Not too well, I guess; she doesn't want anyone but the choir she preaches to hearing her, apparently. Nothing to do with the cheat-sheet thing on her pa..."/>
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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
How's that pressy-attentiony thing workin' out for 'ya, Sarah?
Saturday, February 13, 2010 6:45 PM
FREMDFIRMA
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: And probably a large part of the reason these guys don't nail 'em is that they'll never come back to the show if they do.
Sunday, February 14, 2010 7:56 AM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Sunday, February 14, 2010 9:49 PM
ANTIMASON
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: Call me crazy, but I'm COMFORTABLE with the concept that my President should be smarter than me.
Quote: I've got neighbors who are nice guys, and I don't mind having a beer with them, but when it comes to actual issues, they're idiots, and I don't want people like that anywhere near the nuclear launch codes.
Quote: By the way, since you seem so hell-bent on labeling who disagrees with you a "liberal" or a "statist", please lay out for us in explicit detail EXACTLY how you'd cut all government spending to zero, since that seems to be your comfort margin with government spending?
Quote: Do away with ALL entitlement spending?
Quote:Okay, but don't come whining and bitching to me about your stupid "death panels" when Granny croaks it because she can't afford her medicine.
Quote: Can we cut all defense spending and intelligence? Can we do away with border security and the border patrol? How about the immigration service? Can we get rid of them?
Quote:Who will you cut? And how will you deal with the unemployment deluge when you throw all of them out of work?
Quote:And don't hand me that tired old crap about how you want it all left to the states to decide. Talk about a "statist"! Why is the state better at deciding what to do with my money than the federal government, anyway?
Quote:By the way, of that alleged $60 trillion in entitlement spending, how much of that is Obama's? Be exact, please. How much of it did he inherit, and how much was on the books already?
Quote: And how would YOU cut it to zero? You want Obama to do away with it completely; please explain to us all HOW we're going to do that.
Quote:I'll wait. I'm sure this will be at least as enlightening as your diatribes on evolution.
Sunday, February 14, 2010 10:08 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: Anti: “she was a governor” half-term, then she quit. And as governor her record isn’t exactly stellar, nor was it for any of the other offices she held. It’s all come out since then and there are myriad things to point to.
Quote: Are you freaking KIDDING me?
Quote: I won’t even GO there; the President has to be able to THINK, not be puppeted by his advisors (like Cheney) or wife ( a la Nancy), he has to have some working knowledge of government (which a fancy speaking style won’t give ‘ya), and the ability to make important decisions, meet with heads of state...the list is endless. To think that any uneducated, ignorant person could do the job is a fantasy, at best!
Quote: As to his spending, I don’t like it any more than anyone else; the difference is, I see some of the things that forced him to do so
Quote: and refuse to compare or contrast or condemn him until we see if what he does is effective in getting the country back on its feet, THEN what he does to cut the deficit. I won’t condemn him on trying to deal with the mess he was left.
Monday, February 15, 2010 3:00 AM
KWICKO
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)
Quote:he needs to take action in that direction, as well as congress. but he wont, he has no intention to. instead he'll just continue to spend more, with your full approval
Monday, February 15, 2010 8:25 AM
Monday, February 15, 2010 11:11 AM
Quote: posted by Kwicko- Hahahahahahah - Come on, boy! And this is why it's a waste of time trying to talk to you. It's all or nothing, black or white. Where did you see my "full approval"? Where did you see me sanction anything?
Quote: As long as you're going to label me and everyone else who stands a half inch to the left of you "liberal statists", there's no sense in even bothering to engage you.
Quote: I can just as easily label you a racist fundamentalist christian Bushite supply-side lemming, you know. And it doesn't matter if any or all of those things are really accurate - if you oppose Obama, you're automatically a right-wing fascist Republican.
Quote: Is that the way you think we should be discussing things? Are we only allowed to divide ourselves along the very narrowest of party lines?
Quote: As for spending your way out of a recession... Well, yes and no. You CAN stimulate the economy short-term with government spending;
Quote: Bush tried it, only his method was to start a couple wars.
