02-05-2005, 06:23 PM | #81 (permalink) | |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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First, as to the wording: That kind of behavior is common in almost all circles of life. You can't get your message across if the people listening don't understand what you are saying. I read the playbook and it is not some underground conspiracy, it is merely recommending how to deliver the message without alienting your audience. Ask anybody in advertising or sales; this is commonplace. Hell, I even took an NLP course in order to help me make more sales. Here is an example: I consider myself a pretty smart guy, but my head hurts when I have to read roach's posts. While the concept he is talking about is not beyond me, his manner of writing puts me off. I just prefer more straightforward, simple language. End result: roach loses me as an audience because his message has no chance of connecting to me because of the wording and the style, Like I said, I read some (not all, but some) of the playbook and it didn't bother me. It actually made sense. As to the second paragraph I quoted from you.... You and I are from complete opposite spectrums in regards to idealogical thought. That doesn't make you right nor does it make me wrong. As foreign as my beliefs are to you, I assure you yours are to me as well. But it appears as if you fail to understand that people like me are not all sheep. It just boils down to a difference in how we all view the world and events around us. As to the topic at hand, you should remember that I have talked about it long before it became the conversation du Jour. It just so happens that many of the key talking points that are listed in that memo are very similar to concerns that I personally held based on my own research. No one told me how to think and nobody suggested that I take this issue up as a cause. I was actually studying something completely different and kept coming across information that helped formulate the opinion that I have today. Lastly.... I know our goverment sucks. I know that there are many things that happen that shouldn't. I am not so blind as to not see that. I just look at it differently. Compared to most other gov'ts and cultures, I find this particular one suits me the best. It isn't perfect, but I feel it is the best one going. I also know that some things are not attainable. World peace will never happen, regardless of what any of us want. Hunger will never end. Poverty will always be a blemish on every acre of land on this big ol' ball we call home. All of these things will always battle an opposing force that is much more powerful: human nature. So, rather than try and change something I can't, I focus on things that I can have an effect on. While I do not condemn someone for choosing the more altruistic route, it is not for me. My concern is that we are spiralling down an even worse path because we cannot get past our own differences. Both of our sides seem to have this worst-case scenario vision of each other. It is not hard to find some deep underworld conspiracy if you look for one. It's like some of these studies that get released. You give me what you want a study to prove, and I can prove it, regardless of how assinine the outcome you desire. When you came to the table already ladened with pre-conceived notions, you are going to leave with the same ideals because that is all you will see. As with this case. I have many friends, co-workers, etc. that believe a lot of the same things I do, and..... I can assure you that we are not evil. We are not pathological liars. We don't want more poverty. We don't want more hungry. We are not blind, short-sighted robots of the far-right regime. We are just people, just like you, and we want many of the same things you want. We just see a different way of getting there. |
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02-05-2005, 07:04 PM | #82 (permalink) | |
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
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If we don't like the makeup of the funds that will be offered as I understand it, we can choose to not participate and put all our FICA taxes into the SS plan. |
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02-05-2005, 11:12 PM | #83 (permalink) | ||
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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I'm gonna put myself back on topic:
First, regarding the comments made about personal accounts (that was for you smooth) and the risk of having the money in the stock market. As I was reading the analysis of the Clinton's 2000 budget (yeah, Saturday night and I am spending it reading presidential budget reports), a paragraph jumped out at me: Quote:
This was one of Clinton's proposals regarding SS. If a major problem that some people have with privatization is the riskiness of the stock market, where was the uproar about this? I never heard a peep about it. The only difference with Clinton's proposal and privatization (in regards to the stock market) is who owns the program; me or the government. The obvious next question: Who do you trust more; yourself or the government? Why do I get the feeling that a lot of the fervor here relates more to the person making the proposal and has little to do with the proposal itself? Now, there is another little tidbit of information in Clinton's 2000 budget (as referenced above): Quote:
