REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

So. Who here still thinks that the USA will EVER be back where it was in the 'economically on-fire' era of Bush's early reign?

POSTED BY: CHRISISALL
UPDATED: Monday, August 29, 2016 04:10
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Wednesday, September 15, 2010 5:18 PM

CHRISISALL


Again, a Dark Angel ref:

Quote:

Look around at all this. Built by people who got up every morning, worked hard trying to make a better life...then the Pulse happened and everyone got scared. They blinked, and before they knew it, they’d turned over the store to a bunch of thugs who were happy to take it off their hands. Overnight, the government, the police, everything intended to protect the people had been turned against them.


We are in a state of severe change.
Like our climate.

Wanna jump in denial?


The laughing Chrisisall



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Wednesday, September 15, 2010 5:53 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Maybe it was the downturn you needed to have. Too much spending, too much consuming. It can't go on for ever, you know.

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Wednesday, September 15, 2010 6:33 PM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Hello,

Like our climate, eh? That made me smile, because...

I'm much more worried about the social and economic climate than I am about the temperature.

Mother nature is a powerful, indomitable force that can squash us like bugs...

but I feel like I'm much more likely to be squashed by my overlords and my fellow man. At the very least, those forces take less time to wreak their havoc. That's change I can believe in.

--Anthony



Due to the use of Naomi 3.3.2 Beta web filtering, the following people may need to private-message me if they wish to contact me: Auraptor, Kaneman, Piratenews. I apologize for the inconvenience.

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Wednesday, September 15, 2010 10:24 PM

DMAANLILEILTT


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Maybe it was the downturn you needed to have.


Where have I heard that before?

"I really am ruggedly handsome, aren't I?"

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Thursday, September 16, 2010 1:42 AM

AURAPTOR

America loves a winner!


The weather is as it always has been , in varying degrees of flux.

The economy ? Wont' be takin off any time soon if we're hit with a round of tax hikes. Oh, and it'd be nice to repeal ObamaCare, too.

For starters. Do those things, and we can START talking about returning to 5% unemployment numbers, instead of being well above 8%.

"The modern definition of 'racist' is someone who is winning an argument with a liberal."


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Thursday, September 16, 2010 2:43 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by chrisisall:
We are in a state of severe change.


If the 1970s taught us anything its that the US can NEVER recover from tough economic times.

H

"Hero. I have come to respect you." "I am forced to agree with Hero here."- Chrisisall, 2009.
"I would rather not ignore your contributions." Niki2, 2010.

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Thursday, September 16, 2010 5:49 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Time will tell, I'm not looking tjhat far in the future, probably 'cuz I've only got a few decades left anyway.

As to too much spending, etc., Magons, I'd say too much BORROWING! We were so encouraged to use credit that it had a lot to do with what's happened to us. I STILL get junk mail to get a credit card, even tho' we've got shitty credit because we ran into hard times and it took us years to pay off the ones we had! I'm perfectly content with only an ATM/Visa, and we'll stay that way no matter what; house is paid off and we've got some retirement put away, so I'm not thinking too far in the future.

I think we'll bounce back, most of the time we do; I don't think it'll ever be to the extent we had in the '50s and '60s, OR (hopefully!) to where we were before the BushBubble burst, but we'll be okay in the long run. That's just my opinion.

I worry for those coming after me, and more for climate change than anything, but there's nothing I can do beyond what I am doing, so c'est la vie.


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
Contracted Agent of Veritas Oilspillus, code name “Nike”,
signing off




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Thursday, September 16, 2010 6:23 AM

THEHAPPYTRADER


My geology professor thought Al Gore and his inconvenient truth was a joke. He said the man new just enough to be dangerous without really having a clue as to what is going on. He said throughout our extensive geologic history the climate has fluctuated often and violently with no clear discernible pattern, that natural sources (volcanos and the like) will put out more pollution than we can and that, frankly, we don't have the capacity to CAUSE global warming.

That being said, I'm still all for alternate energy and protecting our environment, we may not be capable of destroying the world, but we can certainly ruin things on a more local scale. But when it comes to climate change, I'm more inclined to believe the scientist that was my college professor than a politician looking for attention.

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Thursday, September 16, 2010 7:31 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


"That being said, I'm still all for alternate energy and protecting our environment, we may not be capable of destroying the world, but we can certainly ruin things on a more local scale."

Hello,

Good words.

This is a place where I think the environmentalists swerve into a brick wall time and again.

They believe in man-caused climate change. Others don't. But almost everyone can agree on the individual remedies that would make our lives better.

But instead of everyone agreeing on the same cure for different perceived diseases, they'd often rather argue over which disease is the right disease.

You've got it right, Trader. There's good reasons to do good things that aren't contingent on any theory of global destruction. Each of those things is good for us on the small scale where it's most important for personal decision making: They benefit the individual in tangible and timely ways.

Selfishness can herald the way to better living, just so long as we're not so selfish that we all have to agree on why we're doing it.

--Anthony

Due to the use of Naomi 3.3.2 Beta web filtering, the following people may need to private-message me if they wish to contact me: Auraptor, Kaneman, Piratenews. I apologize for the inconvenience.

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Thursday, September 16, 2010 7:55 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Niki2:

I think we'll bounce back, most of the time we do; I don't think it'll ever be to the extent we had in the '50s and '60s, OR (hopefully!) to where we were before the BushBubble burst, but we'll be okay in the long run. That's just my opinion.


This might make AURaptor sad; he LOVED where we were just before it burst! Our economy was ON FIRE!!!

alas, we had no fire insurance...


The laughing Chrisisall


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Thursday, September 16, 2010 7:59 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:

If the 1970s taught us anything its that the US can NEVER recover from tough economic times.


Oh, we'll recover all right. But our economic patellas have been broken. We'll never run quite as well again.


The laughing Chrisisall


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Thursday, September 16, 2010 8:20 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Chris: re both posts!


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
Contracted Agent of Veritas Oilspillus, code name “Nike”,
signing off




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Friday, September 17, 2010 5:21 AM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Maybe it was the downturn you needed to have. Too much spending, too much consuming. It can't go on for ever, you know.



..."Needed" to have?

You know, much as I do sympathize with people in other nations who have been hit by the economic downturn, and much as I agree this whole mess has been "our" bad (or at least the bad of the greedy thugs stealing left and right), I draw the line at outright wishing other people ill.

I'm bothered by the "you guys suck, you deserve it" mentality. We are not all rich assholes responsible for this problem. People are starving and dying here, not as bad as a third world nation, but they are. There was a while there people couldn't collect from our unemployment support programs, people have been worried about being able to buy food, water has been shut off in some city neighborhoods that have been hit hard, making hygiene and disease a huge concern, electricity was also shut off, which in summer, without AC, can be a bad proposition for people, and now we're heading into winter when those same people won't have heating.

And apparently you think we need to suffer to teach us a lesson about our buying habits. Yeah. Thanks.

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Monday, September 27, 2010 11:07 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:

..."Needed" to have?

You know, much as I do sympathize with people in other nations who have been hit by the economic downturn, and much as I agree this whole mess has been "our" bad (or at least the bad of the greedy thugs stealing left and right), I draw the line at outright wishing other people ill.

I'm bothered by the "you guys suck, you deserve it" mentality. We are not all rich assholes responsible for this problem. People are starving and dying here, not as bad as a third world nation, but they are. There was a while there people couldn't collect from our unemployment support programs, people have been worried about being able to buy food, water has been shut off in some city neighborhoods that have been hit hard, making hygiene and disease a huge concern, electricity was also shut off, which in summer, without AC, can be a bad proposition for people, and now we're heading into winter when those same people won't have heating.

And apparently you think we need to suffer to teach us a lesson about our buying habits. Yeah. Thanks.


Wow, defensive what?

If your system relies on consuming/owning most of the world's resources, before your citizens do not starve or suffer then I'd say it was a pretty poor system. It should be possible to weather economic downturns, which any free marketeer will tell you are just inevitable 'adjustments' without people suffering catastrophically. If they are, then the system is broke, from where I stand.

I don't agree with the expectation that we all have to ride high on economic growth, it's not sustainable in any system, and as the resources of the world diminish and populations increase, then the down turns will only get worse if we continue on our current path.

I'd like to see the resources and the wealth distributed a little more equitably throughout the world, and maybe that goes for within countries as well. I'd like to see a system that doesn't rely on continuous growth as being the norm. I'd like to see a graph that didn't show the US and other Western nations as being so much wealthier and consuming so many more resources than most of the nations of the world, but I also know that they can't play catch up to our way of living without us really falling short on resources very soon.

I'd love for all this to be done because it was the right way to live, but I also see that people don't decide to downsize their standard of living on mass unless they are sometimes forced into it. Just because I don't wish to see the US return to its former levels of economic growth, doesn't mean I wish starvation on any human in this world, and I'm insulted that you have attributed that to me.

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Tuesday, September 28, 2010 1:35 AM

JONGSSTRAW


I don't see the general economy sparking back to life for a long, long, time. Businesses are discovering that they really don't need all the workers they let go. They're finding new efficiencies, and they know they have a "grateful" workforce do deliver the same work as before, just with less employees.

Also, we've had extremely LOW interest rates in place now for a long time, years already. Record low mortgage rates, and record low business loans, yet these low rates are not stimulating anything. I think the Fed has screwed up the ecomony something terrible. Businesses are simply not borrowing money to grow, and individual Americans are not buying homes and automobiles at the low rates either. These low rates have stymied the economy.






