Tilted Forum Project Discussion Community

Tilted Forum Project Discussion Community (https://thetfp.com/tfp/)
-   Tilted Politics (https://thetfp.com/tfp/tilted-politics/)
-   -   Pelosi (https://thetfp.com/tfp/tilted-politics/157816-pelosi.html)

silent_jay 11-12-2010 04:02 PM

...

aceventura3 11-12-2010 04:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dc_dux (Post 2841361)
I get it...national polls of scientifically selected samples of cross-section of voters are less meaningful than your personal observations of your friends and neighbors.

Did you not understand the first time?

Quote:

There would not have been a United States of both north and south w/o that compromise.
Sez you. How do you know? You found that an acceptable compromise? I would have never accepted that - so I don't get your point.

Quote:

Civics less for you, ace:
What did the Framers think when the Philadelphia Convention ended?

The Constitution has been described as "a bundle of compromises." As you have seen, such prominent features of the Constitution as the different plans for representation in the House and the Senate and the method of selecting the president were settled by compromise. Compromise, however, means that everyone gets less than they want. There were enough compromises in the completed Constitution that nearly every delegate could find something he did not like. During the four months the delegates had spent putting the Constitution together, there were some strong disagreements. Some had walked out of the convention. Three refused to sign the finished document.

Center for Civic Education Lesson 15: What Conflicting Opinions Did the Framers Have about the Completed Constitution?
One could even suggest that your "no compromise" rigidity is counter to American values.
I know what happened, but my point is that they failed on that point. The compromise lead to 200 years of racial strife and a civil war. You don't see that? You don't see those two things as a problem?

This clearly illustrates how I see something like health-care reform and how you see it. This crystallizes our differences, nothing I can add to make it clearer - and I don't understand your thought process on the issue of compromise.

dc_dux 11-12-2010 04:06 PM

I give up, ace.

I just dont have the patience for simplistic black and white thinking that only serves to support an extreme ideology.

And I dont want you to go, but I will be asking the moderators to remind you to stay on topic in the future.

aceventura3 11-12-2010 04:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by silent_jay (Post 2841366)
No one wants you to go away ace, but when you go on tangents about 'Casper the Friendly Ghost', street fights, and basically drag every thread off topic with some sort of rant, that has no relevance to the thread, it gets annoying, but please continue playing the victim like people want you to go away, it's quite amusing.

All I said was, your question could be better asked in a PM, do you not agree it could have been? It was obviously a shot at rb the moderator, not rb the poster.

I have no interest in PM's. My question had a point to it, one for all to see. I thought the point was obvious.

---------- Post added at 12:10 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:08 AM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by dc_dux (Post 2841368)
I give up, ace.

I just dont have the patience for simplistic black and white thinking that only serves to support an extreme ideology.

And I dont want you to go, but I will be asking the moderators to remind you to stay on topic in the future.

Send me a PM, as if this is on topic!

Bottom line is you think the Constitution compromise on the question of slavery was o.k. - unbelievable! Truly unbelievable! There is nothing more to say to you.

silent_jay 11-12-2010 04:11 PM

...

Baraka_Guru 11-12-2010 04:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aceventura3 (Post 2841362)
Am I allowed to respond? If so, and I have posted my view on this, is that there is no centrist position on the major political issues of the day. Fro example you can not be centrist on the question of war, it is either in or out.

I thought you were referring to centrism on the political spectrum. The question of whether to go to war—yes or no—is something else. It's like you're assuming that a centrist would say, "maybe" or "let me think about it" or "can I get back to you?" or "I'm not sure." Centrism does not refer to the response one makes to a yes-or-no question regarding a particular issue.

I hate having to do this, but:
Centrism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Centre-right - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Centre-left - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Now tell me whether you can find political stances anywhere in there. Take your time.

You've more or less acknowledged that politics exist on a spectrum or continuum. Are you saying that a spectrum/continuum does not have a centre? Or are you saying that taking a position somewhere on the centre isn't as desirable? If so, why is that?

I apologize if I have misread your position. I think I have. American politics has been steeped in centrism for decades if not centuries.

Derwood 11-12-2010 04:39 PM

I think it's funny that all my conservative friends think this vote was a "mandate" on anything.

It was nothing more than anger and impatience, and with just two choices in most races, they chose the "other", not realizing that who they were voting in are people representing the party that got us into this mess in the first place.

Willravel 11-12-2010 05:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aceventura3 (Post 2841352)
You are simply wrong regarding how you present the comparison above. Salt, sugar and fat are all required as normal part of human functionality. So are endorphins. In some circumstance they all can be dangerous.

Endorphins carry with them no direct health risk.
Quote:

Originally Posted by aceventura3 (Post 2841352)
Please put the issue in a proper historical perspective.

Slavery at one time was an accepted American value, change germinated.
Women sufferage was not always an American value, it germinated.
Emmisions control as I recall was first and foremost a California value, where California lead the rest of the nation, it was a value that germinated.
Pelosi style liberalism was germinating and was rejected.

Do you get what i am trying to say?

Can you share your definition of "value", in the ethical sense of the word?

Tully Mars 11-12-2010 05:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Derwood (Post 2841379)
I think it's funny that all my conservative friends think this vote was a "mandate" on anything.

It was nothing more than anger and impatience, and with just two choices in most races, they chose the "other", not realizing that who they were voting in are people representing the party that got us into this mess in the first place.


Sprinkle in some good ol' racism and I think you've hit the nail on the head.

filtherton 11-12-2010 06:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aceventura3 (Post 2841359)
I don't believe the polls. I believe what I heard, what I saw. I listened as people went off on the subject of President Obama's and Speaker Pelosi's agenda. If you believe the polls, that is o.k. If everybody in the world believes them and I don't, that is o.k. too - I will stand alone.

This sums it up. The Dunning-Kruger effect in action.

You don't trust polls. Instead, you choose to rely on what you've heard from people in your vicinity, which is actually just an unscientifically sampled poll with a small, sample size and no rigorous quantitative analysis.

This is why it's hard to take your opinions seriously sometimes.

ASU2003 11-12-2010 10:18 PM

I don't believe polls either. They have much higher error percentages than they proclaim. Yeah, 95% of the time they will be right (+/- 4%), but it doesn't answer the question of is it the right thing to do.

I bet Obama could lift the full-auto ban, lower taxes 10%, and cut benefits and gov jobs, yet the right will still hate him.