Quote: He thought it was better to spend on destruction instead of CONstruction.
Quote: I'd say our best investment right now would be infrastructure projects right here at home. Seems we have a whole bunch of bridges, buildings, and roads that could use some serious attention. And we have a good 10% (or more) of the work force looking for something to do.
Quote: It's not that spending as automatically evil; as you yourself have pointed out, SOME spending is good.
Quote: Oh, and WHY are all you righties so hell-bent on keeping every red cent of defense spending? I thought you were for self-reliance. Hell, I've got a damned weapons cache and thousands of rounds of ammo, so *I* sure as hell don't need any "gubmint" protection from Al Qaeda. I can take care of myself. Why can't y'all? I thought you were all about that "personal responsibility" shit. I guess when it comes right down to it, you don't want "the state" taking care of you, unless they're doing it with guns and bombs.
Quote: And speaking of "the state", you also live in a NATION, do you not? What ever happened to "Country First"? Or was that never really an option for all you right-wing lemmings? What you REALLY meant was "ME first!" Right?
Monday, February 15, 2010 11:46 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: TARP was started by Bush, dammit, so after two years of it already, don't dump it all on Obama. Yes, he continued it, but he didn't START it. It matters.
Quote: The right-wing insistence on labeling everyone they don't agree with "elitist" and "academic" is a tired old horse that needs to die. It's a game; it works, especially on blue-collar people and the ignorant. Its intention is to make an "us v. them" mentality, and has no basis in fact. Just jingoism. Not that any on the right will ever believe that--or that those who DO know it's propaganda and use it to effect will ever admit it.
Quote: There's no "full approval" of the debt by anyone I know;
Quote: rather there is recognition of the situation we're in and the knowledge that every time "trickle-down" was tried, it failed miserably.
Quote: One of the responsibilities of government is to be a safety net for the whole country, not just individuals.
Quote: Let's hear what YOUR response would be to the unemployment and disasterous state of affairs, please.
Quote: The stimulus HAS created jobs, it's easy to find the facts just on the internet; the fact that it wasn't enough is argued by as many experts as those saying it wasn't necessary in the first place. Pick your poison.
Quote: The cutest thing about it is that when the country turns around, the right can say "it always would have anyway"
Quote: As Cheney takes credit for Iraq (which ISN'T stable and may never be), all the Repubs have to do is sit on their thumbs and blame the Dems for everything.
Quote: But why bother; given what I've read that you've written, it's obvious you're another black-and-whiter with no room for greys. The concept that ANY of the spending might be necessary to dig us out of this hole is impossible for you to grasp, apparently.
Quote: Mike, "You CAN stimulate the economy short-term with government spending; Bush tried it"--you forget, his version of "stimulus" was also tax cuts for the rich. How well did that work out? About as well as the wars, from what I see!
Monday, February 15, 2010 1:47 PM
Quote: Quote: I can just as easily label you a racist fundamentalist christian Bushite supply-side lemming, you know. And it doesn't matter if any or all of those things are really accurate - if you oppose Obama, you're automatically a right-wing fascist Republican. that seems to be the tone around here. but for the record, i never supported Bush
Quote:hey Niki, raise taxes on the Rich and see what happens. you know the wealthy pay the majority of taxes in this country, see what they do with their money when you go after them. how about tax cuts all around? youre not advocating that taxe increases are an economic stimulas are you?
Monday, February 15, 2010 1:53 PM
Quote:we have 60 trillion in wellfare entitlements, and i dont hear a peep out of you about it
Monday, February 15, 2010 2:00 PM
CHRISISALL
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: It's said the richest 2% pay almost 50% of the income taxes in this country. I'd say they aren't paying ENOUGH, since that same richest 2% also happens to own 95% of the wealth in this country. So they're paying 45% less than their [fair *Chrisisall's addition*] share!