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Wednesday, September 29, 2010 12:19 AM

AURAPTOR

America loves a winner!


Quote:

Originally posted by chrisisall:
Quote:

Originally posted by Niki2:

I think we'll bounce back, most of the time we do; I don't think it'll ever be to the extent we had in the '50s and '60s, OR (hopefully!) to where we were before the BushBubble burst, but we'll be okay in the long run. That's just my opinion.


This might make AURaptor sad; he LOVED where we were just before it burst! Our economy was ON FIRE!!!

alas, we had no fire insurance...





What 'BushBubble' are you referring ? If you mean Housing, then that's the Barney Frank/ Chris Dodd bubble, because they and the sub prime Dems are far more responsible for the collapse, not Bush.

"The modern definition of 'racist' is someone who is winning an argument with a liberal."


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Wednesday, September 29, 2010 12:39 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:

..."Needed" to have?

You know, much as I do sympathize with people in other nations who have been hit by the economic downturn, and much as I agree this whole mess has been "our" bad (or at least the bad of the greedy thugs stealing left and right), I draw the line at outright wishing other people ill.

I'm bothered by the "you guys suck, you deserve it" mentality. We are not all rich assholes responsible for this problem. People are starving and dying here, not as bad as a third world nation, but they are. There was a while there people couldn't collect from our unemployment support programs, people have been worried about being able to buy food, water has been shut off in some city neighborhoods that have been hit hard, making hygiene and disease a huge concern, electricity was also shut off, which in summer, without AC, can be a bad proposition for people, and now we're heading into winter when those same people won't have heating.

And apparently you think we need to suffer to teach us a lesson about our buying habits. Yeah. Thanks.


Wow, defensive what?

If your system relies on consuming/owning most of the world's resources, before your citizens do not starve or suffer then I'd say it was a pretty poor system. It should be possible to weather economic downturns, which any free marketeer will tell you are just inevitable 'adjustments' without people suffering catastrophically. If they are, then the system is broke, from where I stand.

I don't agree with the expectation that we all have to ride high on economic growth, it's not sustainable in any system, and as the resources of the world diminish and populations increase, then the down turns will only get worse if we continue on our current path.

I'd like to see the resources and the wealth distributed a little more equitably throughout the world, and maybe that goes for within countries as well. I'd like to see a system that doesn't rely on continuous growth as being the norm. I'd like to see a graph that didn't show the US and other Western nations as being so much wealthier and consuming so many more resources than most of the nations of the world, but I also know that they can't play catch up to our way of living without us really falling short on resources very soon.

I'd love for all this to be done because it was the right way to live, but I also see that people don't decide to downsize their standard of living on mass unless they are sometimes forced into it. Just because I don't wish to see the US return to its former levels of economic growth, doesn't mean I wish starvation on any human in this world, and I'm insulted that you have attributed that to me.



Magons, I see no "defensiveness", I see an effort at bringing perspective to the discussion. I would venture to say that MOST Americans have neither created or furthered the system of which you speak. It was created long, long ago by politicains and businesses, and yes, it's stupid that so many Americans bought into it, but there are social reasons why many were also manipulated or FORCED into living in such a waythat it perpetuates the system.

I agree with EVERYTHING you said in this last post, word for word, except I don't think Byte meant to "insult" you...I think she was expressing her frustration that America seems to get blamed for everything wrong in the world, when in actuality it isn't the average American person who's responsible, much as it may seem that way at times.

In other words, I agree with both of you and see no defensiveness, only frustration.


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
Contracted Agent of Veritas Oilspillus, code name “Nike”,
signing off




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Thursday, September 30, 2010 12:07 PM

DREAMTROVE


I see everyone agrees that we're going down. There's an old adage in economics that whenever everyone agrees on something, they have to be wrong.

Meanwhile, for those who haven't seen it, this:


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Thursday, September 30, 2010 12:22 PM

DREAMTROVE


Magon,

while I appreciate the right wing rant, [/snark] I don't suspect that a real shortage of resources is at play or that anyone needs to lower their standard of living so that others can increase theirs.

This is a free market issue, in which the control and lack of a free market has led to both the excesses and the imbalance you perceive. If govt. holds the power over finance the result is that it will give a disproportionate amount to itself and its friends, and the word that tipped me here was "force." If the market were truly a free market than the balance of influence of India and China would surely more than offset that of Europe and N. America. No one needs to force anyone to do anything, we just collectively need to recognize that the perception of wealth is what is key here.

The US possesses dollars which the rest of the world values out of proportion because of undue political influence of govts. who are beholden to international economic financial interest more than just our economic propaganda campaign. It does not logically follow that the US has any more economic influence than, India, because we own the dollar and they own the Rupee. I'm sure that in time the balance will definitely show things the other way. The influence of international bankers is bound to have more effect in this environment than any single player in the field.

If you haven't already, you might want to check out Hayek, and esp. G.K. Chesterton
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:

..."Needed" to have?

You know, much as I do sympathize with people in other nations who have been hit by the economic downturn, and much as I agree this whole mess has been "our" bad (or at least the bad of the greedy thugs stealing left and right), I draw the line at outright wishing other people ill.

I'm bothered by the "you guys suck, you deserve it" mentality. We are not all rich assholes responsible for this problem. People are starving and dying here, not as bad as a third world nation, but they are. There was a while there people couldn't collect from our unemployment support programs, people have been worried about being able to buy food, water has been shut off in some city neighborhoods that have been hit hard, making hygiene and disease a huge concern, electricity was also shut off, which in summer, without AC, can be a bad proposition for people, and now we're heading into winter when those same people won't have heating.

And apparently you think we need to suffer to teach us a lesson about our buying habits. Yeah. Thanks.


Wow, defensive what?

If your system relies on consuming/owning most of the world's resources, before your citizens do not starve or suffer then I'd say it was a pretty poor system. It should be possible to weather economic downturns, which any free marketeer will tell you are just inevitable 'adjustments' without people suffering catastrophically. If they are, then the system is broke, from where I stand.

I don't agree with the expectation that we all have to ride high on economic growth, it's not sustainable in any system, and as the resources of the world diminish and populations increase, then the down turns will only get worse if we continue on our current path.

I'd like to see the resources and the wealth distributed a little more equitably throughout the world, and maybe that goes for within countries as well. I'd like to see a system that doesn't rely on continuous growth as being the norm. I'd like to see a graph that didn't show the US and other Western nations as being so much wealthier and consuming so many more resources than most of the nations of the world, but I also know that they can't play catch up to our way of living without us really falling short on resources very soon.

I'd love for all this to be done because it was the right way to live, but I also see that people don't decide to downsize their standard of living on mass unless they are sometimes forced into it. Just because I don't wish to see the US return to its former levels of economic growth, doesn't mean I wish starvation on any human in this world, and I'm insulted that you have attributed that to me.


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Thursday, September 30, 2010 7:24 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by dreamtrove:
Magon,

while I appreciate the right wing rant, [/snark] I don't suspect that a real shortage of resources is at play or that anyone needs to lower their standard of living so that others can increase theirs.

This is a free market issue, in which the control and lack of a free market has led to both the excesses and the imbalance you perceive. If govt. holds the power over finance the result is that it will give a disproportionate amount to itself and its friends, and the word that tipped me here was "force." If the market were truly a free market than the balance of influence of India and China would surely more than offset that of Europe and N. America. No one needs to force anyone to do anything, we just collectively need to recognize that the perception of wealth is what is key here.

The US possesses dollars which the rest of the world values out of proportion because of undue political influence of govts. who are beholden to international economic financial interest more than just our economic propaganda campaign. It does not logically follow that the US has any more economic influence than, India, because we own the dollar and they own the Rupee. I'm sure that in time the balance will definitely show things the other way. The influence of international bankers is bound to have more effect in this environment than any single player in the field.

If you haven't already, you might want to check out Hayek, and esp. G.K. Chesterton
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism




Dreamtrove, I could not agree with you less. I don't believe in an unregulated market and would put the blame on the GFC directly on the lack of effective regulation on the US financial markets which behaved like criminals and racketeers and were able to do it legally. In case you are not aware, Australia is one of the countries that has not been dramatically effected by the GFC to date, and the reasons include our regulated banking industry that did not have a sub prime market, the government funded stimulus package, and the mining boom. A mixture of government intervention and market forces.

Free marketers have this reference for the 'market', so that it's almost a holy entity, not to be sullied by mischevious government intervention. I've never really understood that reverence for any system, frankly, most having their strengths and weaknesses. Free market certainly does encourage strong business growth and prosperity, although I'd argue that prosperity doesn't necessarily mean for the bulk of the population. You see that in Asia a lot, strong economies but lots of poverty. Free market also relies on continuous growth and unlimited/undiscovered resources. It was probably at its strongest when the world was a 'larger' place and their was still unclaimed terrorities (bugger the Indigenous population - whatever use did they make of the land) and minerals and resources to be discovered. The trouble is there is no wild west anymore, and the resources are finite, so a system based entirely on economic growth is not only doomed, it's immoral.


We need to find a way to live with zero growth, a sustainable economy that doesn't create chaos and hardship for the general population.

By the way, in the link dDistributism does not look like your type of theory.

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Friday, October 1, 2010 10:49 PM

DREAMTROVE


Magon

Govt. regulation is interference on behalf of corporations, sometimes on behalf of some corporations at the expense of others, often in fact. However, in spite of your opening, you appear to almost completely agree with me.

Your asian reference is off, however. The poverty did not come *after* the prosperity of some, but rather was the prior state of everyone, and the prosperity of some is new, due to the introduction of free markets.