The guesstimates are that outlays will exceed revenues for Social Security somewhere around 2015/2016. Then what happens? There isn't any money in the trust fund. That leaves us with three options: 1) Pay back the IOU's in the trust fund (where is the money going to come from) 2) Increase the tax rate for SS (which would also include raising the cap) 3) Decrease benefits and a possible fourth: all of the above (depending on who you talk to). What about all of the "experts" saying there isn't a crisis and that SS is solvent until 2042 or 2055? They are counting in the ghost balances of the trust fund. The trust fund has a balance, just like any other ledger, but there isn't anything there. The zero balance is offset by the IOU's. Plus, as I understand it, the design of the trust fund isn't such that it would ever hold a balance. So, unless I am analyzing this information wrong, I am left with the following question: Why shouldn't we be looking at reforming SS now? Realistically, this should have been done a long time ago. If we wait until the "No Crisis" people tell us it is o.k. to work on the problem, it will probably be too late. More Info /please note that I chose my references wisely, no links to Cato, Heritage or whatever. Last edited by KMA-628; 02-05-2005 at 11:14 PM.. |
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02-06-2005, 07:49 PM | #84 (permalink) | |
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02-06-2005, 07:55 PM | #85 (permalink) | ||
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02-06-2005, 08:10 PM | #86 (permalink) | ||
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I still haven't seen an answer to your repeated question of what happens when the payor/payee ration hits 1:1, as is predicted to happen soon. Here's another perspective: Link Quote:
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02-06-2005, 11:31 PM | #87 (permalink) | ||||||
Somnabulist
Location: corner of No and Where
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sob asked what will happen when the revenue-payment ratio for Social Security reaches 1:1, and provides a Luskin artical proclaiming disaster. Let us deconstruct Mr. Luskin's piece, shall we?
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Back on planet Earth, the Social Security Administration will do no such thing. It is silly to think that the Trust Fund should always remain filled with as much money as humanly possible. The Trust Fund is actually there in order to ensure benefits for many years after SS begins paying out more in benefits than it takes in. It is not meant to be a minimally acceptable level of available money. When the Trust Fund was established in its current form - in 1983, by Reagan - it was designed to simply cover SS benefits for a while and, in doing so, eventually dwindle. To use my example again, the Trust Fund will dwindle over the years - from $50 on the last day of 2008 to $0 at some future point - as it is spent by SS to ensure 100% payment of benefits. This "crisis" Luskin is referring to is the Trust Fund doing EXACTLY what it was designed to do. Quote:
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Well, he says that this puts the government $11.9 trillion dollars (the amount they will owe SS) further in debt. Is the real SS crisis that the government will have to pay back to SS the money it owes them? Perhaps - I mean, $11.9 trillion is a lot of money. So what are the possible solutions to this problem? Luskin has no answers. Instead, he points out the obvious - that the government has to get the money to repay that $11.9 from somewhere: Quote:
OK, replies Luskin, what if the federal government does repay its debt to SS? Even then, SS will only be able to ensure everyone receives 100% of benefits until 2042, and surely THAT is the crisis [although I question the imminent adjective he likes to use]: Quote:
Remember when I told you that allowing Bush's tax cuts to expire would more than pay for whatever amount of money the government needs to raise in order to pay its debt to SS? Well, that would easily cover the last 20% or so of benefits that SS needs to make up beginning in 2042 - and keep SS providing full benefits until somewhere around 2080. Even if it didn't, those 80% of benefits are, according to this article, actually worth more in real money than retirees get in full benefits currently (thanks to wage-indexing). Think of it this way: retiree A gets, say, $20 a month from Social Security in 2005. In 2042, retirees may only be receiving 70-80% of what they should be getting, but even so, the amount that retiree B - who lives in 2042 - gets is equivelant to $25 for retiree A. So nobody will be in that much trouble, really, even if the system pays out less than it should in 2042. Which leaves Luskin in trouble. Social Security doesn't face a crisis in 2009, because it has its Trust Fund specifically set up to ensure that retirees get their checks. There is no crisis in 2018, because the government can easily get the cash it needs to pay back Social Security everything it owes in Treasury bills. Even if Social Security doesn't provide 100% of benefits in 2042 - it easily could, but just for the sake of argument - if it gives out only 70-80%, everyone receiving that money would actually betting getting more in real money than people getting all of their benefits in 2005. The earliest time that Social Security faces a real crisis, therefore, is around 2080. That sure as hell isn't imminent and, despite all of Luskin's pretty rhetoric, misdirection, and half-truths, is no crisis.