I heard some interesting things today that Pelosi might have to take an extreme left stand on the issues in order to win back the democratic base. Obama is failing to push for any far left ideas, and pushing more moderate and centrist ones. But, even when the left passes something, it is meeting too much resistance in our own party.
Mayor vetoes San Francisco ban on Happy Meals with toys - CNN.com

Maybe Pelosi is to blame, maybe single-issue dems are to blame, maybe the politicians are corrupt and would rather take 'donations' than advance any left wing agenda. (Close Gitmo, Strict limits on emissions, fight obesity, get out of Iraq/Afghanistan, double CAFE standards, DADT, non-profit healthcare, cut FCC obscenity funding, etc...) This is one thing where having 24/7 talking heads will get your message across, will keep the politicians from straying or compromising, and

roachboy 11-13-2010 10:15 AM

ace--->first off i have no problem with the last post i made. in one of the directions your usual shuck and jive leaked into earlier in the thread, you were declaring people "real americans" and unamerican---you know, that lame mccarthyite shit that seems to loom in the background with alot of far right discourse. this in the midst of yet another demonstration of the reality-optional conservatism you espouse. don't like the evidence that the right media apparatus made up the nancy pelosi you don't like? pretend it isn't there. don't like the polls that demonstrate your contention that the midterms represent some conservative renaissance is a figment of your imagination? pretend they aren't there.

it's always the same. what seems to matter is the avoidance of dissonance. it's like you write in order to flirt with it. but the game is to exclude it, over and over--so the movement in your positions is always lateral, a rearrangement of blocks. and you seem to conflate that with thinking.

at this point, much of this thread is a trail of exasperations.

but hey, why confront that when you can dodge it by whinging about my mod status?

aceventura3 11-15-2010 09:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by silent_jay (Post 2841372)
I'm going to go bang my head against a wall for an hour or so, it would be much more enjoyable than dealing with you, it's utterly pointless, ace.
We know you have no interest in PM's, or reporting posts, you'd rather piss and moan about it and drag threads off topic with your pissing and moaning than use the resources avaliable to you to deal with it. You're right, we're all wrong, blah, blah, blah, enjoy.
And yeah, yeah, my posts haven't been on topic, so no need to say it, forgive me for trying to keep a thread you're involved in even remotely on topic, maybe we need to hear how you watched Casper again.

In context, my reference to Casper was very much on target. If you didn't get it, perhaps go through the thread again and you may see why I wrote what i wrote. Or if you want to question me in that thread on the issue, feel free to do so.

---------- Post added at 05:02 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:39 PM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Baraka_Guru (Post 2841375)
I thought you were referring to centrism on the political spectrum. The question of whether to go to war—yes or no—is something else. It's like you're assuming that a centrist would say, "maybe" or "let me think about it" or "can I get back to you?" or "I'm not sure." Centrism does not refer to the response one makes to a yes-or-no question regarding a particular issue.

I don't know what a centrist would say.

Quote:

I hate having to do this, but:
Centrism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Centre-right - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Centre-left - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Now tell me whether you can find political stances anywhere in there. Take your time.
I don't think I understand what you want. If a centrist adopts moderate policies that lie between the extremes - I don't see how that is possible on an issue by issue basis, however, if the net of position equates to zero, then perhaps real centrism exists. For example I support the legalization of marijuana and I support gun ownership rights, a left and a right position - would I be a centrist if those were the only tow issues in question? I would say no, because there is no moderate position on those questions. I can not think of any issue where there is a true moderate position, only positions where a person may not have a strong opinion.

Quote:

You've more or less acknowledged that politics exist on a spectrum or continuum. Are you saying that a spectrum/continuum does not have a centre? Or are you saying that taking a position somewhere on the centre isn't as desirable? If so, why is that?
The notion of people willing to compromise their beliefs on important issues, perhaps because those issues are not important to them personally leads to a false belief that there is a center. At the end of a process with people like this making decisions we get results like the one referenced above regarding the US Constitution question on slavery. People who did not appreciate the importance of the question forged a compromise that was a disaster. We have better clarity, better law, better results when matters are resolved by those on the extremes who have an opinion. Our nation is trying to compromise on health-care, war, deficits, taxation, energy, trade, etc., and in each case we are getting unworkable responses

Quote:

I apologize if I have misread your position. I think I have. American politics has been steeped in centrism for decades if not centuries.
On many of the big question when this nation has made the most progress it has been because of a full commitment to either extreme. For example there was no moderation on the question of social security - some argue it was a liberal position and we needed to go all in or not do it. During the same era, WWII - some would argue a right issue, we needed to go all in or not do it. I say with health-care reform, we go all in with single payer or do the minor fixes to make it more free market.

---------- Post added at 05:07 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:02 PM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Derwood (Post 2841379)
I think it's funny that all my conservative friends think this vote was a "mandate" on anything.

what I suggest is that it was an "against" result. I agree that it was not a mandate "for" a Republican platform, very few actually ran on that. I have been saying the anti-Pelosi message worked. The Speaker Pelosi angle worked more so than the Pres. Obama angle because many people like him and he has relatively high favorability ratings given the circumstances.

---------- Post added at 05:11 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:07 PM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tully Mars (Post 2841397)
Sprinkle in some good ol' racism and I think you've hit the nail on the head.

You gotta be kidding. You think a measurable component of the results had a racial element? Do you think in less than 2 years all the non-racist people who helped put Pres. Obama in office all of a sudden became racist? Is this what you think or is the racist thing just a liberal knee-jerk reaction to when things don't go their way?

---------- Post added at 05:21 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:11 PM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Willravel (Post 2841394)
Endorphins carry with them no direct health risk.

Neither do Happy Meals.

Quote:

Can you share your definition of "value", in the ethical sense of the word?
I think cultural "values" are a reflection the general shared views of a population. There are views I hold that are not in sync with American cultural values, even to the degree where I ( and I have stated this before) don't think I would be electable to a statewide or national political office. Given my strong feelings on some issues conservatives would consider liberal I could not get conservative support and on most issues liberals consider conservative I could not get liberal support. In my view, the suggestion that Pelosi, is out of sync with American values, is not an insult - I think it is simply self-evident and some people have become very vocal about it.

---------- Post added at 05:27 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:21 PM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by filtherton (Post 2841402)
This sums it up. The Dunning-Kruger effect in action.

You don't trust polls. Instead, you choose to rely on what you've heard from people in your vicinity, which is actually just an unscientifically sampled poll with a small, sample size and no rigorous quantitative analysis.

This is why it's hard to take your opinions seriously sometimes.

If it is raining, I don't check with a weatherman for him to tell me its raining. And if it is raining and he saz it ain't raining, I won't believe him. I don't care about his education, his scientific approach or whatever. That is how I live, call me what you will.

Also, on many of the polls there is a need to drill down. If a response is - its the economy. If you drill down with a follow-up you may find some real answers. Most polls in my view are superficial and are agenda driven. If you put blind faith in them - If I were you I would pause and reflect on that rather than attacking me.

Baraka_Guru 11-15-2010 09:30 AM

Ace, I guess another way to put it is that if you find yourself critical of market economies, free trade, and how capital is used, and if you'd rather see the economy organized a different way—a planned economy, for example—and that you'd rather see the nation's production organized from either the top down or via unions/councils, then you've probably left the centre entirely. If you would like to see a revolution to make this happen, then you've definitely left it.

