08-11-2010, 08:21 AM | #281 (permalink) |
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Actually that's not quite accurate. Bush did not take office a recession things may have been trending that way but it was not a recession.
One of many claims the neo-cons have used to defend Bush and his policies that are either false or mostly False.
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08-11-2010, 08:49 AM | #282 (permalink) | ||
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True, the recession became official after Bush took office. I think most agree the excess of the dot com bubble laid the foundation for the recession, this build up occurred before Bush took office and the peak occurred shortly after he was sworn in. Here is a quot and a link to an interesting recap of some of the data during the period: Quote:
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08-11-2010, 08:58 AM | #283 (permalink) | |
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08-11-2010, 09:40 AM | #284 (permalink) |
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Always take "Enron Paul" Krugman with a large grain of salt. The number of times the Wall Street Journal has caught him in outright lies is an embarrassment...or it would be, to anyone but a former Enron shill.
Last edited by The_Dunedan; 08-11-2010 at 09:44 AM.. |
08-11-2010, 09:58 AM | #285 (permalink) | |
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Yes when all else fails blame the messenger. Or in this case discredit the messenger, The whole Enron connection has been repeatedly been touted as proof that no one should listen to Krugman.
From Wiki- Quote:
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08-11-2010, 11:31 AM | #286 (permalink) |
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The irony about the current debate about allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire is that the party who is currently demanding that everything be "paid for" has yet to explain how keeping the tax cuts will be paid for (when they are projected to add $800 billion to the deficit)
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08-11-2010, 12:10 PM | #287 (permalink) | ||
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Bush's legacy is going to be defined by the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. If Iraq (primary) turns out to be a worthy cause, Bush's administration should be looked at favorably. The investment of life and treasury in that war far exceeds anything else he did. If the effort proves to have been a waste, he should be measured accordingly. Bush, mostly had a singular focus, and it was the "war on terror". Only time will tell what the impact will be. ---------- Post added at 08:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:54 PM ---------- Quote:
---------- Post added at 08:10 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:03 PM ---------- I can not find the fortune article written by Krugman on Enron, do you have a link to it?
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08-11-2010, 12:10 PM | #288 (permalink) | |
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it's stunning to me that anything like this sort of debate is still happening. because it's stunning to me that anyone takes conservative economic theory or the way it organizes data and defines what is and is not important seriously. maybe this 2008 piece from psychology today speaks to it:
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08-11-2010, 12:40 PM | #289 (permalink) | |
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Isn't it a given that at an excessively high marginal tax rate, taxes collected are negatively impacted and that lowering those rates will result in greater taxes collected? Perhaps you don't take such a question seriously, but many do, conservative or not. Serious thinkers also know that on the other extreme - an increase in taxes collected can also occur - hence the search for equilibrium. Given that at an excessive low marginal tax rate, taxes collected are negatively impacted and that increasing those rates will result in greater taxes collected. Supply sider's understand the challenge in these kinds of questions, even if others do not or want to play pretend game and use demagoguery.
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08-11-2010, 01:00 PM | #290 (permalink) |
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ace, look the hell around you. supply side was never a coherent body of thinking. it excludes more than it includes. it's predictive value has proven to be rubbish. the regulatory actions that were implemented based on it have proven to open pathways to fiasco unheard of since before world war 2.