Monday, February 15, 2010 2:04 PM
GINOBIFFARONI
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: Quote: Quote: I can just as easily label you a racist fundamentalist christian Bushite supply-side lemming, you know. And it doesn't matter if any or all of those things are really accurate - if you oppose Obama, you're automatically a right-wing fascist Republican. that seems to be the tone around here. but for the record, i never supported Bush I think you've just said it all. Of all the things I just called you out on, the ONLY one you take issue with is the Bush part. And you never once took issue with him while he was the dictator in chief, so far as I recall. Quote:hey Niki, raise taxes on the Rich and see what happens. you know the wealthy pay the majority of taxes in this country, see what they do with their money when you go after them. how about tax cuts all around? youre not advocating that taxe increases are an economic stimulas are you? I guess you really DO respect the "Rich" - you even capitalize it when you say the word! By the way, what was the top tax rate under Eisenhower? How terrible were things then? It's said the richest 2% pay almost 50% of the income taxes in this country. I'd say they aren't paying ENOUGH, since that same richest 2% also happens to own 95% of the wealth in this country. So they're paying 45% less than their share! Mike Work is the curse of the Drinking Class. - Oscar Wilde
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 10:36 AM
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 10:38 AM
Quote:President Herbert Hoover started numerous programs, all of which failed to reverse the downturn. In June 1930 Congress approved the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act which raised tariffs on thousands of imported items. The intent of the Act was to encourage the purchase of American-made products by increasing the cost of imported goods, while raising revenue for the federal government and protecting farmers. However, other nations increased tariffs on American-made goods in retaliation, reducing international trade, and worsening the Depression. In 1931 Hoover urged the major banks in the country to form a consortium known as the National Credit Corporation (NCC). By 1932 unemployment had reached 23.6%, and it peaked in early 1933 at 25%, a drought persisted in the agricultural heartland, businesses and families defaulted on record numbers of loans and more than 5,000 banks had failed. Hundreds of thousands of Americans found themselves homeless and they began congregating in the numerous Hoovervilles that had begun to appear across the country. In response, President Hoover and Congress approved the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, to spur new home construction, and reduce foreclosures. Shortly after President Roosevelt was inaugurated in 1933, drought and erosion combined to cause the Dust Bowl, shifting hundreds of thousands of displaced persons off their farms in the Midwest. From his inauguration onward, Roosevelt argued that restructuring of the economy would be needed to prevent another depression or avoid prolonging the current one. New Deal programs sought to stimulate demand and provide work and relief for the impoverished through increased government spending and the institution of financial reforms. The Securities Act of 1933 comprehensively regulated the securities industry. This was followed by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 which created the Securities and Exchange Commission. The common view among mainstream economists is that Roosevelt's New Deal policies either caused or accelerated the recovery, although his policies were never aggressive enough to bring the economy completely out of recession. Some economists have also called attention to the positive effects from expectations of reflation and rising nominal interest rates that Roosevelt's words and actions portended. However, opposition from the new Conservative Coalition caused a rollback of the New Deal policies in early 1937, which caused a setback in the recovery.
