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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Au revoir, Paul Martin!
Friday, January 27, 2006 4:02 PM
SKYWALKEN
Friday, January 27, 2006 6:02 PM
DREAMTROVE
Friday, January 27, 2006 7:38 PM
KHYRON
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Hmm. I was sort of indifferent to Martin until he started openly opposing the United States. I guess I'm glad to see that that position still merits and instant lose in Canada.
Friday, January 27, 2006 7:51 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Hopefully this new guy will be a better ally to the US.
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Hey, with an ally like Canada, a country with arguably the world's largest deposits of oil, perhaps we can forget this whole middle east thing.
Friday, January 27, 2006 8:10 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Skywalken: ... as a conservative American I just want to add that this handgun-owning, private health insurance-loving, Kyoto Protocol-opposing, social welfare-hating, capitalist is damn happy to see Martin and the Grits fall down to opposition status.
Friday, January 27, 2006 8:26 PM
GINOBIFFARONI
Friday, January 27, 2006 9:10 PM
Friday, January 27, 2006 9:21 PM
Friday, January 27, 2006 9:42 PM
Quote:Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni: if he steps in on the Canada health act in any major way, or abortion, or many other similar issues.....
Quote:Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni: the Bloc, the NDP, and the Liberals will force an election...
Quote:Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni: ...and if the Liberals oust the Martinites and put forward a decent leader free of scandal, we could have a complete reversal.
Friday, January 27, 2006 10:14 PM
Saturday, January 28, 2006 3:30 AM
Quote: Yeah he probably will be, although he won't take shit from the US either.
Quote:You and I have two things in common: we're both alive, and we both like Firefly.
Quote:If he trys to join the US on missile defence,
Saturday, January 28, 2006 4:08 AM
FLETCH2
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Sure, opposition to the war is a positive position. An American presidential candidate, say John Kerry, could have done very well by opposing the war. Why he didn't can only be speculated on, I suspect it goes to the democrat parties true stance, and Kerry's being not all that bright. Either that or he was just intentionally throwing the election.
Saturday, January 28, 2006 8:41 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Sure, opposition to the war is a positive position. An American presidential candidate, say John Kerry, could have done very well by opposing the war. Why he didn't can only be speculated on, I suspect it goes to the democrat parties true stance, and Kerry's being not all that bright. Either that or he was just intentionally throwing the election. But, and I know jack about Canadian politics, it seems that Martin went much further than that, going to a full out anti-American stance. While I don't know jack about it, I can see that the liberal slipped 14 points from an 8 lead since '04. In two years that's impressive. It's possible more than one thing is wrong. When I try to think of an American president to lose that much support, I'm coming up all Johnson, but technically he didn't run because he lost the '68 primary. Quote: Yeah he probably will be, although he won't take shit from the US either. Wouldn't expect him to. I'm not the sort who thinks Tony Blair is a great ally. I expect people to look after their own interests. I don't expect to see Canadian troops in Hillary's upcoming invasion of Iran. I think it's a mistake to support America when shes wrong. On oil, the whole Alberta story, they're claiming to have more oil than Saudi Arabia, it was in the news, maybe it's an exaggeration, but if it's true, then when are we dancing with Saudi princess? What's with this hoser Bush and this kerfuffle in the mideast, eh? Anyway, just giving a "here's what it looks like to an uninformed American" perspective. Quote:You and I have two things in common: we're both alive, and we both like Firefly. Lol. This was funny. I feel this way sometimes. Quote:If he trys to join the US on missile defence, Why wouldn't he? Missile defense is a great idea. Why would you oppose it? I would assume Harper would want Canadians not to get nuked. This is not an issue yet, but it sure will be when Bin Laden gets his hand on a nuke. Which eventually he will. Honestly, I can't see the softwood as being more than a nitpicky point. The canadian economy is large in charge an sophisticated, and not based on lumber. I still think the election results show the strength of anti-Americanism, in my uninformed way. Nobody likes social programs being slashed, but it didn't cost reagan or clinton any votes, or bush for that matter. I don't think there are enough people hinging on this point. Since I know that canada is a wealthier country than the US, I would suspect it's less of a life-changing issue in Canada than here. More people may feel that it s right to have them, but probable fewer than actually rely on them, and those are the votes you're likely to lose. If Harper makes progress in the private sector economy, creates jobs, etc., then any cuts he makes on social programs will probably not do him that much damage. Just putting my ignorant two cents in
Saturday, January 28, 2006 10:52 AM
Saturday, January 28, 2006 10:54 AM
Saturday, January 28, 2006 10:55 AM
Saturday, January 28, 2006 11:24 AM
Saturday, January 28, 2006 2:44 PM
Quote:I think Kerry wanted to win, I'm just not so sure that Hillary's people wanted him to win. I disagree with your "team evil" idea because it's too grand aand overarching a conspiracy......that doesn't mean that there are not "forces at work" in both parties, I just dont think they collaborate.