it is a hodge-podge of antiquated simplistic notions patched together for the purposes of allowing vast transfers of money away from the state and into the hands of...well who?...a patronage system that pulls the strings of the republican party. you and people like you have fuck all to say about job creation--except let's give more money to the patronage system that supports the republican party by way of dismantling the redistributive state---while making sure to keep the repressive state expanding and armed to the teeth---because---well why? so that patronage network can count on a well-armed police force to keep people away from their gated communities when they figure out they've been had? the bush tax cuts did NOTHING to expand employment. neither did the reagan tax cuts. NOTHING that supply side has advocated has helped. because it's not about that. it's about increasingly class stratification. taking the money and hiding out. and you have fuck all to say about the actual structure of the actual economy. you're obsessed with the hydraulics of taxes as if that were a fundamental problem. that you can devise hydraulic relations around a variable says nothing--at all--about why that variable should be central. you can't argue the case because for you it's all just part of some rigid system the operating logic of which is basically that of shampoo directions: lather repeat, lather repeat. you won't even address the self-evident problems of unemployment (for example) presumably because you think the people who are out of work deserve their lot or they'd get all bootstrappy and pick themselves up. because, in your world, nothing is actually wrong, it's all normal, part of ordinary bidness cycles. but today when, for example, the uk market freaks out because the carefully worded statement from the exchequer indicates that there's a good likelihood of a depression that we haven't even fucking gotten to yet, and the fed releases yesterday a statement on actual activity rates within the economy that are tending toward zero and new trade data shows that the export/import gap has done the opposite of what the conservative economic pundit class has been saying it will.....unemployment continues to go up and the only reason it's not a Crisis on its own is that feature of the rates, that self-adjusting feature which is that people out of work more than 6 months aren't counted. and people who think the way you do are opposing extensions of unemployment benefits. people who think like you you oppose attempts to divert money into supporting or enabling the growing of new businesses. people who think like you oppose all attempts to actually address real problems. people who think like you do imagine that giving more money to the social class that controls approximately, what, 70% of capital, will do something. it hasn't worked. it's not supposed to. working people don't support the republican order. so fuck em, right ace? worse than that, they have in the past organized themselves into unions--GASP---and tried to take power from holders of capital---the Horror! it's pretty clearly time to try something else.
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08-11-2010, 01:15 PM | #291 (permalink) | |
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08-11-2010, 02:08 PM | #292 (permalink) |
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Ace- I think you're looking for this... The Ascent of E-Man
Of course I'm really not sure, you said you couldn't find it. All I did was google the title and this was the first hit. Right now I don't have time to research more, have things to do.
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08-11-2010, 02:27 PM | #294 (permalink) | |
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08-11-2010, 02:32 PM | #295 (permalink) |
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There's plenty of blame to go around. Yes, Clinton was waist deep in the deregulation game just as bush was waist deep in the stimulus. Saying otherwise is simply rewriting history. Her's a story that discusses who did what and when- Link
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08-11-2010, 02:33 PM | #296 (permalink) | |
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But, Krugman's defense focusing on journalistic ethics is honorable, but misses the bigger question of how wrong he was in his views either then or now. It is not clear how he reconciles the conflicts in his writings since the E-man article.
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08-11-2010, 02:36 PM | #297 (permalink) | ||
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---------- Post added at 05:36 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:34 PM ---------- Quote:
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08-11-2010, 02:39 PM | #298 (permalink) |
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Different people have different definitions of "supply-sider". In it's purest form, from my point of view, a supply sider would favor increases in local taxes to pay for local services as compared to the federal government taxing everyone and then re-distributing those taxes based on political considerations. For example in the latest, bail-out bill to save teaching jobs - why is the federal government involved? States should manage and prioritize based on their own needs and tax accordingly. It is clear the federal government is going to take from states who showed discipline and give to those states that lacked it. This encourages inefficiency and rewords irresponsible behavior.
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08-11-2010, 02:47 PM | #299 (permalink) | |
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here's a nice list: Quote:
wait, here's another little chart that does the work for you: right. so it's obvious that there's no rational basis for present levels of military spending. it's obvious that there's no rational basis for maintaining the national security state. except that the national security state is an institutional structure that seems to have real power. plus they benefit from the conservative preference to govern from panic-to-state-of-emergency. military expenditures account for about a quarter of federal government spending. it is the largest single sector (conservatives like to add together social security and medicaid and call them a single thing so that it looks bigger than the military). fact is that all this supply-side focus on taxation as in itself the problem is hooey. the problem is in allocation. it's in priorities. and the biggest problem is the continuance of the national security state. but it's also obvious to anyone who looks at actual history as opposed to econ 101 cliff-note versions of it that since the reagan administration its been supply side bullshit when the political target is the redistributive functions of the state but keynesian all the way when it comes to military spending. why is that?