With this in mind, Obama is obviously not a left-wing politician. He's a centrist. Centrists are more likely to support regulation and other forms of government intervention in a market economy. I don't think Obama is striving for a command economy, depsite what Tea Partiers would like us to believe.

aceventura3 11-15-2010 09:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by roachboy (Post 2841583)
ace--->first off i have no problem with the last post i made. in one of the directions your usual shuck and jive leaked into earlier in the thread, you were declaring people "real americans" and unamerican---you know, that lame mccarthyite shit that seems to loom in the background with alot of far right discourse.

Still insisting the far right is responsible for what happened to Democrats this past election?


Quote:

this in the midst of yet another demonstration of the reality-optional conservatism you espouse. don't like the evidence that the right media apparatus made up the nancy pelosi you don't like?
My point has been that perhaps letting things be made up is a weakness.

Quote:

pretend it isn't there. don't like the polls that demonstrate your contention that the midterms represent some conservative renaissance is a figment of your imagination? pretend they aren't there.
I did not make an issue of the polls, others did. What I think about the polls is not important to the issues in this thread. I know that, so whats the point?

it's always the same. what seems to matter is the avoidance of dissonance. it's like you write in order to flirt with it. but the game is to exclude it, over and over--so the movement in your positions is always lateral, a rearrangement of blocks. and you seem to conflate that with thinking.

at this point, much of this thread is a trail of exasperations.[/quote]

All I do here is share my views.

Quote:

but hey, why confront that when you can dodge it by whinging about my mod status?
Was my point lost? Do I need to explain it? Let's just say there was a sophomoric response to a sophomoric post.

---------- Post added at 05:41 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:36 PM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Baraka_Guru (Post 2842112)
Ace, I guess another way to put it is that if you find yourself critical of market economies, free trade, and how capital is used, and if you'd rather see the economy organized a different way—a planned economy, for example—and that you'd rather see the nation's production organized from either the top down or via unions/councils, then you've probably left the centre entirely. If you would like to see a revolution to make this happen, then you've definitely left it.

With this in mind, Obama is obviously not a left-wing politician. He's a centrist. Centrists are more likely to support regulation and other forms of government intervention in a market economy. I don't think Obama is striving for a command economy, depsite what Tea Partiers would like us to believe.

What I have been trying to say is Pres. Obama's approach is nothingness. In his eagerness to compromise or find a mythical center he fails to solve problems. On the economy it appears he has no real core belief or that his core belief is compromise. If true this fails - went met with those who have real core beliefs. If I walk into a negotiation knowing the other party is going to compromise, I win. I get what I want, because at the end of the day I won't give in.

Baraka_Guru 11-15-2010 09:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aceventura3 (Post 2842113)
What I have been trying to say is Pres. Obama's approach is nothingness. In his eagerness to compromise or find a mythical center he fails to solve problems. On the economy it appears he has no real core belief or that his core belief is compromise. If true this fails - went met with those who have real core beliefs. If I walk into a negotiation knowing the other party is going to compromise, I win. I get what I want, because at the end of the day I won't give in.

Ace, there's some evidence that Obama is a Keynesian.

And your talk about a mythical centre implies that Bill Clinton's presidency is a myth too. That's just one example.

I won't touch on your opinion on compromise. I think that deserves its own thread.

aceventura3 11-15-2010 01:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Baraka_Guru (Post 2842118)
Ace, there's some evidence that Obama is a Keynesian.

A Keynesian is something, you either are one or you are not. You can not be both a Monetarist and a Keynesian, there is no coherent center between the two. Given, Keynesians argue aggregate demand can be managed and monetarist argue that it can not be, a compromise or a hybrid of the two is failure. Because no matter which side is correct, the compromise solution can not solve the problem.

Quote:

And your talk about a mythical centre implies that Bill Clinton's presidency is a myth too. That's just one example.
Bill Clinton shifted from the left to the right. given that shift he was able to work with the Republican Congress. Bill Clinton, cut taxes, reformed welfare, passed NAFTA, cut federal spending, passed a crime bill, reduced government bureaucracy, and some would argue he reduced regulations. That sounds pretty right wing to me.

Baraka_Guru 11-15-2010 01:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aceventura3 (Post 2842184)
A Keynesian is something, you either are one or you are not. You can not be both a Monetarist and a Keynesian, there is no coherent center between the two. Given, Keynesians argue aggregate demand can be managed and monetarist argue that it can not be, a compromise or a hybrid of the two is failure. Because no matter which side is correct, the compromise solution can not solve the problem.

Both Obama and Bush have used Keynesian strategies. Both Canada and the United States are quite familiar with them, just as they are familiar with monetary policies. Most advanced economies are mixed economies, and so you don't even need to be a centrist to use both strategies.

Quote:

Bill Clinton shifted from the left to the right. given that shift he was able to work with the Republican Congress. Bill Clinton, cut taxes, reformed welfare, passed NAFTA, cut federal spending, passed a crime bill, reduced government bureaucracy, and some would argue he reduced regulations. That sounds pretty right wing to me.
This is mostly true. Bill Clinton was mostly centre-left until he lost the House, after which he became centre-right. It's not uncommon to see liberal/progressive politicians shift around the centre. I wouldn't call Clinton a conservative, however. At best, he was able to bridge the gap between liberalism and conservatism through compromise and appropriation. He's not the only liberal/progressive to do that. Canadian politics is filled with it.

NAFTA was started by conservative Canadian and American leaders (Mulroney/Bush Sr.) and was finalized by liberal Canadian and American leaders (Chrétien/Clinton). There were renegotiations in between.

The Liberal Party of Canada has been known to go on a platform that includes tax cuts as well. Obama has cut taxes.

Clinton balanced the budget and eliminated the deficit. The Liberals are champions of a balanced budget, and have been known to cut spending to achieve it.

This is centrisim, my friend.

aceventura3 11-15-2010 01:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Baraka_Guru (Post 2842194)
Both Obama and Bush have used Keynesian strategies.

Assuming agreement on the above, my point is that the hybrid solution is no solution. The hybrid solution is perhaps the reason this recession is as bad as it is - perhaps it is the cause. Either way I am not debating the reasons for the recession, I am illustrating the problem with the mythical center. The argument that both a liberal and a conservative both make the same mistake in my view means both are wrong - not that it is the center.

Quote:

Both Canada and the United States are quite familiar with them, just as they are familiar with monetary policies. Most advanced economies are mixed economies, and so you don't even need to be a centrist to use both strategies.
This is usually when I use an analogy to try to illustrate what I see as the problem in the position above. Today, I will refrain and simply say what I have been saying. If there is a mix at best it is a half solution, at worst it is a disaster, and most likely the underlying economy has the power to over come incompetence.