Select to view spoiler:
Quote:I think that there were those in the Democratic party terrified that an antiwar canidate would be seen as an unpatriotic "move to the left" which would not just loose the party this election but put it in a weaker position come 2008. That was why the Clintons/DLC pushed Wesley Clarke so hard, because a failed Howard Dean run could weaken Hillary in 2008.
Quote:I don't think Dems would have done such a job of isolating Dean and Kosinich had they felt a peace platform was winable.
Saturday, January 28, 2006 8:37 PM
Sunday, January 29, 2006 4:59 AM
Quote:My belief is that the activist part of the Dems last election cycle was probably pro-peace which is why Kosinich and Dean managed big rallys and seemed to have a lot of grass roots backing. The Democratic leadership and the think tanks and institutes that support it however are political operators, they understood that with his current approval ratings no canidate they fielded on any platform would defeat Bush.
Quote:Replacing the Executive in wartime? Never happened except by death of the encombant.
Quote:That's why folks like Wesley Clarke showed up when they did to try and break up the peacenic faction amongst the activists and dilute Deans popularity.
Quote:And yes all of this is setup to 2008. I don't think Dems looked at Bush and thought "he's our guy, let's give him an easy ride" I just think the realists understood that with the approval numbers he had and with a war in progress the very best you could do is come respectably second.
Quote:Bush is a Republican problem.
Quote:. It may make you feel better to imagine he's some remote controlled liberal puppet but the truth is that his power base is in the GOP and that even when he's gone that influence is liable to continue.
Quote:There is nothing inherent in the Republicans that say they have to be the party of conservatives, in fact they have had progressive flashes throughout their history, in Neoconism takes a grip in the party then conservatives will be faced with the same unpleasant choices that activist factions always have with "big tent" political parties, they can move outside and pitch their own tent and maintain their ideological purity, or they stay within the party and hope for better days. Going outside is suicide in my opinion if they want to keep the GOP conservative they have to fight for it's soul NOW.
Sunday, January 29, 2006 6:13 AM
Sunday, January 29, 2006 7:24 AM
Quote:My facts still stand, Johnson did not lose a general election because he pulled out in the primarys, McCathy, the peace canidate that opposed him was NOT the person the party chose to contest the election.
Quote:Truman also didn't stand again so was also not defeated as an encombant. Both these wars were unpopular at home, something that Iraq was not during the last election cycle.
Quote:I took a peek down that rabbit hole of yours. First up, American "Social Democrats" are actually nationalistic Trotskyist, just need to make that clear before people start equating that with parties of the same name in Europe (though now you mention it.... )
Quote:I think you assume that political ideology is supposed to remain "pure" it isn't. "Road to Damascus" moments happen to political theorists all the time, that's because politics deals with people and therefore has no "absolute truths" that can be uncovered, this also explains why Utopian visions ultimately fail.
Quote:I made two purchases at the remainder bookstore yesterday, one was Irvin Kristols "Neoconservatism: the Autobiography of an Idea" the second was an autobiography of Basil Brush. One is writen by one of the most influential thinkers of the late 20th century, the other by a sock puppet. I suspect Citizen is the only one that understands that joke or knows which is which.
Quote:Havent read Kristol's book yet but in flicking through most of the articles are essentially attacks in leftist ideology. You probably think that this is a blind and that he's a trojan horse for some left wing agenda, however I suspect you'd have thought Saint Paul was a Roman plant. I suspect that he's actually stating an honest opinion, as you know the disillusioned are often the zeolots of a new "religion."