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08-11-2010, 02:53 PM | #301 (permalink) | |
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And instead of taxing the rich extra, how about everyone with an income pay federal income tax since everyone is supposedly benefiting from federal services. |
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08-11-2010, 02:56 PM | #302 (permalink) | ||
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"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch." "It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion." "If you live among wolves you have to act like one." "A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers." Last edited by aceventura3; 08-11-2010 at 02:59 PM.. |
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08-11-2010, 03:04 PM | #303 (permalink) |
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this is an awful lot of shucking and jiving and empty conservative blah blah blah to avoid he simple facts of the matter. supply side/monetarist policies are what got the economy into this wreck of a situation. they have nothing to offer as a way out.
supply siders cannot even bring themselves to talk about allocation of resources because they'd run into the military problem. it's not an exaggeration to think that all this conservative economic hooey is really just a smoke screen the function of which is to keep political pressure away from cutting defense spending. this is only possible if conservatives control conversations about the economy. i see no reason to take conservative economic ideology seriously so there's no reason to cede control of the discussion to them. i see nothing from ace, nothing from dogzilla that even remotely begins to address unemployment. ace obssesses about fantasy tax questions; dogzilla is focused only on repeating the conservative meme-of-the-moment about obama's stimulus package, as if the economic disaster we're still moving through originated on obama's watch when ANYONE who is not lying to themselves knows that this turd is a conservative turd which began forming in earnest around 2002 and which squeezed out onto all of us in 2007. ever since, conservatives have been running away from their own record. it's a pretty patronizing thing, assuming people are too stupid to remember what actually happened. but apparently there are some for whom conservative counter-reality is compelling. which brings us back to the psychology today piece.
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08-11-2010, 03:10 PM | #304 (permalink) | |||
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I think strong economic growth allows for more entitlement spending. It is ironic that those in favor of entitlement spending don't support policies that allow for the strongest economic growth. Quote:
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08-11-2010, 03:17 PM | #305 (permalink) | |
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As to the point about PK and E-Man... did you read the article. What has he written since that conflicts with it and how? You do see it was written in May of 1999, right?
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08-11-2010, 03:26 PM | #306 (permalink) | |||
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---------- Post added at 11:26 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:20 PM ---------- Quote:
Also, I am not interested in Krugman - he is consistently wrong or misleading in my view. He has a political agenda that is not related to presenting truth. We will have to agree to disagree, on what you think he writes compared to what I think. Even the article cited today shows conflict with his Eman point of view.
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08-11-2010, 03:46 PM | #307 (permalink) | |
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And yes we'll just have to agree to disagree on PK. Call me crazy but I'm going to go ahead and listen to the Nobel Prize winning economists over you.
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08-11-2010, 03:53 PM | #308 (permalink) | ||||
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All this liberal screaming about how taxes should be raised reminds me of how money fled the UK in the 60's timeframe. |
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08-11-2010, 04:00 PM | #309 (permalink) |
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i think the line about krugman sums up the problem with this and almost every other "discussion"...you--and you are hardly alone in this---cannot cross out of your own frame of reference on socio-economic questions---and you've only got one. so when it comes down to it and you're confronted with viewpoints outside your terms, all you can do is try to find an excuse to dismiss it on the one hand, and repeat your starting point on the other. so there's really only one discussion that you want, and that is a discussion in which everyone agrees politically and conceptually, so that the discussion is really a matter of local adjustments.
it's not a particularly democratic approach. but whatever. i've actually bothered to work out the basic tenants of supply-side hoodoo. i didn't do it voluntarily, but i did it. if i thought that theoretically it made sense, we could have a different kind of conversation--but it doesn't make sense logically and even if it was logically consistent the gap between predicted and actual outcomes in those instances where its been implemented are self-evident. for example, the "innovation" you grovel at the feet of innovated the american-based manufacturing base out of the united states. that "innovation" benefitted shareholders. in conservative-land, that is ethical. in the actual world, it is an act of class warfare.i do not think class war an effective way to address unemployment. apparently you do. this is a structural problem in the american economy produced, enabled and screened by supply-side monetarist hoodoo. if you know anything about the overall history of western capitalism since the early 1970s, there's no avoiding this. for the record, i orient myself as someone who's spent way too long studying the history of the capitalist form of production since world war 2. i think there's something wrong, something profoundly wrong, with an ideological context in which people look around them and see real problems, deep problems and connect them empirically and logically to a particular worldview--neoliberalism, the washington consensus, supply side, whatever---and not bring that worldview into fundamental question. but that's our situation in the states. i think it's perhaps an educational issue. i hope it's not. i hope it's something else. laziness maybe. something i haven't thought of. who knows. ==== edit: dogzilla---so you know, the position i am arguing from is not merely the opposite of yours. i don't think taxes are the central problem.