Quote:

This is mostly true. Bill Clinton was mostly centre-left until he lost the House, after which he became centre-right. It's not uncommon to see liberal/progressive politicians shift around the centre. I wouldn't call Clinton a conservative, however. At best, he was able to bridge the gap between liberalism and conservatism through compromise and appropriation. He's not the only liberal/progressive to do that. Canadian politics is filled with it.
Again, I am not clear if your meaning of center is like the sum of the pluses and minuses adding up to zero. If that is the definition, I agree there is a center - but I don't see how any conclusions can be drawn from such an approach.

Quote:

NAFTA was started by conservative Canadian and American leaders (Mulroney/Bush Sr.) and was finalized by liberal Canadian and American leaders (Chrétien/Clinton). There were renegotiations in between.
To me NAFTA was an aggressive move towards true free market capitalism between North American Nations. I agree that the finer details where negotiated, but again I would argue where there was compromise there were on-going problems.

Quote:

The Liberal Party of Canada has been known to go on a platform that includes tax cuts as well. Obama has cut taxes.
And some taxes have increased during his administration. Seems to me, his goal is not to cut taxes but to redistribute wealth and that he wants to use tax policy to accomplish that goal. I think Bush, for example, simply wanted to cut taxes to lessen the burden on the American people.

Quote:

Clinton balanced the budget and eliminated the deficit. The Liberals are champions of a balanced budget, and have been known to cut spending to achieve it.

This is centrisim, my friend.
I consider that a conservative approach (and I would agree that Bush and Congress failed during his administration), so if our difference is in semantics - we agree in principle. Some how I don't really think that is the case though.

roachboy 11-15-2010 02:06 PM

ace--no republican administration has actually **been** monetarist. they've all been "compromises" between talking monetarist and acting keynesian, particularly in the usage of military spending. clinton was more an actual monetarist than any republican before or since, much to the chagrin of the republicans who had to try to frame him as some phantasmagoric "leftist" so they could differentiate themselves from him.

the problem with monetarism is that it's horseshit. look around you. this is the world that the paralysis of talking monetarism as if it made sense has made.

you really should make an effort sometime to get your historical facts straight.
this reality-optional stuff is a crushing bore.

Baraka_Guru 11-15-2010 02:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aceventura3 (Post 2842197)
Assuming agreement on the above, my point is that the hybrid solution is no solution. The hybrid solution is perhaps the reason this recession is as bad as it is - perhaps it is the cause. Either way I am not debating the reasons for the recession, I am illustrating the problem with the mythical center. The argument that both a liberal and a conservative both make the same mistake in my view means both are wrong - not that it is the center.

There is no feasible alternative. But I think it would be wrong to assume that using both strategies (fiscal/monetary) caused the recession or made the recession worse. And I'm not even sure doing so can be considered a mistake. I think a mistake would be to take extreme measures by selecting one over the other. Mixed economies have proven to be the most stable option.

Quote:

Again, I am not clear if your meaning of center is like the sum of the pluses and minuses adding up to zero. If that is the definition, I agree there is a center - but I don't see how any conclusions can be drawn from such an approach.
You keep getting stuck into some kind of mathematical vortex when considering something that is measured by more than mathematics. You are thinking in binary opposites and so there is no centre possible. I cannot even visualize how you see things. It boggles my mind.

Quote:

To me NAFTA was an aggressive move towards true free market capitalism between North American Nations. I agree that the finer details where negotiated, but again I would argue where there was compromise there were on-going problems.
The final negotiations included clauses that essentially watered it down. It was a shift towards free market capitalism, but the final clauses clung to the idea of protectionism.

Quote:

And some taxes have increased during his administration. Seems to me, his goal is not to cut taxes but to redistribute wealth and that he wants to use tax policy to accomplish that goal. I think Bush, for example, simply wanted to cut taxes to lessen the burden on the American people.
Yes, Obama has taken a centrist approach on tax cuts. He wanted to take the burden off of the middle class specifically. Bush likely took the straightforward conservative approach of small government via lower taxes. The centre-left and most social democrats strongly support progressive taxation. They also strongly support social programs to help the poor or otherwise disadvantaged. I think the right calls this "redistributing the wealth." But at least this all goes on within a market economy.

Quote:

I consider that a conservative approach (and I would agree that Bush and Congress failed during his administration), so if our difference is in semantics - we agree in principle. Some how I don't really think that is the case though.
Balancing a budget isn't a conservative approach, it's a fiscal approach.

Anyway, I've lost what we're on about. Maybe if the average American thinks like you do, ace, and believe there is no centre, that would explain why Pelosi has been demonized. It's a case of a skewed view of economics and history and how the Democratic Party functions. Any mention of socialism in American political discourse is an example of that.

filtherton 11-15-2010 03:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aceventura3 (Post 2842087)
If it is raining, I don't check with a weatherman for him to tell me its raining. And if it is raining and he saz it ain't raining, I won't believe him. I don't care about his education, his scientific approach or whatever. That is how I live, call me what you will.

Right, well, in the context of your analogy, your refusal to use national poll results in favor of your own personal poll results is akin to looking outside your window to see what the weather is like in the rest of the nation.

Quote:

Also, on many of the polls there is a need to drill down. If a response is - its the economy. If you drill down with a follow-up you may find some real answers. Most polls in my view are superficial and are agenda driven. If you put blind faith in them - If I were you I would pause and reflect on that rather than attacking me.
Nobody should put blind faith in anything. However, you must realize that simply saying "I don't trust polls" isn't all that useful a response. Polls should be viewed critically based on objective criteria and one's best judgment. For instance, who funded the poll? Has the polling organization released the raw data? Have they released the questions used? Is their methodology sound? Is the sample representative of the population to which its results are inferred? How accurate have the polling organization's past polls been? Are there any recent events which might render these results obsolete? These are all good questions to ask.

There are a lot of ways that polls can be wrong, but to dismiss them all with a casual wave doesn't make sense if your goal is to understand how your fellow citizens feel about things. This is especially true when your alternative (a small sample of man on the street interviews?) is likely as -if not more- flawed than the polls you criticize. That is why I "attacked" you. Because you presented yourself as being above the trivial nonsense being peddled by pollsters while apparently failing to realize that your methods were likely as or less reliable.

aceventura3 11-16-2010 09:23 AM

Quote:

There is no feasible alternative. But I think it would be wrong to assume that using both strategies (fiscal/monetary) caused the recession or made the recession worse. And I'm not even sure doing so can be considered a mistake. I think a mistake would be to take extreme measures by selecting one over the other. Mixed economies have proven to be the most stable option.
Using both strategies equally, the effect is zero.

Quote:

You keep getting stuck into some kind of mathematical vortex when considering something that is measured by more than mathematics. You are thinking in binary opposites and so there is no centre possible. I cannot even visualize how you see things. It boggles my mind.
Your position boggles my mind.

