
^ wasn't that number higher among NC GOP voters?
11/20/2009 9:43:06 AM
The problem is that the GOP has a large number of religious crazies. Those people are screwing over the real conservatives. The religious crazies don't seem to care about fiscal policy, they just want to force as many people to live up to their "moral standards" as possible. Of course, in my view, most Democrats are "crazy" to some degree, as well. They generally have very little regard for economic freedom, which I don't think is a rational position.
11/20/2009 9:59:48 AM
11/20/2009 10:05:00 AM
Actually, yes, the free market did eventually allow for the Great Depression to end. The actions of the Federal Reserve during the 1920s caused the Great Depression. The policies of Hoover and FDR prolonged it. "Busts" are invariably caused by "booms." Booms are caused by easy credit from the Fed. It's easy to blame the free market and capitalism and demand government intervention, but government intervention almost always makes things worse, especially when it starts to effect monetary policy.It doesn't make much of a difference what I think, though. People will continue to believe that government is the solution, and the free market is the problem. And things will continue to get worse. The government refuses to allow the market to correct itself, so we dig ourselves deeper into the hole.
11/20/2009 10:20:57 AM
You're forgetting a little thing called WWII.But the issue isn't one of free market vs. regulation. It's an issue of the excesses of both. Too much of either is a bad thing. It's totally ludicrous to suggest that one doesn't need the other to keep a check. The free market proves over and over that it can't do it on its own.
11/20/2009 10:28:56 AM
What regulation is needed? I agree that some regulation is needed to protect individuals from damages or fraud. That's the purpose of government. I don't think those needed laws and regulations interfere with the free market, though. My point is that lack of regulation is generally not the problem, it's government intervention and monetary policy. Any recession that has happened in the past 100 years or so in the United States has been tied to actions of the Fed.For instance, some blame the current crisis on "lax lending standards." No one thinks to ask why banks were giving out loans in the way that they were. Normally, in a free market, you wouldn't need regulation, because banks wouldn't be giving out loans to people that clearly couldn't pay them back. Low interest rates created the artificial demand, and government guaranteed loans created the moral hazard.
11/20/2009 10:43:34 AM
The vast majority of democrats/liberals/leftists support economic freedom and the free market. But one man's economic freedom is another man's communism. The British and probably most European countries would say they're capitalist, but by our Republicans' standards, they are in lock-step with Mao.Having policies that promote progress is not anti-economic freedom.
11/20/2009 10:44:23 AM
11/20/2009 10:53:54 AM
^ that example is pretty terrible, and doesn't really work.Our universities are some of the best in the world, not terrible and inefficient. Loans result in debt, which is the correcting force for getting loans. If a person doesn't feel the job they'll get with their new degree will help with the loan, they won't take it. And costs would go up regardless, if people were approaching the capacity of colleges, this is a "natural" part of a free market system. As long as they keep producing a worthwhile product, and there are no barriers to increasing the capacity of colleges, this is an acceptable situation.
11/20/2009 11:05:53 AM
11/20/2009 11:22:43 AM
11/20/2009 11:40:14 AM
We're not always going to have a first world society if people don't save. Savings are what pave the way for a prosperous economy. You're looking at the consequences of people not saving: poverty. Your solution is to force other people to support the people that have not saved. While it may be a noble goal, and it may seem like a solution to you, there are a few problems with this approach. For the people still paying into social security, they have less money in their paycheck, which means less money that they can save or invest. It's money that they will most likely never see again. It also provides a disincentive to save. When you have a "safety net" that applies to anyone that pays taxes, people are going to behave like there is a safety net. They're not going to save as much. They're going to be less frugal. They're not going to work as hard. When there's no safety net, and every person knows that they will be completely screwed when they can't work anymore and have no savings, you know what's going to happen? People will save money. People will work hard, maybe two jobs at once, because they understand the value of sacrificing now to ensure security later. The people that don't will have to suffer the consequences, as they always have.I'm not suggesting we cut off the people that have become dependent on government handouts to live. What I am suggesting is that we phase that kind of stuff out. It could be that we have no choice but to cut those people off when we're out of money, and out of ways to finance the debt, but it's hard to say. We need to stop providing incentives for people to live beyond their means. It would be better to do away with the culture of dependency. Of course, I understand this is direct contrast to modern liberal ideology, which seeks to grasp as much power for government as possible. What modern liberals fail to understand is that loss of economic freedom ultimately leads to (and is no different than) loss of other freedoms.
11/20/2009 1:01:28 PM
the unfortunate thing for you is that there is, in fact, ample evidence that 1) not everyone can afford to always save money, especially depending on how many dependents they have and its fucking barbaric to say "well they chose that path, let them find a charity or suffer and learn". 2) often the world's most creative, prosperous, and free democratic societies don't follow your definition of "freedom" and tend to value egalitarianism 3) the ron paul reloveution world sounds pretty awesome sitting behind your computer, but people are not rational robots, the world is too complicated, markets can be irrational, economics is not a science, people are fragile and stupid and not always the enlightened supermen of Reason who can and should all help themselves, and no matter what some austrian aristocrats or sociopaths might have once said to be "absolute truth", as long as people feel a connection to other people, there will be some form of "common good".If there's a threat to freedom in a place like Denmark or The Netherlands or even the UK or the US today, it's crime, poverty, or the clash of cultures, not the inability to create your own currency. But if you want to sit around thinking about how the world is screwed up because we have legal tender and conspiratorial international banking elites are controlling everything through the federal reserve and people are only poor because they're lazy or the government makes them poor through some conspiracy in which they want people to depend on them and not be ubermensch, then knock yourself out.[Edited on November 20, 2009 at 2:06 PM. Reason : ,]
11/20/2009 2:00:23 PM
11/20/2009 2:32:02 PM
^how do you not get tired of trying to defend every micro point? i'm exhausted, just trying to follow along with your logic.i know you get your jollies to breaking down someone's argument point for point, but this:
11/20/2009 3:40:37 PM
I dont beleive the cat picture is real.i'm pretty sure it's a photochop.