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"You have reached Ritual Sacrifice. For goats press one, or say 'goats.'" |
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02-06-2005, 11:42 PM | #88 (permalink) |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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FYI -
I spoke with Donald Luskin this evening (prior to reading the above). I will forward your rebuttal to him tomorrow to get his take on your deconstruction of his article. I cannot guarantee that he will respond, but if he does, I will post his response here (with his permission, of course). |
02-06-2005, 11:57 PM | #89 (permalink) | |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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Also, Donald Luskin gave me a research paper from the U. of Pennsylvania on the trust fund topic.
It is too large to post here (41 pages), but a good read if you want the "scholarly" take on the situation. PM if you would like a copy and I will forward it on. Here is the abstract Quote:
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02-07-2005, 10:27 AM | #90 (permalink) |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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I received a response from Don this morning regarding guy44's post.
While I agree with Don's assesment, I do not think it would further the discussion here, so I have decided not to post it. Plus, I do not have permission to post it. Since it occured in private conversation, I will keep it that way....private. I just wanted to let you know that he did respond and not too favorably. |
02-07-2005, 01:25 PM | #91 (permalink) | |
Muffled
Location: Camazotz
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You mean, a guy who makes his living on his opinions didn't respond favorably to someone disagreeing with him? Total fucking shock!
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02-07-2005, 01:27 PM | #92 (permalink) | |
Wehret Den Anfängen!
Location: Ontario, Canada
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Are "social security taxes" general revenue, or not? A> If social security taxes are general revenue, then social security costs are also general revenue. In which case, 2015/2016 is not a special year at all. One random general revenue tax fell below the cost of one general revenue program. B> If social security taxes are not general revenue, then the US government owes social security billions of dollars. In which case, in 2015/2016, social security can start calling in those IOUs. So which is it? From what I can tell, the above arguement wants the revenue to be general revenue when it is in surplus, and the sole source of funding SS when it isn't. It's a cake. You can eat it, or you can have it. You really can't do both. Please select one, or show why I'm on crack, and the cake has a dual nature.
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02-07-2005, 01:49 PM | #93 (permalink) |
Somnabulist
Location: corner of No and Where
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I believe that it is general revenue, but in the next few years as less people are paying taxes for more Social Security recipients (the Baby Boomers) the size of the Trust Fund decreases as more and more is used to cover whatever taxes themselves don't. However, the Trust Fund also has about $11 trillion dollars in IOUs from the federal government that, when the general revenue dwindles down around 2018, will need to be called in.
You are right that it is misleading to call actual funds the sole source of funding when there are still IOUs laying around. The only way that is the case is if we were to know, definitively, that the federal government had no intention of honoring those IOUs (i.e. Treasury bills).
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"You have reached Ritual Sacrifice. For goats press one, or say 'goats.'" |
02-07-2005, 01:59 PM | #94 (permalink) | |
Somnabulist
Location: corner of No and Where
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You know, all this detail and nuance regarding Social Security can be very confusing. It is sometimes hard to accurately describe what it is we are talking about. We may get muddled in our meaning, misunderstand difficult economic concepts, or just in general not know what the hell we're talking about.
I know who could sort these things out for us! Why, President George W. Bush can surely break this complicated matter down for the benefit of the American people: Quote:
Here's the whole thing.
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"You have reached Ritual Sacrifice. For goats press one, or say 'goats.'" |
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02-10-2005, 10:22 AM | #95 (permalink) | ||
Wehret Den Anfängen!
Location: Ontario, Canada
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Bush's view on the debt incurred to pay for social security:
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02-10-2005, 11:07 AM | #96 (permalink) |
Crazy
Location: Central Wisconsin
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We know the system will take a dump without change, but so many people are against any change. Why?? look at the Chilean system, they went to privatization years ago and it has done nothing but promoted national growth. It is very possible.