Quote:If Neoconism is a problem at all, then it is the American conservative movements "problem" because if it remains in prominence "traditional conservatism" will either leave the GOP and die or stay and wither.
Quote:The problem the American left has (over and above the usual problems of the left) is that it's bought and paid for. If the Dems regain Congress all that would happen is that the gravy train would flow to them instead of the GOP. In my view under it's current leadership the Democrats are no longer a "progressive" party.
Quote:So in effect we have a "pox on both your houses" I think you'd like it to be the same pox so that both sides can suffer the same indignity. I think they are different "poxes" but with the same cause --- lack of political hygene--- too much dirty politics, and too much dirty money.
Sunday, January 29, 2006 8:13 AM
Monday, February 6, 2006 6:16 AM
Monday, February 6, 2006 8:39 AM
CITIZEN
Quote: I assume he is one of the most influential thinkers of the late 20th century, but I don't get the joke.
Monday, February 6, 2006 8:57 AM
Monday, February 6, 2006 7:12 PM
Quote:It implies a consistant ideology and that isn't apparent. Traditionally the left has had a problem, they can't organise worth ****. Because a lot of their ideology is and remains theoretical it has the ability to mutate and split and do a lot of things detremental to the ability to win political power.
Quote:You like the Strachtmanites but in truth his various changes of tack during his lifetime fragmented and completely disorganised American Trotskyism, if you can catagorise it at all it would be anything other than a consistant plan. These folks fall out all the time, I can't see them maintaining a unified vision.
Quote:And that in the end is the problem with TE as a concept. You've looked back over the last 30 years cherry picked all that was wrong with America in that time and assigned that to TE, which you then decide is an external influence. It's evading responsability by creating a conspiracy that is responsable.
Quote:Let me give you an alternative that explains the same situation. A number of things have happened since WW2. First up the European Imperial powers fell back, openning what had been protected Imperial markets to outside (US) competition. This meant that increasingly the US economy was involved in foreign trade. This in turn acted against classical US isolationism. Second the retreating Empires created a power vacuum that post war theorists assumed would lead to Communist gains, this would threaten not just American economic interests but also create a competitor for the resources a very healthy US economy needed.
Quote:The result is clear as day. For the last 30 years the US has taken on the habits of an Imperial nation. It maintains a large powerfull military to protect its Imperial assets, it vies with other imperial blocks for influence and resources. In addition it has generated an "Imperial Class" a group of academics, industrialists and political operators whose fortunes are linked to the American Imperial supremacy.
Quote:Now when we did it we stuck a Union Flag on anything we could because we're nationalitic kinds of guys, but then again we were using military might to make an Empire, the US only uses its might to protect an Empire that actually grows through commerce.
Quote:Your Imperial Class has a vested interest in extending US influence and more importantly most Americans support that idea. When we had an Empire just about everyone in the UK except for Anarchists and a few malcontents thought it was a great idea. Look at the pictures of public rallys after victories or state pagents. We used to have the World's biggest navy day just to show that our fleet was twice as big as anyone elses. You do exactly the same thing it's what Imperial nations do.
Quote:"Team Evil" hasn't been around for 30+ years, "Team America" has been.
Quote:As you took on your destiny as leader of the world you set in place economic, political and cultural changes that have altered your country and the way it sees itself. Those changes are now so ingrained that they are the established culture and that culture allows for GW Bush and friends. If you really believe that prior to this year the majority of Americans were against the war you are sadly deluded. If you say only 2 of your friends supported it then you have great friends, but not representative ones.
Quote:I have sat in a bar and watched war footage with your "fellow Americans" and you know what? People cheer precision bombing footage.
Quote:I've told you before, you dont live in 1953ville, the country you have is the result of economic and social forces that have changed the world since WW2. That it means that corruption is more likely goes without saying, money has always followed power and guess where the power is?
Quote:My guess is that "traditional" isolationist, small government conservatism is dead if it ever really existed at all. If the imperial drive stalls and America falls back it will morph into either a petty nationalism or something worse.
Monday, February 6, 2006 9:02 PM
Tuesday, February 7, 2006 2:32 PM
Tuesday, February 7, 2006 3:35 PM
Tuesday, February 7, 2006 4:17 PM
Quote: I can see that part of the problem is that I used the wrong terms I should have said "American Corporations" rather than "American Business" or "American Industry," I suspect your quaintness is rubbing off on me.