Quote:

The final negotiations included clauses that essentially watered it down. It was a shift towards free market capitalism, but the final clauses clung to the idea of protectionism.
Which supports my point.


Quote:

Anyway, I've lost what we're on about. Maybe if the average American thinks like you do, ace,
Very few do. And even fewer actually think about the things I think about.

---------- Post added at 05:23 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:16 PM ----------

Quote:

Right, well, in the context of your analogy, your refusal to use national poll results in favor of your own personal poll results is akin to looking outside your window to see what the weather is like in the rest of the nation.
On one point I agree that my viewpoint is somewhat localized on this topic. I am sure the anti-Pelosi message did not work in California and some other areas of the country.

Quote:

Nobody should put blind faith in anything. However, you must realize that simply saying "I don't trust polls" isn't all that useful a response. Polls should be viewed critically based on objective criteria and one's best judgment. For instance, who funded the poll? Has the polling organization released the raw data? Have they released the questions used? Is their methodology sound? Is the sample representative of the population to which its results are inferred? How accurate have the polling organization's past polls been? Are there any recent events which might render these results obsolete? These are all good questions to ask.
Where was this response initially when the topic of polls came up? I simply shared my experience and my knowledge and someone throws in -the polls don;t support your experience, your knowledge - to which my response will always be the same, so what! I trust my judgment, my experiences, what I see, what I discover.

Baraka_Guru 11-16-2010 09:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aceventura3 (Post 2842476)
Using both strategies equally, the effect is zero.

Can I see your answer? Please show your work. I would like to see how you calculated that. :rolleyes:

Quote:

Your position boggles my mind.
My position? I've been talking about stuff that is most often found in books with such titles as Macroeconomics: An Introduction.

Quote:

Which supports my point.
I don't know how, because this is an example of the effect of centrist politics. By the way, what is your point?


Quote:

Very few do. And even fewer actually think about the things I think about.
I'm still not sure what that is, but when applied to the real world, it tends to muddy the waters.

Tully Mars 11-17-2010 12:03 PM

Pelosi elected leader today.

aceventura3 11-17-2010 12:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tully Mars (Post 2842870)
Pelosi elected leader today.

I guess it is a good day for her party, or is it?

Quote:

More money was spent and more commercials were run against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in this midterm election cycle than against any other congressional leader since Newt Gingrich.

More than $65 million was spent on 161,203 ads that targeted Pelosi from January 1 through last week's election, according to a new analysis of TV ads for CNN by Campaign Media Analysis Group.
Anti-Pelosi ads break records – CNN Political Ticker - CNN.com Blogs

Baraka_Guru 11-17-2010 01:00 PM

It isn't exactly news that conservatives are willing to spend a lot of money in opposition of something.

SecretMethod70 11-17-2010 01:23 PM

It's a good day for people who want House Democrats to get things done. I wish the same could be said for the Senate or Executive Branch.

aceventura3 11-17-2010 02:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Baraka_Guru (Post 2842907)
It isn't exactly news that conservatives are willing to spend a lot of money in opposition of something.

Reminds me of one of my favorite football teams in the 80's and 90's -

http://www.inflexwetrust.com/wp-cont...1289431705.jpg

Given your statement above , and others that I read here that are similar, it seems some get it to a point but fail to connect it to the next level. If the opposition is playing for keeps, shouldn't you? If Pelosi can not beat Republicans playing the game of politics, why do they want her to continue being the leader in Congress?

Baraka_Guru 11-17-2010 02:39 PM

My point is that I am rather familiar with the things conservatives oppose; what I'm not so certain of is what they support....well, besides failed economic theories and disastrous foreign policies.

aceventura3 11-17-2010 04:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Baraka_Guru (Post 2842935)
My point is that I am rather familiar with the things conservatives oppose; what I'm not so certain of is what they support....well, besides failed economic theories and disastrous foreign policies.

I support less government. That concept is vague, therefore it is easier to say what I am against government doing. For example I am against government trying to control my diet, or what I feed my children - I am not sure how to say that in terms of what I am for - how would you do it?

I only speak for myself, I am more libertarian than most.

The_Dunedan 11-17-2010 06:32 PM

The difficulty is this: libertarians (and some Conservatives) favour an -absence- of action. They don't simply favour -different- actions, or actions intended to benefit different groups, but the lack of action alltogether.

It's akin to trying to stop a runaway train. The Leftist (and Neo-Conservative) approach is to redirect the train, send it someplace else, in hopes that it will do less damage "over there" or that the train will simply run out of steam before it hits something. The libertarian (and paleo-Conservative) approach is to try and stop the train alltogether, dead in its' tracks, in order to prevent it hitting anything, anywhere. Sometimes this means applying the brake, sometimes it means using explosives and blowing the tracks. When the train is being driven by leftists (or Bu'ushist* Neo-Cons) who refuse to acknowledge the course it's on, the result is frequently that the L/P-C contingent gets turned into hamburger, and the train keeps going full-speed until it demolishes a hospital, a church, an orphanage, and a gun-shop. This is the result of the last 10-15yrs.


*A term of derision, borrowed with permission from the inestimable William Grigg, of Pro Libertate.

Baraka_Guru 11-17-2010 06:46 PM

Do libertarians believe that it's government that has created an inequitable society where there is a subset of the population who can't afford adequate health care? Or is it that government has caused the U.S. system to be the most expensive in the world? Do they believe that fully privatizing the system will make it affordable for everyone? Are there any models that exist where this has happened?

The_Dunedan 11-17-2010 07:07 PM

Quote:

Do libertarians believe that it's government that has created an inequitable society where there is a subset of the population who can't afford adequate health care?
Yes, as a result of "corporate welfare" and excessive regulation of the medical industry. Regulation drives up costs, which drives up prices. Likewise corporate welfare, by insulating some companies from market forces while -not- insulating others, and by providing Gov't assistance to companies which deserve to fail, has prevented innovation and kept prices artificially high.

Quote:

Or is it that government has caused the U.S. system to be the most expensive in the world?
Again, yes, and for most of the same reasons. However, a secondary issue is the fact that US companies essentially bear the brunt of medical innovation and research. They pay for the research, development, testing, and licensure of new drugs for example: that is a cost which the originating company must bear, but which its' competitors do not have to. A pharmacy in France can afford to charge much less than a pharmacy in the US for the same medicine, because that pharmacy's parent company didn't spent the previous ten years and millions or billions of dollars developing the drug. Their per-unit cost is simple: the cost of the pill. The cost to the company which -developed- the thing, on the other hand, includes all the run-up charges as well. Kinda like how the F-35 is 1/10th the price of an F-22 while still utilizing most of the same cool technolgy: the development costs are built into the F-22 (because all that cool tech was developed while the F-22 was) while the F-35 uses what was by then off-the-shelf technology (which is of course much cheaper because it's already been developed).