11/21/2009 12:35:18 AM
red herring.and I think... strawman.Look at the pixels.
11/21/2009 8:29:24 AM
11/21/2009 10:07:40 AM
11/21/2009 12:19:56 PM
11/21/2009 3:43:25 PM
He's strawmanning the cat's argument. The lake is a red herring.
11/21/2009 5:03:10 PM
11/22/2009 8:42:33 AM
I find it funny that those billboards have a roughly similar appearance to various internet-crazy sites like the Time Cube... it's as though rabid insanity has some universal design format.[Edited on November 22, 2009 at 8:47 AM. Reason : .]
11/22/2009 8:46:31 AM
i like how that billboard is protected by the very same amendment it claims to be in jeopardy.and nothing jazzes up an anti-government sign quite like a soviet hammer and sickle and poorly drawn taliban caricatures.well played mizzourah, well played[Edited on November 22, 2009 at 10:41 AM. Reason : REMEMBER FT. HOOD!!!]
11/22/2009 10:36:20 AM
The democrats did the same thing, don’t you know? Everything is equal.
11/22/2009 11:19:24 AM
I guess she released the book a few years too early. At least back then people only questioned the government's policies instead of openly advocating a violent overthrow. Which one of us is treasonous again, Coulter?
11/22/2009 12:35:09 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mKKKgua7wQk
11/23/2009 12:51:41 PM
^ I think Sarah Palin and a lot of her supporters are morons. That being said, this trick could be done with any major political figure.On another note . . .ATTN: LOG CABIN REPUBLICANS, Your Tie Has Arrived!
11/23/2009 6:37:06 PM
Contrary to what my conservative friends think, I do not have any qualms with voting for a republican next election. As long as pundit idiots like Rush Limbaugh are considered "party leaders", Sarah Palin is actually taken seriously as having potential for 2012, and Dick Cheney's is considered part of the "new republican image"; than I will swallow down my pride/vomit and will vote for Obama in 2012.[Edited on November 23, 2009 at 7:09 PM. Reason : k]
11/23/2009 7:09:27 PM
^ which is exactly what many in the left are banking on. What would be funny though is if Palin ended up winning because everyone votes for her as a joke, like they did for the goofy guy running for prom king.
11/23/2009 7:16:32 PM
That is what they were banking on in 2004 as well and what the GOP was banking on in 2008. We see how that went. People turn out to vote for candidates, not against them.
11/23/2009 7:18:12 PM
^^^You shouldn't make the mistake of voting/non-voting for anyone simply because of their party affiliation. A libertarian, for instance, can only run as a Republican if they plan to get elected. You don't even know who the Republican candidate for 2012 will be, so it's way too early to say that you'll vote for Obama...especially given the damage he inevitably will have done by then.[Edited on November 23, 2009 at 7:19 PM. Reason : ]
11/23/2009 7:18:45 PM
^^ I feel like the GOP kind-of gave up in 2008.McCain’s campaign was pretty poorly run (which I attribute to the fact that McCain relied on the RNC for funding since he chose public financing, and to a large extent didn’t have control of his own message and campaign), and the pick of Palin was your proverbial hail-mary.I really wish McCain could have gotten his shot at presidency. 2000 would have been perfect for him, because he was slightly younger and more spry, but Rove was just too good at his job.[Edited on November 23, 2009 at 7:26 PM. Reason : ]
11/23/2009 7:25:40 PM
11/23/2009 9:09:09 PM
11/24/2009 1:23:47 AM
^ Go for it you would be doing this world a favor
11/24/2009 7:44:13 AM
11/24/2009 3:06:05 PM
Why does that belong in this thread?
11/24/2009 3:16:17 PM
because I think it was posted earlier in the thread (or somewhere) as a possible example of a conservative being nuts and killing a census worker. As it turns out, it was just a nuts census worker who committed suicide.
11/24/2009 3:22:56 PM
Gotcha, didn't catch that earlier post. People just assumed it was some racist tea party group that did it.
11/24/2009 3:24:57 PM
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/top/all/6737570.htmlConservative concedes a 2nd time in NY House race
11/24/2009 5:11:44 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/20091124/pl_ynews/ynews_pl996Republicans considering ideological purity test for candidates
11/25/2009 12:36:46 AM
How are these people so oblivious to how dumb they look?1. WHEREAS REAGAN, WHEREAS REAGAN, WHEREAS JESU--OOPS WE MEAN REAGAN. Jeez. 2. I'm fairly certain Reagan wouldn't have passed this Reagan test. Amnesty, taxes, and the deficit.
11/25/2009 7:38:27 AM
11/27/2009 12:14:07 PM
i guess this can go here.Nine years ago, Mike Huckabee commuted the 95 year prison sentence of Maurice Clemmons, who is being sought as a "person of interest" in the Washington coffeehouse cop killer. He's not considered a suspect at this point though. We'll see.
11/29/2009 11:15:05 PM
If you read the story, his 95 year jail sentence was issued when he was 17, on charges of theft. 95 years for a black 17-year-old for theft. Without knowing the nitty-gritty details of the man's story, I would say he deserved the commutation.The article also indicates he stands accused of child-rape and is considered mentally unbalanced. Hindsight is 20-20.
11/30/2009 12:16:37 AM