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If you've ever felt there was a reason to be afraid of the dark, you were right. |
02-10-2005, 11:28 AM | #97 (permalink) | |
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Bush should be impeached now on the grounds of utter incompetence
and duplicity. Here is a link to the SSA Trust Fund Portfolio. It contains "special issue" and treasury bonds, totalling $1,703,395,104 . Quote:
shills with fake names (as in Jeff Gannon) in his press conferences, payoff mouthpieces posing as commentators (Armstrong Williams) and enlist the Fox News/Limbaugh/Hannity/Coulter apparatus to fool the sheeple into consenting to his policies. Policies that are not in the sheeple's best interest, judging by the lack of truth in the way they must be presented and shilled. Bush doesn't want the sheeple to know that the SSA trust fund does exist, with publicly available details. Bush knows that it will take an act of Congress to dismantle and default on payment of SSA's bomd portfolio. He doesn't want you to know that this is what he plans to do. It is a much easier way out than taxing and budgeting responsibly and competently to meet government's obligations. |
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02-10-2005, 11:49 AM | #98 (permalink) |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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host -
The facts are not on your side here. The trust funs has zero economic assets. It has a ton of money owed to it, but it has zero real dollars in it. As I have said before, if you were given a check for $10 from the trust fund, without transferring any money into the trust fund, the check would bounce. No one is arguing that the trust fund has zero dollars in it (at least no one that has looked at the facts), the argument is how to we pay back the money. The money was borrowed from the trust fund and spent without any plan of paying it back. Now, in 15-20 years, when SS needs to pull from the trust fund, how do we pay the trust fund back to keep SS benefits up. |
02-10-2005, 12:31 PM | #99 (permalink) | |
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KMA-628, isn't the real dilemna that the Bushco didn't "purge" the SSA web
page containing the trust fund asset information before Bush declared that it doesn't exist? If the SSA trust fund's bond portfolio has no value, what does that tell the Japanese or the Chinese, who probably don't regard their combined $1 trillion Treasury Bill holdings as "valueless". The POTUS is obligated to advocate responsible tax and budgetary policies. Past presidents, and even Bush, until it no longer suited his new message, reassured workers and retires as to the viability of SSA. Bush is taking the wronf approach, and attempting to take the easy way out. Why the sudden shift to a tax policy that favors the wealthiest? Why should what remains of the middle class endorse the president's continuing agenda of shifting wealth and tax burden from the lower 80 percent of American's to the wealthiest 20 percent? There are other alternatives. Let the sunset provisions of Bush's tax cuts expire, leave inheritance taxes in place.....the wealthy simply purchase affordable instruments, for example, "second to die" life insurance policies on wealthy parents mitigate much of the impact of the "death tax". Remove the $90,000 and above earned income cap on SSA payments. The wealthy paid for Bush and his agenda, and they are in the process of getting what they paid for, while some of us watch in frustration, and others willingly co-operate in Bush's wealth shifts away from themselves and their children. You are saying the same thing that Bush said. SSA's site contradicts both of you. Quote:
benefits. Bush and apparently, you, want to separate the government's obligation to redeem outstanding securities "on demand". Why is this bond portfolio your target? Are American workers more gullible or less worthy than Asian treasury bond holders? Why doesn't Bush tell them that their U.S. treasury holdings are "worthless IOU's" ? Can't you recognize that Bush is acting in a dangerous, desperate, and duplicitous manner? He is hoping to talk down the value and risk of just one class of government bond. By doing this, he doesn't pass the test of representing the best interests of all Americans. He should be impeached. |
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02-10-2005, 12:34 PM | #100 (permalink) | |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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Even for you, this is a little wacko. I do not wish to participate in discussions that require me to don ye old tin foil cap. Read the posts in this thread. The trust fund has been discussed thoroughly, with plenty of factual evidence to back up the assertions. |
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02-10-2005, 12:48 PM | #101 (permalink) | ||||
Wehret Den Anfängen!
Location: Ontario, Canada
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This isn't a crisis of social security. This is a crisis of general government finantial mismanagement. The US congress is in massive deficit financing mode -- they are spending money hand over fist which they don't have. The social security debt only makes the existing finanicial imprudence of the federal government even worse -- it is just one of many debts. What GWB is describing is defaulting on trillions of dollars of US government debt. He's describing stealing from the social security fund, by zeroing it's assets, and using that to prop up a horribly leaking government finantial situation. Quote:
And calling your opponents "wacko" isn't polite.