Quote: We've all heard the claims that cutting tax rates for the richest Americans will improve the standard of living for the working class. Supposedly, top-bracket tax breaks will result in more jobs being created, higher wages for the average worker, and an overall upturn in our economy. It's at the heart of the infamous trickle-down theory. The past 40 years have seen a gradual decrease in the top bracket's income tax rate, from 91% in 1963 to 35% in 2003. It went as low as 28% in 1988 and 1989 due to legislation passed under Reagan, the trickle-down theory's most famous adherent. The Clinton years saw the top bracket hold steady at a higher rate of 39.6%, but under the younger Bush's tax-cut policies, the rich are once again paying less. The drastic change in tax policy that has taken place since the early 1960s gives us a great opportunity to study and evaluate the claims that lower taxes for the rich translate to more wealth for the average American. 1. Cutting the top tax rate does not lead to economic growth. It is true that growth increased drastically after the 1982 tax cut, reaching as high as 7.3% in 1984. However, as the Reagan-Bush, Sr. administrations went on and taxes for the rich were slashed even further, growth fell to negative levels during 1991, at the heart of the last recession. And, two of the three years with the highest growth were during the 1950s, when the top tax rate was 91%. Overall, there seems to be no close relationship between the top tax rate and the GDP growth rate, and statistical analysis backs this up: the correlation coefficient between the two variables is 0.03, meaning that there is essentially no connection. (If tax cuts were strongly related to GDP growth, we would see a coefficient close to -1.) So much for upper-class tax cuts boosting the economy; now it's on to median income growth. 2. Cutting the top tax rate does not lead to income growth. Again, we see inconclusive evidence for the power of tax cuts. We do see small peaks in median income growth, a good measure of how the average American household is doing, after top-bracket tax cuts in the mid-1960s and early 1980s, but we also actually see income decreases after the tax cuts of the late 1980s, and strong growth after the tax increase of 1993. It is true that in the year with the worst median income decrease (3.3% in 1974), the top tax rate was 70%. However, it was also 70% in the year with the highest median income growth (4.7% in 1972)! Once again, the lack of connection between the two measures is backed up by a correlation coefficient near zero: 0.06, to be exact. And yes, yet again, the coefficient is positive, indicating that income has gone up slightly (though negligibly) more in years with higher taxes. Two strikes. How about hourly wages? 3. Cutting the top tax rate does not lead to wage growth. Growth in average hourly wages did increase during the 1980s following the first Reagan tax cuts, albeit two years after the cuts took effect. But, just like GDP growth and median income growth, hourly wages decreased following the late 1980s tax cuts, and spiked upwards after the 1993 tax increase. Furthermore, wages grew at a level of at least 1%, and usually much more, all throughout the period when the top income tax rate was 91%. In fact, it isn't until 1972 that we see a wage growth rate of less than 1%. However, if we look at the 19 years of the study period when the top tax rate was 50% or less, we see that 8 of the years saw an increase in wages of less than 1%. Thus, it seems that hourly wages grew more when taxes were higher - indeed, the correlation coefficient is 0.34, indicating a mild positive relationship between higher taxes for the rich and higher hourly wages. This finding flies in the face of the conservative theory. As if that's not enough, now let's see about what President Bush claimed would be the biggest result of tax cuts - job creation. 4. Cutting the top tax rate does not lead to job creation. Here, we see the change in the unemployment rate laid against the top tax rate from 1954 to 2002. Thus, negative values signify a decrease in unemployment -- in essence, job creation. Once again, while the top tax rate trends downward over the period, the annual change in unemployment doesn't seem to trend at all! Although the largest increase (2.9%) did occur in 1975, when the top marginal tax rate was 70%, three of the four largest decreases in unemployment occurred in years when the top rate was 91%. The mixed results do not bode well for those who see tax cuts for the richest as a sparkplug to incite job growth. The correlation coefficient between the variables here is 0.11 -- meaning that there have been slightly more jobs created in years with lower top tax rates, but this pattern is negligible -- nowhere near strong enough to signify a relationship.
Quote:{The stimulus is} not going to work, the economy is recovering in spite of the stimulus.
Quote: see what they do with their money when you go after them
Quote:Four current and former partners at Ernst & Young, one of the world's largest accounting firms, were indicted Wednesday for allegedly orchestrating a scheme to create illegal tax shelters for the firm's richest clients. The scam catered to clients who earned more than $10 million to $20 million a year, finding them ways to reduce their taxes, according to an indictment handed up in the federal court for New York's Southern District. One of these complicated tax shelters involved converting clients' ordinary income into capital gains. The idea behind the alleged scheme is that the tax rate on capital gains is significantly lower than the regular income tax rate, especially for the rich. The rich clients in question would normally be taxed at a rate of about 40 percent, according to court records. But the income allegedly filtered through the tax shelters and was taxed only at the long-term capital gains rate of about 20 percent.