Quote:

Do they believe that fully privatizing the system will make it affordable for everyone?
Not necessarily, but neither do they believe that people who -did- look after their health and finances should be forced to subsidize those who did not. What many libertarians believe is that privitization would lower the cost of health-care enough for private charities, personal savings, and installment payment (which is how I've paid for my health-care since I turned 18) to cover the shortfalls. This would be because Doctors would be free to negotiate payment as they wished, free to carry (or not carry) malpractice insurance, etc.

On the balancing end, libertarians are big fans of consumer-advocacy groups (think J. D. Power & Associates): the kind of outfit who could rate doctors, give a good impression of their fees and services, and get the word out if a doc was crappy, dishonest, or an asshole. So: you find a nice, cheap doctor: he's got minimal insurance, but J. D. Power (or whomever) say he's a real top-flight cutter who's never needed it anyway. On the other hand, an expensive doctor might well be that way because he gets sued every 6mo and needs the cash to cover the settlements: our hypothetical advocacy group would be there to spread the word on that guy too.

Quote:

Are there any models that exist where this has happened?
None within the western world within the last 50yrs or so, but there are older examples. Mutual-Aid Societies in the US were one archetype which lasted until around WW2, likewise the various left/right-wing anarchist groups in Spain had a rough (but workable) medical network which functioned along similar lines.

Granted, these are imperfect examples: medicine was much less complex and less expensive back then. However, the result of 50yrs of Gov't meddling in the US and Europe has been exploding costs, degradation of service, loss of the "personal touch," the rise of the HMO, and in much of the rest of the West a near-total stagnation in regards to medical innovation. An additional result has been the sorts of horror stories chronicled weekly in the Wall Street Journal: such as the London woman whose family called an ambulance and was asked whether they would prefer for the EMTs to try and save her life or "just make her comfortable" so she could die quickly and save the NHS some Pounds.

'We're Going to Let You Die' - WSJ.com

Quote:

Liz Hunt of London's Daily Telegraph reports on an even more chilling euphemism used in a country that long ago instituted "health-care reform":

"Mrs ------- has breathing difficulties," the night manager told her. "She needs oxygen. Shall we call an ambulance?"

"What do you mean?" my friend responded. "What's the matter with her?"

"She needs to go to hospital. Do you want that? Or would you prefer that we make her comfortable?"

"Make her comfortable." Here's what that meant:

Befuddled by sleep, she didn't immediately grasp what was being asked of her. Her grandmother is immobilised by a calcified knee joint, which is why she is in the home. She's a little deaf and frail, but otherwise perky. She reads a newspaper every day (without glasses), and is a fan of the darling of daytime television, David Dickinson. Why wouldn't she get medical treatment if she needed it?

Then, the chilling implication of the phone call filtered through--she was being asked whether her grandmother should be allowed to die.

"Call an ambulance now," my friend demanded.

The person at the other end persisted. "Are you sure that's what you want? For her to go to hospital."

"Yes, absolutely. Get her to hospital."

Three hours later, her grandmother was sitting up in A&E [the accident-and-emergency ward], smiling. She had a mild chest infection, was extremely dehydrated, but was responding to oxygen treatment.

As Hunt notes, "Withdrawal of fluids (and drugs) is one of the steps on the controversial palliative care programme known as the Liverpool Care Pathway, which has been adopted by 900 hospitals, hospices and care homes in England."

Former Enron adviser Paul Krugman disagrees: "In Britain, the government itself runs the hospitals and employs the doctors. We've all heard scare stories about how that works in practice; these stories are false." But is it possible that Reich is right and Krugman is wrong?

filtherton 11-17-2010 08:07 PM

I'm not too familiar with pharmacy economics, but I'm pretty sure that most pharmaceutical companies are multinationals and that European regulatory hurdles are even higher than in the US.

Also, it would be nice to know how much drug companies actually spend on R&D as opposed to marketing, but alas, the only sources for that type of information are drug companies themselves and they apparently aren't too keen on enumerating their expenses that specifically.

Also also, government frequently plays a large part in the germination of new treatments and technologies via publicly funded research institutions which take ideas from the notebook and test their feasibility via translational research.

I shed no tears for the pharmaceutical industry.


Finally, it's easy to blame the ills of society on government meddling because most of us are completely unfamiliar with how society would be without a meddling government. However, it is for precisely this reason that anyone who claims to understand the effects of ending government meddling is full of shit. Despite the rainbow tinted pictures they often paint, libertarians don't know what would happen if their dreams came true. I suspect that things would likely get unbearably bad before they got better, and that's assuming that they'd get better at all.

mixedmedia 11-18-2010 04:54 AM

What's more, drug companies hold the patent for their drugs for the first 10-12 years of availability during which they make much more than their R&D money back. Particularly on medications for chronic conditions such as arthritis and hypertension. Yet, you don't see their prices going down once they've recouped their R&D money. Therefore, I don't really understand the comparison with France. Are we supposed to begrudge them for offering fair prices for their medications?

---------- Post added at 07:54 AM ---------- Previous post was at 07:28 AM ----------

I will agree with you about government influence on the declining quality of health care in that when Medicare instituted the practice of using Diagnosis-Related Groups (I think it's called) in the early '80s to standardize care and discharge planning for medical conditions requiring hospitalization or long-term care, insurance companies immediately saw the cost-saving benefits and today nearly all, if not all, insurance companies control the parameters of our healthcare in the same way.

That said, leaving millions of people uninsured and needlessly dying or suffering lifetime disability is not a reasonable alternative. These things don't happen in a bubble. You will pay and your healthcare is going to be affected one way or another. Why not just put the boogeyman on the table and accept that healthcare is not like cars or computers, everyone has a right to health and we all benefit from a society that has the ability to practice preventive healthcare and early detection of disease.

aceventura3 11-18-2010 08:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The_Dunedan (Post 2842991)
The difficulty is this: libertarians (and some Conservatives) favour an -absence- of action. They don't simply favour -different- actions, or actions intended to benefit different groups, but the lack of action alltogether.

It's akin to trying to stop a runaway train. The Leftist (and Neo-Conservative) approach is to redirect the train, send it someplace else, in hopes that it will do less damage "over there" or that the train will simply run out of steam before it hits something. The libertarian (and paleo-Conservative) approach is to try and stop the train alltogether, dead in its' tracks, in order to prevent it hitting anything, anywhere. Sometimes this means applying the brake, sometimes it means using explosives and blowing the tracks. When the train is being driven by leftists (or Bu'ushist* Neo-Cons) who refuse to acknowledge the course it's on, the result is frequently that the L/P-C contingent gets turned into hamburger, and the train keeps going full-speed until it demolishes a hospital, a church, an orphanage, and a gun-shop. This is the result of the last 10-15yrs.