Of course free markets are not shrines, and a market totally unfettered by interference would lend itself to monopoly, but that's just a flaw in the design of the currency system. Any interference by the govt., which is, not just happens to be, but has to be, the arm of some corporation or other, and so could never be a neutral beneficent force.

Australia just has a better economic structure because it does not have a federal reserve system as the US, and now Europe. It's just a state in which the govt. has not yet been able to regulate markets to that degree yet. If the Australian market were more regulated by govt and less free, it would become like ours, and in time, it probably will, unless you have a more educated electorate.

Quote:

Free market also relies on continuous growth and unlimited/undiscovered resources.


Ah, this is the source of confusion. Those are not really free markets, but "international free trade" which was never free, but a fancy new name for imperialism that the Brits came up with to defend the opium wars in China. Of course, British Imperials could be looked at as govt. regulation of economies, or alternatively, as a corporatist system of govt-corporate monopoly merger.

At any rate, you seem to be falling heavily on the Hayek side, and not Keynes here, so I take it we agree, and I'm glad you followed the Chesterton link.

Welcome to the Tea Party ;)

Oh, and if you're confused, don't worry, it's completely natural. It's confusing at first. Soon you'll see we're really all on the same side, except for those nuts who think we're being invaded by immigrants, I suspect they're just ignorant. But it's not really a govt. totalitarian state control of an intellectual elite which you seek, but rather freedom from an imperial monopolistic domination, am I correct? If so, then we're really after the same thing.

(Funny side note, I said before reading this link that left in Australia was right in the US ;) )

Oh, another footnote: Govt., if given the power to regulate markets on an absolute scale will almost instantly be taken over by whatever the most powerful moneyed interests already exist. Govt, afterall, is also not a shrine, but the identical humans in a slightly different, more rigid and domineering form of organization (a) The USSR could be looked at as a state run by an oil company. and (b) I suspect the most influential person in Australia is Rupert Murdoch. Make what you will of that.

Also, this, from the link

c) "While socialism allows no individuals to own productive property (it all being under state, community, or workers' control), distributism itself seeks to ensure that most people will become owners of productive property."

and

d) "Distributism favors the elimination of the current private bank system, or in any case, its profit-making basis."

and

e) "Embodying the philosophy explained by Chesterton, above, that too much capitalism means too few capitalists, not too many, America's extensive system of anti-trust legislation seeks to prevent the concentration of market power in a given industry into too-few hands."

I suspect any informed tea partier would agree with all three of these points. However, the only role I see for govt. in regulating banks would be in the initial set up of the currency system, or in anti-trust, since a constant federal regulation of the economy such as we have in the US would inevitably lead to a bank-controlled govt. control of banks, which brings us back to the beginning of this whole cycle.

I hope you see that some of us on the right are not in fact nuts and wrong, but coming at it from a different angle, and part of that angle is an assumption, based on some experience, that govt. is ultimately corruptible, and that such corruption is inevitable.

As for capitalism, I'll just close with this one

"Capitalism should have died a natural death with the birth of the industrial revolution" - Henry Ford.

(Ford meant, of course, that it should have given way to a new economic system of industrialism, which rewarded industrial behavior, to replace capitalism, which rewards the existence of extant capital, which is held by a perennial wealthy elite. I suppose under this logic, it should now give way to "informationalism.") Ford probably would have entertained socialism as well, he just would have been wrong, as he was on many occasions, but his grasp of economics was pretty strong.

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Saturday, October 2, 2010 2:59 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by dreamtrove:
Magon

Govt. regulation is interference on behalf of corporations, sometimes on behalf of some corporations at the expense of others, often in fact. However, in spite of your opening, you appear to almost completely agree with me.


That's your system, because your politicans are so aligned with the corps who pay them off. Government regulation is government regulation - the less regulation, the more power the corporations have as in the USA.

Quote:

Your asian reference is off, however. The poverty did not come *after* the prosperity of some, but rather was the prior state of everyone, and the prosperity of some is new, due to the introduction of free markets.

Many Asian markets have had free market economies for many years. My point was about the inequities that often exist in free market economies, where you can have wealthy nations but lots of poverty. Trickle down economics is a myth.

Quote:

Of course free markets are not shrines, and a market totally unfettered by interference would lend itself to monopoly, but that's just a flaw in the design of the currency system.
Agreed.
Quote:

Any interference by the govt., which is, not just happens to be, but has to be, the arm of some corporation or other, and so could never be a neutral beneficent force.

I don't see that my government is totally in the hands of the corporations, not saying that lobbyists are not powerful, but I still believe they represent their electorates. Call me an idealist

Quote:

Australia just has a better economic structure because it does not have a federal reserve system as the US, and now Europe. It's just a state in which the govt. has not yet been able to regulate markets to that degree yet. If the Australian market were more regulated by govt and less free, it would become like ours, and in time, it probably will, unless you have a more educated electorate.

Nope. The Reserve Bank of Australia http://www.rba.gov.au/


Quote:

Ah, this is the source of confusion. Those are not really free markets, but "international free trade" which was never free, but a fancy new name for imperialism that the Brits came up with to defend the opium wars in China. Of course, British Imperials could be looked at as govt. regulation of economies, or alternatively, as a corporatist system of govt-corporate monopoly merger.

Free market http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_market = free trade http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_trade, it's just the international arm of what happens locally. Businesses rely on growth and expansion. It's how they measure success.

Quote:

At any rate, you seem to be falling heavily on the Hayek side, and not Keynes here, so I take it we agree, and I'm glad you followed the Chesterton link.

Welcome to the Tea Party ;)

Oh, and if you're confused, don't worry, it's completely natural. It's confusing at first.


Yeah, well I remember having a confusing discussion with you about how nazis were left winged, so I'd say YOU were the confused one here. Whatever way we were taught, it's clear that our world views are chalk and cheese. I generally consider myself to be keynsian, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keynesian_economics if anything at all, favouring a mixed economy of regulated free markets, but I see that all these theories are now outdated, given the world population and the increasingly limited availability of resources. These days I align myself somewhere between the views of the left and the Greens. http://greens.org.au/policies/sustainable-economy/economics

Quote:

Soon you'll see we're really all on the same side, except for those nuts who think we're being invaded by immigrants, I suspect they're just ignorant. But it's not really a govt. totalitarian state control of an intellectual elite which you seek, but rather freedom from an imperial monopolistic domination, am I correct? If so, then we're really after the same thing.

I don't have your views on government, so I guess we're not really on the same page. I'm not sure what I would believe in the US, given the situation there, which frankly I don't really understand. here, I don't see government as a force for evil, any more than I see corporations as intrinsically evil. I like a system where there is checks on the power of any organisation, and actually I see that government is less powerful than corporations. Government here actually has a regulatatory affect on corporations, which is why they are always at each others throat. I think that is a good thing.


Quote:

(Funny side note, I said before reading this link that left in Australia was right in the US ;) )

I'm not sure what to make of that statement. It appears to those of us outside the US that your country has veered wildly to the right in recent years, and Obama has just moved you a smidgeon back to the centre. Our 'right' would be left of the Deomcrats and our 'left' would probably be considered communist by many of your guys.


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Saturday, October 2, 2010 3:24 PM

CHRISISALL


I don't disagree on any particular point, Miss.


The laughing Chrisisall


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Saturday, October 2, 2010 3:53 PM

KLESST


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Trickle down economics is a myth.



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Saturday, October 2, 2010 9:10 PM

DREAMTROVE


Magon,

1. Americans are not particularly different from anyone else, it's logical to assume that what would happen here would happen anywhere with anyone who followed the same path. In fact, the completely consistent pattern of disaster with socialist statism around the globe seems to back this up, as does the pattern of imperialism. The French in Algeria and the Japanese in Manchuria are not identical to the Dutch in South Africa, but the pattern of the relationships is consistent with imperialism, and people shouldn't expect radically different result if they decide to enact an imperialist ideology.

2. You're completely correct that trickle down economics is a myth. It's one of my gripes with Obama and one of his own idols, Reagan. An Indian I saw once did a clever skit on this which I've since seen imitated, recently I think it was the daily show, but the thrust of it was that the wealthy consume the fine wines, and an hour later, it will trickle down on the poor.

However, the long term free market nations of asia have by far the best wealth distributions in the region (Japan, Taiwan, SK)

The disparities of NK/SK are not caused by the south Korean free market any more than the poverty of western china is caused by the emerging middle class of eastern china. In both cases, the poverty is caused by the decayed ideology of communism. In southeast asia, the communist influence is pronounced, and at the very least keeping people poor.

If you want talk Indonesia, you have a point, but it's not like I'm advocating the Guanji as a solid economic system. (I suspect it would be more fair to blame the local economics than imperialism at this point, though I would accept the other as a valid argument.)

If by your govt. you mean Australia (you live in the UK right?) then I would say it was age and size. America was also once not as corrupt, though it has been very corrupt before. Australia is doing much better than most places, and the UK is doing better than Europe and almost everyone better than the US, but I'm not sure this is really necessarily due to design of the system.

The american structure is surprising in its resistance to being broken down by neocons and globalists into a slave state. Sure, they will succeed, but I think our constitution has given them a lot of trouble. But it's also worth noting why we have such a problem in this manner: America has lots of power, military and economic, and these globalists want that. I suspect that their next target is China, and with any luck (from an american perspective) they will give up on the US and leave us alone (I actually think the best hope is to convince them that we're ignorant and useless. Though then they might just rape us for natural resources. Ack. Maybe that's what they're already doing.)