Quote:Here is a nice object lesson in how a couple of obscure changes in the tax law can save a few people a lot of money. The IRS has reported that the number of those earning $200,000 or more who paid no taxes rose sharply in 2005. More than 7,300 of these worthies avoided U.S. income tax entirely, two-and-a-half times the year before. About 85,000 paid worldwide taxes of less than 10% of their income. The study, by the IRS’ Brian Balkovic, cites two big reasons for this plunge in tax liability. One was a 2004 law that let individuals use foreign tax credits to reduce their Alternative Minimum Tax. The other, passed in response to Hurricane Katrina, opened a temporary window for people to make big cash charitable contributions without facing the normal limits on how much they can deduct. The 2005 tax return data are the most recent available. The impact of just these two changes was stunning. Balcovic reports that in 2004, 412 of 3 million high-income taxpayers reported about $16 million in foreign tax credits. In 2005, more than 3000 wealthy filers took nearly $450 million in these credits. The increase in reported charitable contributions was also dramatic.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 11:07 AM
RUE
I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 1:41 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: I think you've just said it all. Of all the things I just called you out on, the ONLY one you take issue with is the Bush part. And you never once took issue with him while he was the dictator in chief, so far as I recall.
Quote: I guess you really DO respect the "Rich" - you even capitalize it when you say the word!
Quote: By the way, what was the top tax rate under Eisenhower? How terrible were things then?
Quote: It's said the richest 2% pay almost 50% of the income taxes in this country. I'd say they aren't paying ENOUGH, since 0that same richest 2% also happens to own 95% of the wealth in this country. So they're paying 45% less than their share!
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 1:50 PM
AURAPTOR
America loves a winner!
Quote:Originally posted by rue: I'm still trying to figure out how Obama is "an egg head from academia". It's a bit off topic, but it was mentioned more than once, so it seems to be important to SOMEbody. Any HELPFUL response to this question would be appreciated. .
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 1:52 PM
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 1:54 PM
Quote: Either you Are with the terrorists, or ... you Are with the terrorists
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 1:56 PM
STORYMARK
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: Quote:No, I mean Obama. He's added more debt in 1 year than Bush has in 8. Cites? I've got Bush down for over $10 trillion added onto the national debt on his watch. Care to show us where Obama topped that figure in one year? Or are you just lying again? Quote:But I see you do endorse violence against women. Figures. Not quite to the degree that you do, though, with your "Two for one" t-shirt joking about killing two terrorists with one bullet when you shoot a pregnant Palestinian woman in the stomach. But it's different when you endorse it, isn't it?
Quote:No, I mean Obama. He's added more debt in 1 year than Bush has in 8.
Quote:But I see you do endorse violence against women. Figures.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 2:06 PM
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 2:11 PM
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 2:20 PM
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 2:32 PM
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 2:37 PM
Quote:Originally posted by chrisisall: Rue, you hear that noise? There must be concert nearby, 'cause I hear lots of yelling that makes no sense... The laughing Chrisisall
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 2:53 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: To say that Obama is no better than Dumbya is, first, judging him on one year as opposed to Dumbya’s eight. That’s not logical.
Quote: You expect him to change everything at once; if he continues following Dumbya's policies throughout his term, I will judge him then. We have yet to know whether he will eliminate them IN TIME, given the horrendous mess he has to deal with today.
Quote: Some of the “but bush was worse” you hear here may be the voicing of frustration that those of us held who could see what was happening for eight years yet heard no serious outcry against it, and were called “treasonous” for even doing so.
Quote: Frustration is human; it comes for me from seeing so much anger at Obama when most of what people are angry about BEGAN with Dumbya, was promulgated by Dumbya, and some of Obama’s actions are predicated on trying to dig the country out of the horrible hole Dumbya put us in.
Quote: It’s hard NOT to compare the horrors Dumbya committed to the far less horrific things Obama is trying to do. No, there is no way I believe Obama is AS BAD as Dumbya was; whether I believe that in four years or not is yet to be seen.