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08-11-2010, 04:36 PM | #310 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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The Reagan administration raised taxes twice in 1982, and in 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, and 1987 and even with all those tax increases, they still couldn't possibly hope to tackle the insane Federal budget deficit created as a direct result of the their poor tax policies. The Reagan administration's stupid spending increases forced Bush1 AND Clinton to continue raising taxes until the budget was finally balanced to a point in the 90s, only to have supply side voodoo jump right back in under Bush2 with tax cuts for the rich and spending increases again. Why is it you can't see lowering taxes and increasing spending is poor fiscal policy? Seriously, there's no doubt at all that under Reagan and Bush2, spending increased significantly and taxes decreased and there's absolutely no doubt the deficit grew under Reagan and Bush2 at levels unprecedented outside of having a world-wide war. This isn't a matter up to opinion. Reagan's tax policies did not create as much growth as Clinton's. There was a 2.5% increase in tax revenues from 1979 to 1989 and a 4.1% increase from 1989 to 2000. Economic growth comes from sound fiscal policy, where taxation and spending are at least in the same general area. It provides natural confidence in the markets (as opposed to artificial confidence created by deregulation). Reaganomics, lowering taxes, increasing spending, deregulating banking and investment, and supply side voodoo, doesn't work. It just doesn't. |
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08-11-2010, 04:39 PM | #311 (permalink) | ||
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Here is a link to a chart showing the trend: Federal Government Revenues Have More Than Tripled Since 1965
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08-11-2010, 04:58 PM | #312 (permalink) | |
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Second- We're really at end game with your position on PK and mine. I see no point to continue disagreeing. I've already agreed to disagree. I mean honestly I have better things to do then read through something put out by the Heritage Foundation.
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08-12-2010, 02:22 AM | #313 (permalink) | |
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So what is the problem? From my point of view the government is taking way too much money that rightfully belongs to those that earned it. Secondly the government is reaching into way to many aspects of life in this country. Cut the taxes to force the government to cut spending. That leaves the feds unable to meddle in quite so much. |
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08-12-2010, 02:34 AM | #314 (permalink) |
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Neither the current financial crisis nor the recent oil spills have high taxes or government interference as their proximate causes. Not to mention that you're asking for more government interference with respect to immigration - one would expect a proponent of the free market to encourage immigration and the cheap labor it provides. In this regard one could view illegal immigration as a form of probusiness civil disobedience.
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08-12-2010, 02:57 AM | #315 (permalink) |
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right. ok so you aren't thinking in terms of the social world at all, dogzilla---you're just repeating reagan era metaphysics, the sort of thing that the republican-dominated state told working people when their jobs started to disappear--
for example in steel into the magic of holding companies run by bankruptcy specialists who moved in to take advantage of the space created by a decision taken during world war 2 to export continuous casting as part of the marshall plan and take short-term profits knowing that in the longer run it would put them out of business---which it did----for you no problem, the manly forward march of the Captains of Industry requires it and besides this is a utilitarian good because it's better for everyone that workers from the steel industry become workers in the walmart industry. economic activity is a social activity. the closest capitalism got to actual functionality as a system and not one predicated entirely upon exploitation and held together by violence (the american way) was during the fordist period---strong unions, collective bargaining were fundamental to the revolution in consumer credit, the extension of the suburban model---it was also a period of intensive innovation---but it followed from the arrangements put into place under the new deal and the right couldn't countenance it. it is a mystery to me why that is, why the hooverites whose history is of nothing but failure were rehabbed in the post-vietnam era---what made jingoism, simple-mindedness and brutality so appealing. the changes started under nixon---by the clinton period, it was pretty clear that operationally the only americans were shareholder americans because theirs were the only interests that were being served. it maybe woulda been different if republican blah blah blah about the linkage between tax cuts and business investments turned out to yield the new sectors that were talked about. but it didn't. it didn't because it's not about that. republican blah blah blah is about creating a circular situation which creates increasingly polarized class relations which justifies endlessly expanding repressive state. weapons manufacturers win. defense contractors win. police and prison industries win. shareholders don't during those period when the political and economic incoherence of conservative rule become evident. we're in one of those periods now. but that's an obvious story and i'm tired of telling it.