I don't know a lot about the Australian central bank, but my understanding is that is a bank, and not a privately held consortium of corporations foreign and domestic, which is what we have here. If it's similar to ours in its regulatory power over the economy, than I would imagine that long term you would have trouble.

My understanding is that the only system which operates similar to ours is new Euro consortium. Ours is nearly 100 years old, and its becoming a more serious problem as time progresses, as it gains absolute control over the economy. Whether or not it is part of the US govt. is probably not significant, (it's not) rather its ability to influence the economy and its power over us is the part which creates a market no longer free. As I frequently put it, it's like playing monopoly when one player is allowed to deal himself endless cash from the bank.


From your own link:
Quote:


Free Trade. Not to be confused with Free market.



The distinction is subtle, but important.

Free trade is the lack of trade barriers. This would be fine except for the manner in which it enables imperialism.

The Free market is the free exchange of parties without govt. control except to the protection of property (from your link) This is pretty much accurate. The free market is our ability to swing our business arms without hitting anyone else's business nose. Its opposition would be a govt. controlled economy.

Since a there is no difference between a govt. and an armed monopolistic corporation, the former would have to be preferable to the latter, since the latter is the former's worst case scenario.

Some interference is actually necessary to prevent monopoly, but as I see govt. as ultimately corrupt, I would prefer to see this more inherent to the design of the system.

Another very very important difference:

The free market is an ancient system of economic trade. Free Trade is the name of a globalist policy which has recently been developed and implemented (over the last 150 years or so, but slowly and incrementally.) Free Trade is really imperialism, or in the view of some, a step towards one world govt., which I suspect is just another tool of imperialism.


Quote:

Yeah, well I remember having a confusing discussion with you about how nazis were left winged,


I don't recall the discussion, but the fact that the National Socialist NSDAP was the left wing party on the ticket, solidly believed in, supported and enacted left wing policies is not a question which is in any credible dispute.

One could argue that the Nazi's left wing economic model was superior to that of the right wing Wiemar Republic's free market policies, but that's not the claim you just made.

I'm surprised you consider yourself a Keynesian. It doesn't strike me that your statements would lead me to this conclusion.

I think the Greens are economically naive but well intentioned. I frequently vote for them as a protest vote, but I'd seriously reconsider if I thought they had any chance of winning. Mostly I want the numbers to demonstrate support for the environment, even if I agree more with a Tory approach to environmentalism (Remember I assume that govt. is always corrupt, and so any govt. agency such as the EPA is automatically an office of the industry, so govt. regulation is the literal handing of environmental stewardship to the same corporations who are damaging the Earth)

Quote:


I like a system where there is checks on the power of any organisation, and actually I see that government is less powerful than corporations. Government here actually has a regulatatory affect on corporations, which is why they are always at each others throat. I think that is a good thing.



I so disagree with this analysis. Ironically, I think we want a fairly similar end result for society. Here are a couple points:

1. Govt. is automatically more powerful than a corporation:
a) It has a military
b) It can interfere in the actions of anyone and exile or imprison them
c) It can tax the population directly, and even issue its own currency.

Until a corporation can do this, it's nowhere near as powerful as govt.

2. Govt. and corporations are not separate from one another, so any regulatory agency will belong to the corporate interests that elected the govt. within one or two election cycles. This has been demonstrated repeatedly, and in American legal circles is actually not particularly disputed.

I don't imagine the reality is very different anywhere else, except that in any smaller system, economic corruption is likely to move at a slower pace. This is why empires like the USSR and China decay so quickly, whereas small states like Austria and the Czech Republic seem relatively stable. I would figure that Australia, being similar in size, demographics, etc. to Canada would decay at a similar rate. Canada right now is just starting to go the way America did around the time of Reagan. I don't know about Australia, I would guess that Mr. Murdock probably has more than his share of influence there, he certainly does here.

3. I don't think govts. and corporations are at each other's throats, unless it is a partisan dispute of a blue corporation and a red govt. or the other way around. But largely, I think that such disputes are all for show, like Obama's phony battle with BP, or Bush's conflicts with the Telecoms. I suspect there are minor disputes buried in this, such as "you didn't give me enough cash" or "you didn't grant us the power you said you would."

A lot is going on there, but one thing I don't think is going on is that corporations and govt. are at odds (except in minor cases like the US govt. vs. Stem Cell Research. Notice that both Bush and Obama openly stated their support for the industry many times while legislatively undermining it. I guess their statements of support were probably the tip off: Everything a politician says is probably a lie, it's just like advertising: If it were true, there would be no need to say it.)

I also don't think there's any difference between Bush and Obama, as govts. or administrations. As people I think there's quite a bit of difference. It's also possible that president is just not a very powerful position so a change in president doesn't make for a change in policy. It's also possible that these are both very weak men, and if that's the case, perhaps that's why they were selected as candidates by our media.

I've met a lot of Australians. They're a very aimiable lot, I'm very fond. I don't have any serious political disagreements with them. I also know a lot of people on the American left. They all seem to think that Australian liberals are basically moderate republicans. That's where I get the impression. I've never met an Australian who was remotely communist. I've met a few who thought they were socialists, but they tend to really be more libertarian.

What I found more interesting was that you consider yourself to be on the left, which seems from my perspective to be more self-labeling than anything to do with your positions. Perhaps the same is true of myself, in the other direction.

I also think the left right continuum of politics is a radical oversimplification, and may have become utterly useless.

One more point about regulation though, and I think this is key. It's not that there's a difference in the nature of populations or govts. It's a Nietzschian concept: If there was a regulatory agency which controlled the actions of an industry, than those most affected by its actions, being the industry itself, would put the most effort into obtaining the positions of leadership in that agency.

Ergo, the corruption of regulation is not a state or quirk, but absolutely inherent in the concept of regulation, and, ergo, an unavoidable end result.

I agree there need to be limits on the excesses of industry, and am personally particularly concerned with energy and agriculture and hell, I'll throw in medicine and also the financial sector. However, I hardly think that handing them the power to limit their own power is a viable solution. On the contrary, I think it's a recipe for disaster.

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Saturday, October 2, 2010 10:38 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Magon,

1. Americans are not particularly different from anyone else, it's logical to assume that what would happen here would happen anywhere with anyone who followed the same path


I used to think that America was a lot like us, but the more I read from posters, the more I see the difference in beliefs and systems. Not surprising, really, that there would be differences. Same as if I went to China or Malaysia or Sweden. Countries have different systems of government that make differences. Of course we’re all globally linked through international finance. Bummer that.

Quote:

The disparities of NK/SK are not caused by the south Korean free market any more than the poverty of western china is caused by the emerging middle class of eastern china. In both cases, the poverty is caused by the decayed ideology of communism. In southeast asia, the communist influence is pronounced, and at the very least keeping people poor.
Not all countries are former communist countries in south east asia, but most are former colonies and I would agree that that has contributed towards the poverty. You contradict yourself somewhat in your post by saying that you don’t agree with trickle down economics, which is one of the foundations of free trade ideology...the concept that if a society is left alone from government regulation, prosperity for all will follow a good solid economy. What I am trying to demonstrate is that you can have a good strong economy and lots of poverty. Those Asian countries often do not have social security or decent universal health - so there is little chance of social mobility.

Quote:

If by your govt. you mean Australia (you live in the UK right?)
Are you saying that Australia is a part of the UK???????? I live in Australia and am Australian and have nothing to do with the Uk other than I once lived there. Sometimes I talk about the UK or the US...usually in a very ill informed manner

{quote]then I would say it was age and size. America was also once not as corrupt, though it has been very corrupt before. Australia is doing much better than most places, and the UK is doing better than Europe and almost everyone better than the US, but I'm not sure this is really necessarily due to design of the system.

Well no, it’s been pretty much established by everyone in reality world that the fact we are doing ok is exactly as stated in my previous post, well regulated financial system, the government funded stimulus package and the mining boom. But you believe what you will.

Quote:

I don't know a lot about the Australian central bank, but my understanding is that is a bank, and not a privately held consortium of corporations foreign and domestic, which is what we have here. If it's similar to ours in its regulatory power over the economy, than I would imagine that long term you would have trouble.
if you follow the link, you will see that it is a financial regulatory arm of the government. Hence we have a regulated banking system. Regulated meaning government regulated.


Quote:

Free trade is the lack of trade barriers. This would be fine except for the manner in which it enables imperialism.
so would you suggest tariffs then? How would someone who does not believe in government intervention prevent the imperialism that inevitable results from free trade.

Quote:

The free market is an ancient system of economic trade. Free Trade is the name of a globalist policy which has recently been developed and implemented (over the last 150 years or so, but slowly and incrementally.) Free Trade is really imperialism, or in the view of some, a step towards one world govt., which I suspect is just another tool of imperialism.
they are both as old as each other. Countries have traded freely, or not so freely depending on the authority of the times, for as long as people have been bartering. There is no ideological difference, although you may not like the outcome of one as much as the other. You are either anti government interference or you see that it has its uses in certain circumstances.

Quote:

I don't recall the discussion, but the fact that the National Socialist NSDAP was the left wing party on the ticket, solidly believed in, supported and enacted left wing policies is not a question which is in any credible dispute.

One could argue that the Nazi's left wing economic model was superior to that of the right wing Wiemar Republic's free market policies, but that's not the claim you just made.


Yes, this is when I realise how difficult it is to have a meaningful discussion with you, when we can’t even agree on the fundamental building blocks of meaning. Clearly we have been taught history in a way that does not even interface on any level and it’s like we are arguing apples and oranges, except that you see oranges as being blue.