Quote: While the Democrats have cow-towed and compromised over and over again, the Republicans are sticking tight to their refusal to compromise on virtually ANYTHING, and their determination to ignore the country and the people just to block anything from happening is insane.
Quote: The filibuster has never been used in even CLOSE to the fashion it is now, and their actions may force its elimination, which I think is wrong for the country. There is no comparison, as far as I’m concerned, between the Democrats’ attempts to govern and the Republican’s determination to stop any governing by anyone.
Quote: Hell, what they asked for is IN the health care bill; they demanded a meeting in the open, now that they've been given it, they're making every ridiculous excuse they can come up with NOT to do so. And on and on.
Quote: As to stimulus, Dumbya’s was vastly more dedicated to increasing the wealth of the rich; Obama’s has been more across-the-board and attempts to bring the disparity between rich and poor more in line.
Quote: It is bigger now than it’s been in our history, and that’s largely a result of Dumbya giving tax cuts to his cronies.
Quote: I believe a stimulus is necessary, and the one we’ve had not nearly enough. On that and many of the other things you have written, we will have to agree to disagree; our approaches to helping the country out of this mess are different, and we’re both entitled to our opinions; it’s obvious neither of us will change the other’s mind, so we’ll just have to wait and see how It turns out.
Quote: Bush wars good/Obama wars bad. Obama is trying to work his way OUT of the two wars Dumbya started; yes, in the end Dumbya wanted to get out of Iraq too (or said he did), but you can’t blame Obama for not stopping two wars cold in one year that Dumbya started and enhanced for eight!
Quote: As to TARP, yes I can blame Dumbya...he began it in 2008, that’s a long time before Obama had any say in the matter. I don’t like TARP either, but I won’t blame Obama for it exclusively.
Quote:Originally posted by rue: His formal title was "senior lecturer," but the University of Chicago Law School says he "served as a professor" and was "regarded as" a professor. Sen. Obama, who has taught courses in constitutional law at the University of Chicago, has regularly referred to himself as "a constitutional law professor," most famously at a March 30, 2007, fundraiser when he said, "I was a constitutional law professor, which means unlike the current president I actually respect the Constitution." A spokesman for the Republican National Committee immediately took exception to Obama’s remarks, pointing out that Obama’s title at the University of Chicago was "senior lecturer" and not "professor." There is a big diffence between "senior lecturer" and "professor." A professor is expected to do original research before and after they become a professor which is then published in a recognized journal both (Obama has no has academic publications to his name), and a professor has tenure (which Obama doesn't have). While lectures are ADDRESSED AS 'professor', they are not in fact professors. *************************************************************** Silence is consent.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 3:22 PM
Quote:i dont believe taxing nearly everything someone earns away from them is fair
Quote:Publisher’s Weekly: Probing everything from smart legal maneuvers to outright tax fraud by the wealthy, this fascinating, highly readable survey explores the tax code's haphazard evolution since 1913, and how it has favored rich individuals and large corporations over average taxpayers. Citing IRS Commissioner Charles Rossotti, who testified in 1998 that tax evasion costs the federal government $195 billion annually, Lewis and Allison et al. (The Buying of the President) note that almost 1,000 families earning more than $200,000 paid no income tax in 1995 and that corporate income taxes, which made up 28% of federal tax revenue in 1956, now are only 10%. Familiar ploys like hiding money in offshore trusts, tax shelters and nonprofit fronts figure in these Amazon.com: This book is a group project; Charles Lewis and Bill Allison are the principle authors, but they have relied on an investigative team that includes 19 other individuals affiliated with the Center for Public Integrity, a left-of-center research organization in Washington, D.C. What they've assembled in The Cheating of America is a survey of how the rich and powerful shirk their responsibilities: "We investigate the people and companies who have benefited most from our society and our way of life and then chosen to thumb their noses at the rest of us, by paying little or no taxes." The book is full of facts and figures, many sure to outrage. The authors identify, for instance, some 45,000 tax returns filed by people earning more than $100,000 and paying less than 7 percent of their income to the federal government--compared to millions of workers who earn much less and proportionally pay much more. (One recent IRS report counted 2,680 filers with incomes of $200,000 or more claiming they owed no taxes at all, up from just 85 in 1977.) What makes the book succeed, however, is not its careful number crunching, but all the little stories that detail "the phenomenon of tax avoidance (that's legal), tax evasion (that's illegal), and tax 'avoision' (catch us if you can)." There are the wealthy film producers who use offshore trusts and tax shelters to hide their income, the millionaire tax evaders who renounce their U.S. citizenship in order to escape making tax payments, and the accountants who help it all happen. At times, the book feels like a long Reader's Digest article, all told in the service of an outrageous conclusion: "Many of the nation's wealthiest individuals and its largest corporations are not paying their fair share of taxes today."