*A term of derision, borrowed with permission from the inestimable William Grigg, of Pro Libertate.

Well said, I agree.

YaWhateva 11-18-2010 02:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The_Dunedan (Post 2842991)
The difficulty is this: libertarians (and some Conservatives) favour an -absence- of action. They don't simply favour -different- actions, or actions intended to benefit different groups, but the lack of action alltogether.

It's akin to trying to stop a runaway train. The Leftist (and Neo-Conservative) approach is to redirect the train, send it someplace else, in hopes that it will do less damage "over there" or that the train will simply run out of steam before it hits something. The libertarian (and paleo-Conservative) approach is to try and stop the train alltogether, dead in its' tracks, in order to prevent it hitting anything, anywhere. Sometimes this means applying the brake, sometimes it means using explosives and blowing the tracks. When the train is being driven by leftists (or Bu'ushist* Neo-Cons) who refuse to acknowledge the course it's on, the result is frequently that the L/P-C contingent gets turned into hamburger, and the train keeps going full-speed until it demolishes a hospital, a church, an orphanage, and a gun-shop. This is the result of the last 10-15yrs.


*A term of derision, borrowed with permission from the inestimable William Grigg, of Pro Libertate.

It might just be me but your assertion that a libertarian favors an absence of action would imply that the libertarian's approach to stopping a runaway train would be to do nothing about it.

dc_dux 11-18-2010 03:15 PM

I wonder if the libertarian "hands off" approach would apply to Pelosi's creation of the Office Of Congressional Ethics (an unnecessary bureaucracy that investigated 69 ethics complaints against House members and recommended action on 13 of them?).

Will the newly elected Tea Party Republicans, who are so adamant about cleaning up Washington, stand by quietly when Boehner dismantles the OCE?
Quote:

But behind closed doors, Boehner’s agenda clashes head-on with the populist rhetoric of many newly elected Republican House members. Even as they outline institutional reforms, GOP leaders are gearing up to kill the fledgling Office of Congressional Ethics, which helps police ethics complaints.

...Ornstein said at a recent briefing hosted by Common Cause, largely because party leaders have "made it very clear" that they plan to eliminate the Office of Congressional Ethics. "There is no pledge here to deal with ethics issues in a positive way, period," he said.

GOP leaders probably won't vote publicly to kill the OCE but will simply quietly defund it next year, said John Wonderlich, policy director of the Sunlight Foundation.

NationalJournal.com - House Ethics Tightrope - Monday, November 15, 2010
Where is the outrage among our conservative colleagues?

dogzilla 11-18-2010 03:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dc_dux (Post 2843342)
Where is the outrage among our conservative colleagues?

Wondering why thy house didn't kick Charlie Rangel out today. So much for ethics.

dc_dux 11-18-2010 03:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dogzilla (Post 2843343)
Wondering why thy house didn't kick Charlie Rangel out today. So much for ethics.

The full House has not voted yet.

But are you suggesting that the House use different standards for expulsion than other previous findings of ethics violations?

I would agree with you that the House needs to make its ethics penalties more punitive...but I dont agree with changing the rules in the middle of the game. In the history of Congress and most recently, the only Members expelled were those convicted of a crime in a criminal court...and a few expelled for their support of the Confederacy during the Civil War.

A "censure" is more punitive than a "reprimand" and is fitting in this case, based on existing standards.

Let the Republicans, who will draft the new House rules, establish harsher punishment going forward. I would absolutely support such House rules.

But why do away with the OCE?

aceventura3 11-18-2010 04:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dc_dux (Post 2843342)
Where is the outrage among our conservative colleagues?

Many of us don't get outraged over things that don't matter. My perception is that Congress will do a superficial job of policing its members and that they will never impose real consequences for ethical violations that do not rise to the level of prosecutable criminal activity. My perception is that nothing really changed with OCE and I admit that I could be totally wrong because I do not follow these issues very closely but I wanted to respond to the question. In summary the issue is just not that important to me.

Derwood 11-18-2010 04:36 PM

Ethics investigations in Congress should be processed by an independent commission, not by people's peers (which always results in partisanship and back scratching)

dogzilla 11-19-2010 02:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dc_dux (Post 2843344)
The full House has not voted yet.

But are you suggesting that the House use different standards for expulsion than other previous findings of ethics violations?

I would agree with you that the House needs to make its ethics penalties more punitive...but I dont agree with changing the rules in the middle of the game. In the history of Congress and most recently, the only Members expelled were those convicted of a crime in a criminal court...and a few expelled for their support of the Confederacy during the Civil War.

A "censure" is more punitive than a "reprimand" and is fitting in this case, based on existing standards.

Let the Republicans, who will draft the new House rules, establish harsher punishment going forward. I would absolutely support such House rules.

But why do away with the OCE?

There's no time like the present to start making an example of corrupt politicians. Rangel went 17 years without paying some taxes? Why is he even in office, let alone not in jail or heavily fined?

I don't know the details of what the Republicans plan. If they are implementing strong ethics rules and don't need the OCE. I agree with what Derwood said about some independent group filing and handling ethics violations claims.

dc_dux 11-19-2010 05:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dogzilla (Post 2843451)
There's no time like the present to start making an example of corrupt politicians. Rangel went 17 years without paying some taxes? Why is he even in office, let alone not in jail or heavily fined?

I don't know the details of what the Republicans plan. If they are implementing strong ethics rules and don't need the OCE. I agree with what Derwood said about some independent group filing and handling ethics violations claims.

Given that he is not facing criminal charges, he should be required to pay back taxes, which is what the committee recommended in its findings, along with being censured.

So you think the House should ignore its own standards and Rangel should be held to a higher standard than any previous Member of the House who faced ethics charges and be expelled w/o having been found guilty of criminal offenses.

Based on what? Certainly not based on precedent or the current House standards of ethics...so it must come down to your partisanship.

Quote:

In the history of the United States Congress there have been 19 Members expelled, 15 from the Senate and 4 from the House of Representatives. The majority of those expelled were removed from office for their support of the Confederacy in the immediate aftermath of secession. In 1861 eleven Southern Senators were expelled including the 1860 Democratic Presidential nominee John Breckinridge. In 1862 three more Senators were expelled for supporting the Confederate rebellion. Three Members of the House were expelled in 1861 for supporting the Confederacy as well.

There have only been three other expulsions from Congress in its entire history. In 1797 Sen. William Blount (TN) was expelled for "Anti-Spanish conspiracy" and treason. In 1980 Rep. Michael Myers (PA) was expelled for accepting money in return for using his official position to influence immigrations matters. In 2002 Rep. Jim Traficant (OH) was expelled after he was convicted on numerous counts of bribery, racketeering, and tax evasion.

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php...on_and_censure
The honorable thing for him to do is resign. The dishonorable, partisan response to hold Rangel to higher standards than any previous member of Congress.