Quote:

I'm surprised you consider yourself a Keynesian. It doesn't strike me that your statements would lead me to this conclusion.
I’m not sure which bit is confusing - I generally support a mixed economy – free market with regulation from government – isn’t that quite clearly Keynesian, unless you also have a different meaning attached to that as well.

Quote:

I think the Greens are economically naive but well intentioned. I frequently vote for them as a protest vote, but I'd seriously reconsider if I thought they had any chance of winning. Mostly I want the numbers to demonstrate support for the environment, even if I agree more with a Tory approach to environmentalism (Remember I assume that govt. is always corrupt, and so any govt. agency such as the EPA is automatically an office of the industry, so govt. regulation is the literal handing of environmental stewardship to the same corporations who are damaging the Earth)

Me too, truthfully. Currently they hold a very powerful position here, so we’ll see how they perform in power.

Quote:

1. Govt. is automatically more powerful than a corporation:
a) It has a military
b) It can interfere in the actions of anyone and exile or imprison them
c) It can tax the population directly, and even issue its own currency.

Until a corporation can do this, it's nowhere near as powerful as govt.


I guess I see our government being quite powerless in the face of the IMF and the international financial world. These influences are extremely pernicious and drive government policies more than any other interest groups here. The fact for us is that a collapse in a financial sector impacts on our economics and hence our daily realities more than any government policy, and the government is forced to react but they are powerless to actually do much but tinker around the edges of a largely free trade world, hoping to either keep the countries competitive edge, or build a barrier to a world wide financial tsunami (which is what they did. Opting out is not an option.

Quote:

2. Govt. and corporations are not separate from one another, so any regulatory agency will belong to the corporate interests that elected the govt. within one or two election cycles. This has been demonstrated repeatedly, and in American legal circles is actually not particularly disputed.

From the sounds of things, that is more a problem in your electoral system than ours. Not saying that it’s not a concern, but it’s quite different the way people get elected and the power of lobbyists.

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I've met a lot of Australians. They're a very aimiable lot, I'm very fond.
Some of us are amiable and some of us are not. We’re almost like individuals in that way.

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I don't have any serious political disagreements with them. I also know a lot of people on the American left. They all seem to think that Australian liberals are basically moderate republicans
Well they’d be very wrong. Both parties support welfare and universal health, both agree with government regulation in many many areas, neither support liberal gun laws, both are largely secular adn unaligned to any religious groups. Actually there is little between them. The Liberals tend to be perceived as more business friendly and Labor as more union/worker friendly.
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I've never met an Australian who was remotely communist. I've met a few who thought they were socialists, but they tend to really be more libertarian.
Libertarian views are quite rare here. Perhaps those people moved to the states for political reasons.

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What I found more interesting was that you consider yourself to be on the left, which seems from my perspective to be more self-labeling than anything to do with your positions. Perhaps the same is true of myself, in the other direction.
Here I would be considered slightly left of centre, slightly aligned to the greens. Over in the US, I’d probably be considered more hardline left. Who knows?

Quote:

I also think the left right continuum of politics is a radical oversimplification, and may have become utterly useless.

The definitions are clearly different here than in the US, but I see the four cornered spectrum as being more useful. Generally, they appeared to be used to insult people, as far as I can see.



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Sunday, October 3, 2010 4:31 PM

DREAMTROVE


Magon

I think that it's more that we have different experiences from different parts of our similar structure: For instance, our military has a callous disregard for the well being of its troops, gets involved in large scale conflicts with technologically unsophisticated poorer nations and uses the majority of our tax dollars. It also has a huge industry supporting it, and a large media propaganda campaign. This means that attitudes towards the military in the US will be different than it will be in Australia or Japan. But that doesn't mean that the people of the US are any more pro-war, or imperialistic in their viewpoints.

I will second your bummer that

Quote:

trickle down economics, which is one of the foundations of free trade ideology


I disagree with this statement. Obama is strongly in favor of it, as was Reagan. I think it comes from Keynes, but it's a tenet of certain types of capitalism that tend to be pro big business. I'm not anti big business, but I can still independently hold that trickle down economics is a fallacy, regardless of whether a democrat or republican is supporting it. I'll grant that it's not a tenet of communism ;) But that doesn't mean that I think it's correct.

I think we are both very familiar with the politics and economics of east asia, so there's no need to nitpick it, but I just have to a little bit, because we see some things slightly differently:

1. The successful economic growth co-existing with massive poverty is a result of states in transition in Asia. If you want a good example of this existing in perpetuity, America is an excellent example. Mexico is another. Since Mexico was long socialist and the US capitalist I suspect this is system-independent, and is just a measure of the level of corruption, which is very high in both of these N. American states, according to the CIA.

2.
Quote:


Those Asian countries often do not have social security or decent universal health - so there is little chance of social mobility.



I think this statement contains a conclusion which I would call conjecture, and would disagree with. The first part is true, of course, and I see this as a strength in these economies, and part of the reason that they possess far more social mobility than the US, which I think they do. I think the free market states of East Asia are a decent model for nations like the US to follow. I think the US is a terrible model for them to follow. I've posted here a whole lot of times that I rank Japan, Taiwan, Korea and Hong Kong very highly as economic models, though I have plenty of disagreements with each, nobody's perfect.

I felt fairly sure you said you lived in the UK for some time. Maybe I have you confused with another poster, but I don't think so.

Quote:

Well no, it’s been pretty much established by everyone in reality world


Check this arrogance at the door. An assumption that you know objective reality, or that everyone agrees with you, is a really dangerous concept, and an obstacle to reaching any kind of understanding. Jes saying...


Australia will always be doing well for the same reason Alaska will: An abundance of resources relative to population, no outside imperial dominance, and no large underclass. It really doesn't matter what system you guys implement. I don't think that any sane person would say that Alaska's prosperity is due to Sarah Palin.

Okay, sure, someone could probably fuck it up, but it would be hard.

So your banking system is somewhat like ours, except that it seems that your central bank is govt. connected whereas ours is a regulated private corporation, which of course controls its own regulation, and ends up regulating govt. (It's a worthwhile study, it's a total mess, regardless of which side you want to attack it from.)

Tariffs are the right of any sovereign nation, I'd certainly prefer them to an income tax or anything that impedes the national economy.

I never said I supported international free trade, esp. in its absolute form. Unchecked international free trade like the WTO wants to create *is* imperialism. It's no better than state-sponsored monopolies.

An important question I don't think you're asking yourself enough is *who* regulates. If there are to be limitations, it's necessary that the power to limit is also distributed. If you hand that power to a group that just renamed itself "govt." then you have just anointed some random corporation as god, and nothing good can possibly come of that.

Quote:

they are both as old as each other.


No, they aren't. "Free Trade" is a slogan referring to international free trade, it came from mid 19th c britain to defend its actions in the opium wars. It's used primarily by globalists to forward the WTO and other multinationals (EU, CAFTA, NAFTA, MEFTA, ASEAN, G8, G20, etc.) These are essentially the one worlders. A scary group. Collectively, we tend to cal them the NWO.

For a freemarketeer to oppose the NWO is not only not contradictory, it's logically mandated if they are well enough informed.

Also, this is not a new concept. Hayek et al well understood this nearly a century ago, the dangers of international finance in its unfettered economic imperialism, as well as the role that this played in major military conflicts.

Another point that you are missing here is that the NWO crowd are themselves socialists, not just an aspersion, they are self declared socialists, and they mean it. They intend to be the social engineers of our future. They just have more in common with Chinese communism than they do with Russian: They intend to use corporations, or corporate-govt. hybrids to achieve their ends. I'm not guessing of course, famous neocons and neolibs have been writing and publishing this nonsense for decades.

I'm anti-govt because a govt is a corporation elevated to absolute power, thus absolutely corrupted, but some sort of mitigation is indeed necessary to prevent monopoly. Personally, I'd prefer it to be a system of more competing currencies that had better designed systems of protection. If anyone could create a currency system, then the best protected most stable ones would evolutionary replace the corrupt manipulative ones we now have.

The logical short of this is this:

A free market is chaos, which is an ideal environment for evolution.

A socially engineered market or society is intelligent design.

On the NSDAP as a left wing socialist party, this is not something that I was taught, since I have no education, but I do happen to know some prominent historians and I think I'm fairly well versed in this one, but there is absolutely no need to know much about it at all, since the historical facts are obvious. They were avowed socialists and leftists, and like all regimes of their kin in history, they were an unmitigated disaster. Only a truly deluded and biased academia would teach anything else. (Sure, I understand that there were people to the left of them, the communists, whom they despised. I think they probably thought of communists are russian spies, and also jews.) I would add that, while the NSDAP is generally maintained to be the worst govt. even, it's really tied for the position: Stalin and Mao definitely rank, and many smaller socialist regimes such as the Khmer Rouge were really just as bad. My own father's extended family was killed by the Nazis, but that's because they were in Czechoslovakia at the time. Had they been Ukrainian, they might just as easily have been slaughtered by the Soviets. It's far more six of one half a dozen of the other. I don't think pure evil can really be compared.

I also don't think that socialism has a monopoly on pure evil. I just think that it is a system which creates a far greater system of centralized power, so it enables the evil to do far more damage than they would under any other modern system. (In an older world, King Leopold was able to wreak quite a lot of havoc.)

The worst socialist regimes of today are the Congo and Ethiopia, though NK is pretty bad. The best are probably Syria and Cuba, though they have issues, doesn't everyone?