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 3:42 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: It's odd that not one single conservative has ever voiced a problem with Dubya's being an egg-head from academia or an Iv League Ivory Tower elitist (Yale AND Harvard? Really?). Hell, these big-business free-marketeers don't even seem to have any problem with his utter failure at ever running anything. I find that curious.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 3:45 PM
Quote:i was included in that! but i still am, i havent let my guard down, i ive seen behind the veil and recognize that Obama is not some liberal knight in shining Armor. hes just another puppet with different objectives
Quote:republicans are obstinate and obstructionists. its simply not true!
Quote:prince Robin Hood Obama, he's not like evil Bush, hes an intellectual, hes african American, hes.. 'messianic'.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 3:46 PM
Quote: originally posted by Niki2- As to your opinion of the Depression ... I agree with Wikipedia’s take; obviously you don’t. That’s all we need say on the matter.
Quote: Old myths never die; they just keep showing up in economics and political science textbooks. With only an occasional exception, it is there you will find what may be the 20th century’s greatest myth: Capitalism and the free-market economy were responsible for the Great Depression, and only government intervention brought about America’s economic recovery. A Modern Fairy Tale According to this simplistic perspective, an important pillar of capitalism, the stock market, crashed and dragged America into depression. President Herbert Hoover, an advocate of “hands-off,” or laissez-faire, economic policy, refused to use the power of government and conditions worsened as a result. It was up to Hoover’s successor, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, to ride in on the white horse of government intervention and steer the nation toward recovery. The apparent lesson to be drawn is that capitalism cannot be trusted; government needs to take an active role in the economy to save us from inevitable decline. But those who propagate this version of history might just as well top off their remarks by saying, “And Goldilocks found her way out of the forest, Dorothy made it from Oz back to Kansas, and Little Red Riding Hood won the New York State Lottery.” The popular account of the Depression as outlined above belongs in a book of fairy tales and not in a serious discussion of economic history. to read the rest, click the link below http://fee.org/articles/great-myths-of-the-great-depression/
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 3:47 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Storymark: Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: Quote:No, I mean Obama. He's added more debt in 1 year than Bush has in 8. Cites? I've got Bush down for over $10 trillion added onto the national debt on his watch. Care to show us where Obama topped that figure in one year? Or are you just lying again? Quote:But I see you do endorse violence against women. Figures. Not quite to the degree that you do, though, with your "Two for one" t-shirt joking about killing two terrorists with one bullet when you shoot a pregnant Palestinian woman in the stomach. But it's different when you endorse it, isn't it? I know we're ignoring him now and all - but I thought it worth pointing out that Rappy boy once again bitched out on a direct question (the above underlined segment), deftly deflecting the conversation to important issues like a joke about a bumper sticker.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 3:48 PM
Quote:Go in by legacy rather than merit, to boot.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 3:50 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: It's odd that not one single conservative has ever voiced a problem with Dubya's being an egg-head from academia or an Iv League Ivory Tower elitist (Yale AND Harvard? Really?).
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 3:58 PM
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 4:04 PM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: Speaking of the recovery ... http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/recoveryanniversary/
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 4:07 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: Just caught your last post. I can only say that we are diametrically opposed in what we believe, and we can only wait and see what happens to find out which of us is right.