Quote:And no, I'm afraid you don't tend to demonstrate any knowledge of American industry as far as I can see. I loved your comment about Microsoft designing the Mac for Apple, now there's industry research at it's finest.
Quote:Let me explain it simply. Imagine a company "Apple of the Loom" which traditionally makes textile products in North Carolina where it employs US workers and makes a modest profit. The opertunity comes along to have the same products made in Indonesia at a fraction of the cost. "AotL" closes it's N. Carolina factories and moves manufacturing overseas.
Quote:ma-and-pa companies that oppose it natural selection favours "pro international business" canidates in both parties.
Quote:Some time later when Indonesian rebels threaten the status quo and try to move Indonesia towards an Islamic theocracy threatening the assets of American companies based there, considerable pressure is brought on the administration to "protect US interests in the region" by sending a career battle group. In addition the US sends advisors and technical aid against "insurgents."
Quote:Later, when the US government changes party the Indonesian position is maintained because there are still US economic assets on the islands needing protection and the "pro-international business" canidates of the new ruling party have the same financial backers as their predecessors.
Tuesday, February 7, 2006 4:48 PM
Tuesday, February 7, 2006 9:09 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: It's not that. There are 300,000 corporations in America. There are 15,000 publicly held corporations. There are probably several thousand American publicly traded international corporations whose business relies on an international market. In counting those that benefit from newcon globalization, you would have trouble getting up to the double digits, and in no way would approach the triple digits.
Quote: I did work for a stock broker for ten years, I do understand this industry, and feel no need to argue the point. No offense, but to stem the flood fo your propaganda is not a call for me to waste time I could spend working, please don't force the situation.
Quote: Nothing is wrong with international business. What is wrong I already posted at length. Break down the cost of hiring an American, and you will find that it costs a company $3 in taxes and federally mandated spending for every $1 that they pay to the American worker. So instead, they move operations overseas, largely to *high* wage countries. The majority of American jobs are leaving for countries where the *wages* are actually higher, but because of favorable pro-business regulations, the *costs* are lower.
Wednesday, February 8, 2006 5:37 AM
Quote: Assuming it's all about Tax is an avoidance of reality and a knee jerk pandering to dogma. If a guy can have a good life on $15,000 in India you will hire him for $15,000, you can not hire an American for $15,000 if that is less than the guy needs to live. That's just reality.
Wednesday, February 8, 2006 5:45 AM
Wednesday, February 8, 2006 10:49 AM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: Our principle outsourcee is Canada.]
Wednesday, February 8, 2006 1:44 PM
Quote:I do read what you write.
Quote:Quote: Our principle outsourcee is Canada.Odd, that's an high tax "socialist" country
Quote: Our principle outsourcee is Canada.
Quote:their taxes and regulations are higher than yours
Quote:The countries you tend to cite like Korea are not outsource destinations, they are industrial competitors. Samsung did not start life in a Chicago suburb and then head east.
Quote:you still can't employ an American at less than his cost base (well unless you legalise slavery.
Quote:When an HMO sends a radiologist in India your CT Scan for evaluation then of course the guy avoids US taxation, but the home he just built outside of Calcutta costs 1/5 what a simular sized US home cost.
Quote:His education cost a fraction of what his US colleagues degree cost. He lives happily as a professional on $20,000 a year not just because he pays less tax (though that's nice) but because all of HIS costs are lower too.
Quote:I'm not against free trade. In fact from what you have writen I suspect I like it more than you do.
Quote:I'm just saying that in the modern world where US corporate interests are involved in more and more places you should expect both political parties to be internationalist. That Clinton and Bush have similar internationalist tendencies is a product of them living in the same part of American history, not an admission that they are in Cahoots.
Quote:Now if without TE references you can explain why Globalisation is anything other than a natural extension of the principles of free trade I'll address those issues. I don't see there is a difference which is why I've been trying to show that this is a natural process. If you think different you have a chance to prove it.
Wednesday, February 8, 2006 2:50 PM
RUE
I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!
Quote:Since both countries have the same style of education system, it's hard to argue that what ideological difference may exist
Wednesday, February 8, 2006 2:58 PM
Wednesday, February 8, 2006 8:52 PM
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