Socialism doesn't work because the underlying idea: That a small super intelligent elite can design society for the benefit of all, it's simply untrue: the people, collectively, are smarter than any elite. Also, the original core definition of socialism "A society based on cooperation, not competition, focusing on the collective, not the individual" is a totally flawed concept. The focus on the collective is the arrogance of assuming that leadership is capable of knowing what is best for all, while the allowing of no individuality not only stifles dissent and creativity, but blocks the input of the minds of the people. Moreover, the focus of cooperation is exactly the flaw which causes socialist societies to go most off base: Nazi Germany is nothing but cooperation. If everyone cooperates with insanity, the result is mass insanity (Cultural Revolution come to mind?) Competition is necessary not only because it is the founding block of evolution, but because bad ideas *require* opposition to prevent society from steering off course.

[/rant]

Sorry, I thought I needed to vent because I felt you weren't getting *why* the Nazis were evil. Everyone knows that they *were* evil, but few people look to far into how they got that way.


Keynes is clearly spelled out by Keynes. It's a philosophy of boosting the economy by encouraging consumption, and boosting production through an increase in employment, and the encouragement of that through govt. stimulus and investment.

He said it himself, CIG=Y, that's what it's all about. The video actually does a decent summary though it doesn't explain the formula of consumerism, it's pretty clear.

I think you trust govt., and I think that trust is misplaced. I also don't think you're nearly as left as you think you are.

I find your condescending tone very irritating. I actually take more issue with that than what you say.

Statements like this, which you have hurled plenty of:
Quote:


unless you also have a different meaning attached to that as well.



Are completely uncalled for in any forum for discussion, and disrupt civil debate.


Greens. Not all Green parties are equal of course. America has a bogus two party system in which two parties get to make all of the election regulations for everyone, so they orchestrate to keep everyone else out. This means that small parties are always filled with moles from major parties who are manipulating to help either try to use them to split a vote, or to prevent them from splitting a vote, which leads them to be less effective than they would be.

There's a general failure I see in this sort of Labor ideology though, which is the same as my feeling on govt: If you unionize everyone, the corporate heads would instantly appoint themselves or their lackeys as union leaders, the same as they would name themselves as govt. regulators.

These rats are very adept at jumping ships.

It's something they do so well that I think it's really quite safe to assume that they do it with 100% efficiency 100% of the time. You can call that cynical if you want, but I don't think it's at all delusional.

Quote:



I guess I see our government being quite powerless in the face of the IMF and the international financial world. These influences are extremely pernicious and drive government policies more than any other interest groups here. The fact for us is that a collapse in a financial sector impacts on our economics and hence our daily realities more than any government policy, and the government is forced to react but they are powerless to actually do much but tinker around the edges of a largely free trade world, hoping to either keep the countries competitive edge, or build a barrier to a world wide financial tsunami (which is what they did. Opting out is not an option.



I think we're going to agree again. The IMF, a financial regulator, is just about the most evil thing to cross the earth in recent years. I support anything that opposes them (even if they're communists) The IMF, together with other international financial regulators, WTO, World Bank, G8, G20, and the other major globalist organizations, such as the WHO, pretty close to pure evil. *(another reason I have sympathy for the Islamic Republic of Iran: They've successfully kept these goons at bay.)

If you want to understand US foreign policy, think of it this way:

The US is totally controlled by a private corporate consortium, a regulatory agency called the Federal Reserve, which runs US policy *intentionally* to create the maximum debt possible. It does this to give it total control over our top level policy decisions. It does this in order to use us as the Hit Man of the world. It does this to knock out opponents to globalism.

Here's the scariest image I've seen to date:



Check out that map and compare it to places the US has gone to war in the past 20 years. I think it's almost an exact match.

Iran is the most powerful independent economy left on the planet. Right now, Obama is at war in Kandahar and Balochistan because these are the last two places that we would need in order to completely surround Iran with military bases, which not only gives us attack options from every angle and enables us to attempt a siege, it more importantly enables us to block a flow of Chinese and Russian weapons in to defend Iran.

The globalist cartels have nothing short of world domination in mind.


Quote:


From the sounds of things, that is more a problem in your electoral system than ours. Not saying that it’s not a concern, but it’s quite different the way people get elected and the power of lobbyists.



Lucky you, though I suspect you don't have enough cheese on the table yet for these rats. I just indicated that they want the US military, that's why they infect us so ferociously, but also, we're a large empire, and easier to corrupt. Also, they've been at work at us for a century.

Quote:


Some of us are amiable and some of us are not. We’re almost like individuals in that way.



Nah, you're all amiable, and I hear all the men are hunks.

Quote:

Well they’d be very wrong.


And yet I've been in many such political conversations. Maybe those aren't the issues that come up.

Quote:

Libertarian views are quite rare here. Perhaps those people moved to the states for political reasons.


It's your country, but I have to say, it had to have become the national stereotype of Oz for a reason.

Remember, there are libertarians like myself who are fairly strongly anti-gun and very pro-immigrant.

I think here you would be politically confused. You seem to anchor yourself to old world leftist standbys, but hold what I would call a more or less tea party world view, even if that may scare you. Your stances against globalism and for independent or personal economic control, a lot of the stuff you posted here, esp. earlier, I would place you on the right, but politics are strange.

The worst measure of politics are wedge issues, not because they have no merit, but because most people who believe they believe in them really have only ever heard one side of the argument, because people tend to listen to the pundits and politicians who agree with them.

Most often the vertical is used the same way, to insult, since no one wants to be called authoritarian.

I would put in more like this:

Here are my four corners: (no one will believe ultimately in all of any of these, I suspect.)


Universal Equality. The core belief here is that everyone should be equal, have equal power, influence, assets, opportunities and control, regardless of any performance, achievements, situations of birth, transgressions, or position. This position would most likely require some form of enforcement to keep such equality in place.

Preservation of a Way of Life. This is often at odds with the U.E., it is based on the idea that each group or society has the right to determine its own rules and its own destiny without any interference from the outside, and to continue in perpetuity without having to cave to the demands of other groups.

Globalism. This is the belief that the world is only safe from tyranny, war, oppression and poverty if we share only one system for the entire planet, one economy, one currency, one govt., one set of rules, one language, one faith, and one unified goal of the correct course of action. This tends to ultimately preclude any independent divergent groups, and certainly any capable of self defense or independence.

Independence. This is the belief that the only safe world is one in which no one is attempting to enforce their beliefs on anyone else, and each of us is ultimately limited to the influence stated by the legal axiom that our right to swing my arms ends where your nose begins. If any governing bodies exist in such a world they can hold no power other than to prevent the take over of free societies from those who would seek to dominate others.


I suspect we're all somewhere in the middle of all of this. I think I would say that each person or group of people should have the right to decide what level of organization and management they want, and what kinds of relations they wish to have with other societies, and that each individual can decide to join any group that will have them, provided one simple rule which I think would prevent tyranny: Everyone has the right to leave the society which they are in.

Each society should start with a more or less equal share of resources, and be able to do what they want with them with some simple logical limits: They should not be allowed to damage the earth, as that would effect everyone else, and they should not be able to create either resource drains or pollution overflows that create automatic problems for other societies (They probably should not export population against the will of others, either, because, even though myself, I'm pro-open immigration, I can see that that will lead to problems, and probably wars) These simple restrictions could be a code that any society could sign to, which would grant them non-interference from other societies. If any and all societies were freely permitted to come to the aid of any society being unjustly oppressed by another, that would limit conflict. A push for less lethal military technology and more defensive anti-military systems would probably also help. Mostly, any kind of interference should be recognized as imperialism, including, or perhaps especially, financial. That's just a rough sketch of where I would put my ideal world balance. I wouldn't expect the societies of such a world to be at all similar in size or ideology. In fact, the more variety, the better, as that would give each citizen a wider choice over the type of society that he or she would want to live in.

Just stabbing in the dark here.

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Sunday, October 3, 2010 11:39 PM

AURAPTOR

America loves a winner!


Quote:

For instance, our military ....uses the majority of our tax dollars.


Nope. A common believed misnomer. Health, education and pensions take up more of the federal budget than does military spending.

http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/usgs_piecol.php?title=Total%20Spen
ding&year=2010&sname=&units=r&label=Pensions_Health%20Care_Education_Defense_Welfare_Other&fed=0.985897883_1.107228509_1.026283321_0.896189962_0.762304485_1.634801988


"The modern definition of 'racist' is someone who is winning an argument with a liberal."


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Monday, October 4, 2010 1:02 AM

MAL4PREZ


You'll note where Rappy goes for his information. That official sounding site he references, "usgovernmentspending" is actually propaganda built by Christopher Chantrill, "writer and conservative". Look into the site - Chantrill thinks the roaring twenties is The Way American Should Function, and the crash in 1929 was not related to anything anyone did in the twenties. I guess the evil govt somehow did something evil right then in Oct, 1929 that ended the party.

"Seventy years ago the leaders of both US political parties turned away from the policies that had created an economic powerhouse we call the Roaring Twenties....Today, after a twenty-five year economic boom, Americans are once more faced with a political elite that wants to monkey with success."

I'm amazed that folks like this guy can sit around blaming today's new policies for a crash that happened 2-3 years ago, when Bush was in office. Especially when the crash was so plainly caused by actions taken during the boom time, actions that made the boom happen but could not last.