Quote: It sounds to me like you expected a "knight in shining armor" to fix things; perhaps I had lower (or more realistic?) expectations. I KNOW how bad things are and never expected a miracle; as I said, I'll wait and see.
Quote: The bills have been passed on party lines? What do you expect, when NO Republican will vote "yes" on ANYTHING?
Quote: I believe in several cases Democrats DID cross party lines and vote with the Republicans; but NEVER the reverse.
Quote: The use of the filibuster is unconscionable. You expect the Democrats to vote with them, just for the sake of bipartisanship? What happened to "majority rule" in this country, if the minority can decide everything?
Quote: As to cutting spending and government, I responded to your remarks about how that affected the Depression. You have no comment, probably didn't even read it, just choose to stick by your beliefs to the opposite. Not much to say; you’re not giving any facts to back up your contentions, just opinion.
Quote: Remarks like that and saying Obama could just end the wars immediately ‘cuz he wants to, make it just impossible to continue, and not worth my time.
Quote: Especially because of Quote:prince Robin Hood Obama, he's not like evil Bush, hes an intellectual, hes african American, hes.. 'messianic'. Okay, now you've lost me completely.
Quote: I was very clear in listing the things I disagree with Obama about, I’ve quoted sources to back up my points, I've tried hard to have an honest debate, but you can still make statements like this. That about does it.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 4:21 PM
Quote:what does that tell you?
Quote:same revision of history that the text books and the shills in the corporate/government media propogate
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 4:50 PM
Quote: So only you know "the truth". Your faith that everyone else has it wrong tells me all I need to know.
Quote: The reason you lost me is not because you dissed Obama. It is because I had made it clear I did not see him the way you described, yet you happily accused me of doing so AND added that I had called Dumbya facist and Naziwhich I have never done.
Quote: That is not honest discussion or debate. If you want to misquote me and pretend I said Obama was infallible, there can be no communication. I'll not waste any further effort and time on trying, I've already spent too much. I'm off to dinner.
Quote: I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around [the banks] will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs. -Thomas Jefferson
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 5:10 PM
TRAVELER
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 5:30 PM
Quote:Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni: here are some crazy examples http://www.thefreemanonline.org/featured/most-outrageous-government-waste/
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 6:04 PM
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 6:14 PM
Quote:Okay, now you've lost me completely. I was very clear in listing the things I disagree with Obama about, I’ve quoted sources to back up my points, I've tried hard to have an honest debate, but you can still make statements like this. That about does it.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 6:17 PM
Quote:Posted by antimason: i dont claim to have a monopoly on the truth
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 6:33 PM
Quote:Originally posted by traveler: I believe Obama wants us out of Afganistan. He is not going to leave until Al-Qaeda has no safe place in that country to support attacks against us.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 7:03 PM
Quote:Originally posted by traveler: So if we were to pull out of Afganistan today we would be allowing the Taliban to retake the country. The first thing they would do is give Al-Qaeda the support it needs to raise and train more terroists to attack us. It was this very tactic that brought us there. Maybe it's why Obama is increasing our presence there and forcing the Taliban out. He would like Afganistan free of these guys and thus prevent it from becoming a training ground for Al-Qaeda again.
Quote:If we had not started a war in Iraq we would have had more troops available to deal with Afganistan and may have been through with that war. But we went chasing after Weapons of Mass Destruction in Iraq. So our forces were stretched and we didn't get the job done in Afganistan. We are now pulling troops out of Iraq. That finally gives use the capability to take the offensive to the Taliban. Something we should have done years ago.
Quote:I believe Obama wants us out of Afganistan. He is not going to leave until Al-Qaeda has no safe place in that country to support attacks against us.
Quote: I prefer seeing these guys ground to dust in Afganistan then allowing them the opportunity to do that again.
Quote: If it takes a person from Harvard Law School to get the job done, I am not going to stand in his way.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 7:07 PM
Tuesday, February 16, 2010 7:09 PM
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