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02-10-2005, 12:53 PM | #102 (permalink) | ||||
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Bushco policy of "scrubbing" government web pages ! Quote:
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I'd be happy to post 20 more examples when time permits. The "tin foil cap" cliche is getting a bit long in the tooth, dontcha think? Any excuse to avoid actually countering my points with references to verifiable.....or contested sources ! |
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02-10-2005, 02:06 PM | #103 (permalink) | |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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The problem is how the trust fund becomes liquid again. SS and the trust fund have been used as a cash cow for years, but I have yet to see a tangible way of transferring the liabilities to liquid assets. Bottom line (as I have said numerous times): The money was borrowed and spent without our approval and in order to replace that money, we, the American taxpayers, are going to have to foot the bill. Our government isn't going to foot the bill, they will pass it on to us. Which means that we will pay for it twice. Anyway, as to the "wacko" thing. I called the assertion wacko, not the person. Did you not read the comment? That kind of stuff belongs in Paranoia, not here. And the assertion is made by someone that devotes an entire thread to questioning the mental health of people like me. I learned my lesson, Mr. Ignore button is now implemented so as to avoid this kinda of thing in the future. |
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02-10-2005, 02:46 PM | #104 (permalink) |
Tilted
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"Yeah.....it's me....I'm the one who is misleading the thread by referring to the
Bushco" No it's you misleading the thread, that was really getting pretty interesting, by stopping-down discussion of the actual problem at hand to slam the administration again. (If it makes you feel better, I generally agree that they're wankers. Just like Clinton's group, and Bush Sr.'s earlier.) -fibber |
02-10-2005, 02:57 PM | #105 (permalink) | ||||
Wehret Den Anfängen!
Location: Ontario, Canada
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It holds bonds which represent debt of the US government, which it purchased in large quantities since the 80s, as planned. If I go to my investment advisor, and ask for cash, I can't get it. I'd have to cash in my investments first. This does not mean there is are no real assets in my investment account. US government bonds are pretty damn liquid. They could sell them on short notice, or at worst get an overnight loan while the sale goes through, and produce cash (or, lower-M money) as required. Quote:
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Collectively, you are liable. It's called responsibility. And don't pretend they decieved the people of America with election promises -- look at the reelection rate in the senate and the US house. Possibly the American people where negligent in their responsibilities, and didn't pay attention to what their representatives did, but you can't claim it was without their approval. It isn't the SSA who is screwing up. It is the US congress, US senate and the US president, who collectively are spending the USA into debt. A debt which they are lieing about. Quote:
There is a pig-in-the-python demographic problem. There is a US-government financial mismanagement problem. Claiming that those problems are a problem of SS is both useless and disenginuous. The US government taking the SSA trust fund, and zeroing it, is the same as a company taking a pension fund (possibly invested in company stock) and folding it into general revenue. It's accounting fraud, theft from the people with a stake in the fund, and immoral. You have to realize, accounting is real -- "it is just accounting" is about as ignorant a financial statement you can make. Your bank account is just numbers. Debt is just numbers. Ownership of a company is just numbers. Everything you own, everything you owe, the lubrication of the entire world economy -- it is numbers in some computer somewhere. Those numbers all represent real obligations. Failure to live up to these obligations is theft.
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02-10-2005, 11:01 PM | #106 (permalink) | ||
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Bush and his administration, but either refuse or are incapable of mounting an argument that is well founded in verifiable facts that make a case that it it is in their own best interest, and that of the country's, to do it. I did not single you out as someone who fits that description. Here's a well respected journalist and commentator who seems to be making similar observations and comments about delusional politicians and their supporters as I did in my "mental health" thread. Go figure...... Quote:
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02-10-2005, 11:19 PM | #107 (permalink) | ||
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Please consider that I got involved because I posted a "reasonable" reaction to this, displayed in Post #95..... , and I'd do it again, if Bush persists in deliberately misleading the citizenry as to the SSA trust fund's assets ! Quote:
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02-11-2005, 01:00 PM | #108 (permalink) |
Tilted
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It's cool, I usually have no problems with your arguments, just their delivery sometimes.
On topic, I read some article earlier this morning on how the bond idea resembles one McGovern proposed before the '78 election. I really dig McGovern as I always felt he was a bit above the ultra-partisan mentality, and it struck me as odd seeing a similar proposal from someone who was labled as "too left" by many to even get the big D. nomination in '78. I'll try and find it again. -fibber |
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account, bush, forfeit, plan, profits |
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