Anyhow, this web site is put together by a conservative guy with an agenda and a tenuous hold on reality (funny Rap should be drawn to that kind of thing.) I wonder how Chantrill's interpretation of the US budget compares to posted government numbers... I'd post a few interesting comparisons I've already found, but I have got to get out the door, and this site is blocked at work.

Maybe later...


-----------------------------------------------
hmm-burble-blah, blah-blah-blah, take a left

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Monday, October 4, 2010 4:30 AM

BYTEMITE


www.usaspending.gov

Useful link, though AURAPTOR may be wary that this site is maintained by the current administration. Propaganda is a possible concern.

So I'll also post a link to what I think appears to be unaltered budget data in excel spreadsheet form for the past 50 or so years.

www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2005/sheets/hist08z7.xls

Non-discretionary defense spending in 2009, when the Obama administration took office, was 485.6 billion dollars. Non-discretionary defense spending in the last year (2008) of the Bush administration was 465.5 billion dollars.

Total nondiscretionary budget in 2009 was 942.3 billion dollars. Total nondiscretionary budget in 2008 was 922.9 billion dollars.

Bush spent about 50% of his nondiscretionary budget in 2008 on defense. Obama spent about 51% of his nondiscretionary budget on defense.

Also, that increase in defense spending should really piss off anyone who voted for Obama. Or at least, I hope it does.

This is a pie chart I found on wikipedia of the US Federal Budget in 2009 (I'm not sure why the link says "FY 2007", the chart itself is labeled Fiscal Year 2009). It appears to combine discretionary and non-discretionary spending. I believe the "Pensions" section in AURAPTOR's link is represented by "Social Security" in this one, though I'm not completely positive.



Non-discretionary and discretionary together come to 20% for Social Security, 19% for Medicare/Medicaid, 23% for Defense, 17% for "Other Mandatory" and 12% for "Other Discretionary."

Defense budget does eat up a lot, but whether you're talking a majority or not depends on whether you're talking discretionary or non-discretionary spending.

That is, of course, assuming that everything is being reported accurately to us by the government. I suspect that government contracts might be listed under "other," and that many of those contracts are defense related.


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Monday, October 4, 2010 7:51 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:


You'll note where Rappy goes for his information. That official sounding site he references, "usgovernmentspending" is actually propaganda built by Christopher Chantrill, "writer and conservative". Look into the site - Chantrill thinks the roaring twenties is The Way American Should Function, and the crash in 1929 was not related to anything anyone did in the twenties. I guess the evil govt somehow did something evil right then in Oct, 1929 that ended the party.



That's probably where Rappy got his "fact" that 95% of Americans pay no taxes at all, or that unemployment was at 4% under Bush. Closest it ever got to that number while Bush was on the scene was in the last 4 months of Clinton's Presidency; once Bush took over, it started going up and up and up. Interestingly, unemployment went up AFTER Bush's tax cuts, too. So much for that whole "tax cuts create jobs" rubric, eh?

Under Bush, unemployment almost doubled, from a low of 4.3% to over 7.9% when he left office. Heckuva job, Bushie!

I wonder if this guy is where Rappy also got his "fact" that Obama has spent more than all other Presidents combined. (In fact, he hasn't even spent as much as the previous ONE President did, much less all those before him)

The modern definition of "socialist" is anyone who's winning an argument against a tea-bagger.

AURaptor's Greatest Hits:

Friday, September 24, 2010
I hate Obama's America. You're damn right about that.


Friday, May 28, 2010 - 18:26 To President Obama:
Mr. President, you're a god damn, mother fucking liar.
Fuck you, you cock sucking community activist piece of shit.
... go fuck yourself, Mr. President.


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Monday, October 4, 2010 7:55 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)


I'd be curious to know how much of that "health, education, and pensions" spending would more accurately fit under Pentagon spending, in the form of healthcare for military personnel and veterans (VA), and education of same (GI Bill, for instance), and pensions, disability, and retirement pay of veterans.

Also, how much of your INCOME TAX is going to pay for defense spending, and how much is going to pay for Medicare and Social Security?

The modern definition of "socialist" is anyone who's winning an argument against a tea-bagger.

AURaptor's Greatest Hits:

Friday, September 24, 2010
I hate Obama's America. You're damn right about that.


Friday, May 28, 2010 - 18:26 To President Obama:
Mr. President, you're a god damn, mother fucking liar.
Fuck you, you cock sucking community activist piece of shit.
... go fuck yourself, Mr. President.


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Monday, October 4, 2010 8:04 AM

CHRISISALL


In the 1950's, more than half of the tax $'s collected by the IRS came from large corporations.
Now it's 5%.

Who's making up for that, I wonder...?


The laughing Chrisisall


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Monday, October 4, 2010 8:07 AM

KANEMAN


Quote:

Originally posted by Kwicko:
I'd be curious to know how much of that "health, education, and pensions" spending would more accurately fit under Pentagon spending, in the form of healthcare for military personnel and veterans (VA), and education of same (GI Bill, for instance), and pensions, disability, and retirement pay of veterans.

Also, how much of your INCOME TAX is going to pay for defense spending, and how much is going to pay for Medicare and Social Security?

The modern definition of "socialist" is anyone who's winning an argument against a tea-bagger.

AURaptor's Greatest Hits:

Friday, September 24, 2010
I hate Obama's America. You're damn right about that.


Friday, May 28, 2010 - 18:26 To President Obama:
Mr. President, you're a god damn, mother fucking liar.
Fuck you, you cock sucking community activist piece of shit.
... go fuck yourself, Mr. President.





Plenty of mine. You on the other hand, you being a gay shipping clerk, I'm going to bet you don't pay dick. You most likely recieve the earned income credit.....So, leave the tax debate to those that actually GET taxed and PAY taxes at the end of the year. You weekly tax deducted cock suckers that get most (if not all) back at the end of the year, and go spend it as if it were in a bank(-minus the interest)...giving the economy a FAKE boost, make me sick...And, you are gay.

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Monday, October 4, 2010 1:53 PM

DREAMTROVE


Rap,

Sorry, I should have clarified. I meant federal income tax. Technically, the govt. does not admit that entitlement taxes are taxes, but they are what pays for entitlement spending, which I admit is larger than the budget. However, if you look at the budget and include contracts payroll and pensions which are actually military as well as projects and international aid which is actually military, and then add in war and defense supplementals, the budget was almost entirely military until Obama stoked by the bailout portion. Oh, and homeland security, the name of which still creeps me out, to say nothing of the concept, is military.

Actually, if you want to be technical, all tax dollars go to the debt, or the interest on the debt, and every penny the fed spends is deficit spending.


All that said, you have to be extremely aware that everyone here is very very familiar with how our govt. spends money and where it goes.

If we're talking in rough terms, a trillion or so in military spending each year when you add it up, it's a lot of money. Far more than anyone else is spending, though China might come close if they actually paid their workers and soldiers (they're doing what our military used to do, which is pay penny wages to people working for their national defense.)

Anyway, it's easy to see why any international concern interested in meddling and nation building would hijack America to be its patsy.


But, of course, I'm also aware that it's paying your salary, so no offense intended.


Kane,

You're gay, you used to say so on your profile. This is getting old. It was cute when you and Mike were newlyweds after you caught him on the rebound from Rap, but now it's more like the bitchy couple that's been married too long and really needs to start seeing their other cousins.

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Sunday, October 10, 2010 8:56 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Sorry, I thought I needed to vent because I felt you weren't getting *why* the Nazis were evil. Everyone knows that they *were* evil, but few people look to far into how they got that way.

please show me where i have ever indicated where the nazis were not evil. I don't dispute their violence or insanity, I dispute that you should call them left winged. The fact that you do, leads me to believe that you are either very ignorant, or we have been taught very different ways of seeing the world.

Hopefully you can see this chart which places facism where I think it should be on the spectrum.



From wiki

Fascism (pronounced /ˈfæʃɪzəm/) is a radical and authoritarian nationalist political ideology.[1][2][3][4] Fascists seek to organize a nation according to corporatist perspectives, values, and systems, including the political system and the economy.[5][6] Fascism was originally founded by Italian national syndicalists in World War I who combined left-wing and right-wing political views, but it gravitated to the political right in the early 1920s.[7][8] Scholars generally consider fascism to be on the far right of the conventional left-right political spectrum.[9][10][11][12][13][14]

It worries me that the Right in America appear to be rewriting history to fit their bias, which is why I keep rebutting you.

And to counter your rant on socialism - many countries would have what would be regarded as socialist type economies and are not authoritarian states. It's the authoritarian that you should object to, be it on the left or right spectrum

Quote:

I think here you would be politically confused. You seem to anchor yourself to old world leftist standbys, but hold what I would call a more or less tea party world view, even if that may scare you. Your stances against globalism and for independent or personal economic control, a lot of the stuff you posted here, esp. earlier, I would place you on the right, but politics are strange.


I don't know much about the tea party except that they hate Obama, and I quite admire him. I don't think he's a messiah and i'm not sure how much he can achieve, but I like the politics of the man, so I'd say no, I wasn't aligned with the tea party.

I'm not sure how you get that i am right winged, really, I don't even by your own rather different view of the world. I think you long to identify that we are all the deep down the same in our views sometimes leads you to jump the conclusions. Being anti globalist is a key feature in many left winged views... but so we cna clear things up

I'm pro universal health
I believe in mixed economies
I'm pro gun control
I'm cautious about immigration, because I don't think my country can sustain a much larger population but think asylum seekers should be treated humanely and given citizenship if found to be geunuine.
I'm pro policies that encourage sustainability in undustry and land use
I favour a welfare system, but I think there should be checks and limits
I'd like America to butt out of a lot of its military activity globally
I'm probably socially conservative when it comes to bringing up kids, because I think one biological Mum and one biological Dad is the best system, but failing that two loving caring adults is also okay, and in the end we all do the best we can
I don't approve of hitting kids
I don't believe in capital punishment, or prison sentences for non violent crimes

Hmmm, there is probably a lot more.