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08-12-2010, 04:20 AM | #316 (permalink) | |||
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If people in other countries want to provide cheap labor, let them do it from their home countries. Any candidate that proposes any form of amnesty for illegal immigration has lost my vote. Last edited by dogzilla; 08-12-2010 at 04:23 AM.. |
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08-12-2010, 04:55 AM | #317 (permalink) | ||
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08-12-2010, 04:55 AM | #318 (permalink) |
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you know nothing about immigration/labor policies in other places, dgozilla, so i don't know why you'd pretend otherwise. i can tell you for sure that you know nothing whatsoever about the politics of undocumented workers in france. or any of western europe. what you do, of course, is unwittingly or not replicate the neo-fascist position on the question.
the consistencies are remarkable. as for the financial crisis---if we're going to smear historical reality back antecedent to antecedent so that we can find an origin point that's politically advantageous-seeming (carter explains the 2002 housing bubble? are you fucking serious? why not charlemagne?) it'd make sense to connect it to more empirical connections, like the linkage between the fordist social model and post-fordist modes of using credit to buy social solidarity. which is what happened. which is a far more cogent larger-scale narrative against which to set the specific sequence of terrible choices enabled by republican regulation-phobia. greenspans decisions from around 2002 forward about interest rates and about not requiring derivatives be routed through a market, so the republican-specific total devaluation of transparency, one that goes exactly contrary to the hayek-y notion of why markets can plausibly be seen as useful for capitalism (the history of prices presupposes transparency)... but whatever. you aren't interested in what actually happened. you're interested in maitaining continuity in your economic ideology. this is a psychological exercise for you, then, not a historical one.
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08-12-2010, 05:08 AM | #319 (permalink) | ||
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At any rate both sides of the aisle have a had a hand in this and own this problem. Most people I talk to want to blame the "other" side, whichever is "other" to them This type of thing has been going on for years. I think Bush I and Clinton (and I honestly think Clinton had it shoved down his throat by a GOP controlled congress) tried to turn it around in some ways but really it's just been spend, spend, spend... often money they (we) don't have. Currently spending is really out of control. I'd like to see a lot of that slashed. There's also a lot of talk about extending Bush's tax cuts, that just adds to the problem as it would not be paid for. So in my mind both sides have no problem increasing the debt and deficit spending as long as it goes to the things they want. I agree people using their homes as freaking cash machines was crazy. I know just around my house in rural Oregon I was always amazed when I'd see families, that I knew made considerably less per year then I, purchase RV's, boats and other "toys" that I never felt I could have afforded. I never asked but many told me things like "You like it? Damn near costs me what I spent on my house. But the bank offered us a second and it's only costing us "X" per month, so we just had to have it." I always ended up thinking "you spent 1/2 of what you spent on your house on something you're going to use two weeks a year? That sounds nutty to me." But really if you think about it you had a POTUS out their repeatedly telling people to spend, spend and spend some more. And that's what the Fed. government was doing too. Want to go to war and don't have the cash... freaking borrow it! Want to cut taxes and don't have the cash? Freaking borrow some more. Quote:
The problem with that thinking in my mind is it's much like trying to deal with the current economic problems. It doesn't take into account the moneys already been spent. It doesn't take into account there is already something like 11 million people here illegally. Just saying send them home won't work. It sounds good, it's sounds simple... too simple. It's a complex problem and a simple solution will not solve it. We let these folks come here for decades, Reagan tried to deal with it, but his efforts really didn't close the border. So what we ended up doing was creating a bunch of citizens without stopping the flow of new illegals. Half a solution to a problem will not solve that problem. This, like the economy, has been left alone so long it's become a monster.
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I used to drink to drown my sorrows, but the damned things have learned how to swim- Frida Kahlo Vice President Starkizzer Fan Club Last edited by Tully Mars; 08-12-2010 at 05:12 AM.. |
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08-12-2010, 05:24 AM | #320 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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Amnesty makes more sense than shipping them out en masse. Getting rid of that many cheap workers all at once would have such a negative impact on the American economy it's not even funny. We're talking many jobs here that most Americans probably don't even want, and certainly not for the pay.
Undocumented workers have been a boon to the rich. What better way to build wealth than to find those desperate for work?
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Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot |
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dems, note, rich, soak |
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