The current ethics rules that Pelosi pushed through (with much arm-twisting of her own party) are the toughest in the history of Congress...not only with the creation of the quasi-independent OCE (members of the OCE are private citizens and cannot serve as members of Congress or work for the federal government) but with much tougher gift standards, travel standards, etc.

Could they be stronger? Absolutely. Just as it is undeniable that they are still the strongest ethics rules ever adopted by Congress.

And Boehner has made clear that ethics are not high on their agenda so it is highly unlikely that the Republicans will implement stronger ethics rules than currently exist (and that he intends to gut).

Xazy 11-19-2010 06:02 AM

He will walk, get his slap on his wrist, it is pathetic. He was in the committee of Ways and Means, is the most ironic part of it all.

The House ethics committee voted 9-1 on Thursday to recommend censure. That is not just Republicans, or Democrats. No one has the balls to say we need to throw the bum out. In my book they are all afraid to take that step since that means they can be next if they mess up.

dc_dux 11-19-2010 06:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Xazy (Post 2843503)
He will walk, get his slap on his wrist, it is pathetic. He was in the committee of Ways and Means, is the most ironic part of it all....

And Newt Gingrich was minority whip when he was found to have violated House ethics rules with tax violations around a questionable tax-exempt organization that he used for political purposes.

Gingrich was reprimanded (less than censure) and temporarily gave up this leadership role (only to on to become Speaker), just as Rangel gave up the chairmanship of Ways and Means. Gingrich paid $300,000, just as Rangel is expected to pay back taxes.

How do you justify a penalty beyond those established in the House rules and/or ethics guidelines used in the past?

I am not defending Rangel.....I just dont believe in double standards, particularly when they come off as partisan.

Wes Mantooth 11-19-2010 12:50 PM

I think the turn this thread took is a good example of why (amongst other things) some on the right don't really like giving the government having a larger role in society. It often seems like we in the US have a contradictory view of the federal government. On one hand they are supposed to be an impartial arbitrator a group of elected officials that only have our best interests in mind built to stand against corrupt corporations and greed to help us maintain a fair and equitable society.

Yet time and time again we see government waste, redundancy, corruption, greed and scandal which seemingly nobody can or will do anything about. We've almost become a society that just accepts the feds are complete and utter fuckups built largely of the elite who are totally out of touch with the average American and our needs as a country.

The two concepts of government simply don't mix very well.

I get the feeling that a lot of Libertarians/far right simply feel they are in a better position to manage their own lives/livelihoods better then a massive, out of touch federal government who can't possibly have the best interests of everybody at heart. They seem to feel that you can't legislate a fair society and the government shouldn't have the power to try in the first place, its none of their business, they don't have the ability to properly micromanage a nation of 300 million and we as a people should have the right to win or lose on our own merits.

Its not perfect, and like most things once taken to extremes it begins to fall apart but there is something to be said for putting limits on where/when the govt should be involved in our daily lives based on nothing more then their track record alone.

aceventura3 11-19-2010 01:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wes Mantooth (Post 2843707)
I think the turn this thread took is a good example of why (amongst other things) some on the right don't really like giving the government having a larger role in society. It often seems like we in the US have a contradictory view of the federal government. On one hand they are supposed to be an impartial arbitrator a group of elected officials that only have our best interests in mind built to stand against corrupt corporations and greed to help us maintain a fair and equitable society.

Yet time and time again we see government waste, redundancy, corruption, greed and scandal which seemingly nobody can or will do anything about. We've almost become a society that just accepts the feds are complete and utter fuckups built largely of the elite who are totally out of touch with the average American and our needs as a country.

The two concepts of government simply don't mix very well.

I get the feeling that a lot of Libertarians/far right simply feel they are in a better position to manage their own lives/livelihoods better then a massive, out of touch federal government who can't possibly have the best interests of everybody at heart. They seem to feel that you can't legislate a fair society and the government shouldn't have the power to try in the first place, its none of their business, they don't have the ability to properly micromanage a nation of 300 million and we as a people should have the right to win or lose on our own merits.

Its not perfect, and like most things once taken to extremes it begins to fall apart but there is something to be said for putting limits on where/when the govt should be involved in our daily lives based on nothing more then their track record alone.

Something is happening, I am starting to read posts on TFP that I agree with. Again, well said.

dogzilla 11-19-2010 01:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dc_dux (Post 2843481)
Given that he is not facing criminal charges, he should be required to pay back taxes, which is what the committee recommended in its findings, along with being censured.

Since when is tax evasion not a crime? Note that one of the reasons Charlie Rangel was before this committee was for not paying taxes for some 17 years? How far do you think that you or I would get if we suggested to the IRS auditor that we pay only back taxes with no interest or penalties?
Quote:

Originally Posted by dc_dux (Post 2843481)

So you think the House should ignore its own standards and Rangel should be held to a higher standard than any previous Member of the House who faced ethics charges and be expelled w/o having been found guilty of criminal offenses.

If you're going to be serious about draining the swamp, as Nancy Pelosi claimed she was going to do, then there's no time like the present to do more than have Charlie stand before his peers and get a toungue lashing

dc_dux 11-19-2010 01:35 PM

I get it.

You think the House should ignore its own existing rules and long-standing standards of punishment.

I disagree.

Pelosi implemented the toughest ethics standards in the history of Congress (I have said they dont go far enough) that you guys just cant bring yourself to acknowledge. If Boehner keeps them in place, or even better, expands them, I will applaud him.....but dont count on it.

Wes Mantooth 11-19-2010 02:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aceventura3 (Post 2843738)
Something is happening, I am starting to read posts on TFP that I agree with. Again, well said.

Thanks. I don't always agree with the far right and at times I violently disagree with them but I do believe they bring some good ideas and much needed balance to the table (I guess the same could be said for both sides). I feels like we put a disproportionate amount of faith in the federal government when we have no where else to turn but often over look that they don't always do the best job...or if they can/should be doing the job at all.

I don't know, I suppose its always good to have balance.

SecretMethod70 11-19-2010 04:10 PM

The inefficacy of the federal government can't be seen in a vacuum when you have people running (or helping to run) the federal government that believe programs are unnecessary and therefore appoint unqualified people to the job or defund programs and then use that as evidence said programs don't work. (For example, see: George W. Bush/FEMA/Hurricane Katrina)


Wes Mantooth 11-20-2010 11:24 AM

But isn't that just another part of the problem Secret? On top of everything else you also have those running the show actively rooting for certain (all?) programs to not only fail but completely disappear. I think for a large majority of the country to really even begin embracing a bigger role for the US government the feds themselves are going to have to begin giving people a reason to have a little faith in their elected officials and the government itself...I'm not sure I see that happening.

Thanks for linking that book btw. I think I might order that it, looks really good.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 12:31 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2
© 2002-2012 Tilted Forum Project


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360