NB When i talk about being pro gun, universal health, and immigration, I'm talking about my country, and not the US. What works here, may not work there.



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Sunday, October 10, 2010 9:02 PM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
many countries would have what would be regarded as socialist type economies and are not authoritarian states. It's the authoritarian that you should object to, be it on the left or right spectrum

Thank you, MD. THANK YOU!!!!!


The laughing Chrisisall


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Monday, October 11, 2010 1:52 AM

FREMDFIRMA



And don't forget the intel and alphabet boys, Byte, and the TREMENDOUS amount of money poured down a rathole into their black budgets to accomplish simple things they never actually manage to accomplish.


Oh screw it, since I've all but been outed anyways, and recently been informed in no uncertain terms that no one gives a fuck anymore...

Did you know back in the 80's they had to create a SEPERATE, in-house military intel branch to do the shit the CIA was SUPPOSED to be doing, but was too busy fucking over their so-called protectees to bother ?

And had to HIDE it from every damn body ?

I mean, say... a rescue attempt, right - you wanna know how many doors, points of entry, how many goons and what their patrols are like, before you pop the cork, yes ?

And that is what the fucking CIA's OFFICIAL JOB IS, and they *can't* bloody DO it, or won't, and half the time they just lie, or tell you whatever is more politically convenient for em or will net them the most money and power, but for their assigned and intended purpose they're useless - worse than useless cause they keep DOIN shit which blows back on us, like propping up dictator shitheels and blowing away moderates... cause, yanno, war feeds their budget too.

And so ole jay-sock came up with the idea of rolling their own humint and sigint department internally, in a cell structured fashion, off the books, to do the job those CIA fucks wouldn't.

And so once again I question the necessity of pouring our tax dollars down that shithole.

"Truth overcomes all bonds."

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Monday, October 11, 2010 2:08 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:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Quote:

Sorry, I thought I needed to vent because I felt you weren't getting *why* the Nazis were evil. Everyone knows that they *were* evil, but few people look to far into how they got that way.

please show me where i have ever indicated where the nazis were not evil. I don't dispute their violence or insanity, I dispute that you should call them left winged. The fact that you do, leads me to believe that you are either very ignorant, or we have been taught very different ways of seeing the world.

Hopefully you can see this chart which places facism where I think it should be on the spectrum.



From wiki

Fascism (pronounced /ˈfæʃɪzəm/) is a radical and authoritarian nationalist political ideology.[1][2][3][4] Fascists seek to organize a nation according to corporatist perspectives, values, and systems, including the political system and the economy.[5][6] Fascism was originally founded by Italian national syndicalists in World War I who combined left-wing and right-wing political views, but it gravitated to the political right in the early 1920s.[7][8] Scholars generally consider fascism to be on the far right of the conventional left-right political spectrum.[9][10][11][12][13][14]

It worries me that the Right in America appear to be rewriting history to fit their bias, which is why I keep rebutting you.



Spot on. The right in this country is constantly trying to rewrite history. They're "strict constitutionalists" - except for the pesky parts like the 14th Amendment; they're fundamentalists Christians who believe in ALL of the bible - except for the pesky parts that rankle them.

Quote:


And to counter your rant on socialism - many countries would have what would be regarded as socialist type economies and are not authoritarian states. It's the authoritarian that you should object to, be it on the left or right spectrum.

Quote:

I think here you would be politically confused. You seem to anchor yourself to old world leftist standbys, but hold what I would call a more or less tea party world view, even if that may scare you. Your stances against globalism and for independent or personal economic control, a lot of the stuff you posted here, esp. earlier, I would place you on the right, but politics are strange.


I don't know much about the tea party except that they hate Obama, and I quite admire him. I don't think he's a messiah and i'm not sure how much he can achieve, but I like the politics of the man, so I'd say no, I wasn't aligned with the tea party.



As far as I can tell, the tea-baggers have no idea what they stand for. As long as somebody seems angry at the scary black man, they'll stand for just about anything.

The number one issue for tea-baggers seems to be "I don't want the government telling me what to do!" What you'll notice, though, if you look closely, is that at the same time, they're also shouting, "I WANT THE GOVERNMENT TO TELL *THEM* WHAT TO DO!!!"

Quote:



I'm pro universal health
I believe in mixed economies
I'm pro gun control
I'm cautious about immigration, because I don't think my country can sustain a much larger population but think asylum seekers should be treated humanely and given citizenship if found to be geunuine.
I'm pro policies that encourage sustainability in undustry and land use
I favour a welfare system, but I think there should be checks and limits
I'd like America to butt out of a lot of its military activity globally
I'm probably socially conservative when it comes to bringing up kids, because I think one biological Mum and one biological Dad is the best system, but failing that two loving caring adults is also okay, and in the end we all do the best we can
I don't approve of hitting kids
I don't believe in capital punishment, or prison sentences for non violent crimes

Hmmm, there is probably a lot more.

NB When i talk about being pro gun, universal health, and immigration, I'm talking about my country, and not the US. What works here, may not work there.





Right on. I'm with you on most of these.

And anyone who claims they DON'T favor mixed economies is lying. There's no "pure" economy to be found anywhere on Earth. China is a mixture of capitalism, fascism, socialism, and communism; so is the U.S. The key differences are the ratios of the mixture. ;)


The modern definition of "socialist" is anyone who's winning an argument against a tea-bagger.

AURaptor's Greatest Hits:

Friday, September 24, 2010
I hate Obama's America. You're damn right about that.


Friday, May 28, 2010 - 18:26 To President Obama:
Mr. President, you're a god damn, mother fucking liar.
Fuck you, you cock sucking community activist piece of shit.
... go fuck yourself, Mr. President.


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Monday, October 11, 2010 6:26 AM

BYTEMITE


According to the Nazis, Magon, they were both. Hence the confusion and alternative interpretations.

In practice they were right wing and fascist, with all the badness that cronyism between state and corporations can produce. But among the Nazi elite they did have a number of socialist policies. If you were a Nazi and a good Ayran, they would take care of you (and send you out to fight wars where you would get slaughtered). Very similar to some left-wing politicians in America I know that say one thing then do another.

All of it is, of course, bullshit. But then authoritarianism usually is.


Quote:

It's the authoritarian that you should object to, be it on the left or right spectrum


Yep. You have your priorities straight.

If I'm contributing here, I should probably address this one.

Quote:

except I don't think Byte meant to "insult" you...I think she was expressing her frustration that America seems to get blamed for everything wrong in the world, when in actuality it isn't the average American person who's responsible, much as it may seem that way at times.


Yeah. I was/am frustrated. But I sorted this one at least out with Magon behind the scenes.

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Saturday, November 28, 2015 1:40 PM

JAYNEZTOWN


Can a Dying Civilization Defeat ISIS and Radical Islam?

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/11/27/can-a-dying-civiliz
ation-defeat-isis-and-radical-islam
/

Quote:

If we are honest we must face a very dark and sobering fact: The outcome of this war is far from certain. We are proud of being a nation of can-do optimists, but we are also a nation in denial about a culture in a tailspin.





and thought I might bump this one


I think much of the 'fall' came in the 70s, things changed in America...Democrats were no longer like JFK or FDR but instead became regressive liberals like Chomsky, Moore and Carter

Nixon he had a clever foreign policy but he took America away from the Gold Standard - huge mistake, this corruption would later lead to endless Petrodollar Arabia Islamo Wars of Iraq, Libya....you name it, the mess keeps growing

The latest mess, I wasn't always a fan of Clinton but at least he had some kind of foreign policy, and created an economy - ok it was a tech bubble, a fake dot-com bubble but at least that economy existed, Bush Jnr and Obama have really only played parts in sinking America deeper into debt


The USA can come back
but huge changes might be needed in the Congress, the Senate and the US political system. I would like to see someone like Webb or Ron Paul or some independent thinker push America ahead again, what is happening now just ain't working

Bush Jnr broke the debt clock in NYC, another digit needed to be added the broken clock,
Durst Organization in New York reached its limits. The national debt exceeded $10 trillion for the first time under Bush Jnr, the clock ran out of digits to record the number.
Obama's policy made the debts even worse


The idea for the clock came from New York real estate developer Seymour Durst, who wanted to highlight the rising national debt. In 1989, he sponsored the installation of the first clock, which was originally placed on Sixth Avenue—between 42nd Street and 43rd Street—one block away from Times Square. At the time, the national debt remained under $3 trillion but was rising. The clock was temporarily switched off from 2000 to 2002 due to the debt actually falling during that period.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Debt_Clock

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Thursday, August 25, 2016 8:30 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Whenever we return to Reaganomics, the proven template for juggernaut economy, we'll be back.

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Monday, August 29, 2016 4:10 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Never.

I know "never" is a really long time, but ... never. It was an historic moment, never to be repeated.

And trying to recreate the past will lead to great errors.

All we can do is move forward, despite uncertainty and doubt.


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I think it's time you disabused yourself of that pleasant little fairy tale about our fearless leaders being some sort of surrogate daddy or mommy, laying awake at night thinking about how to protect the kids. HA! In reality, they're thinking about who to sell them to so that they can get a few more shekels in their pockets.

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