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Politics Obama - Actually doing a good job?

Discussion in 'Tilted Philosophy, Politics, and Economics' started by rogue49, Mar 10, 2012.

  1. Lindy

    Lindy Moderator Staff Member

    Location:
    Nebraska
    I agree, 2% is not enough, but don't you mean administrations, as in the plural form? We can't blame Dubya for everything. I hate to defend him, but really, he was just one in a long line of overspenders.
     
  2. Charlatan

    Charlatan sous les pavés, la plage

    Location:
    Temasek
    Yes. Others spent, but the others were willing to raise taxes (Reagan, Bush 1 and Clinton). Bush 2 engaged in two wars (i.e. massive expenditures) and only kept cutting taxes.

    He stands out as egregiously over spending...
     
  3. rogue49

    rogue49 Tech Kung Fu Artist Staff Member

    Location:
    Baltimore/DC
    Yes, and people tend to forget that GWB's adminstration kept the two wars "off the books" in the budget.
    The Obama administration decided to put them back on...affecting the reported totals.

    Of course, both sides have a habit of emphasizing it one way or another for their convenience or to make a point.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  4. Joniemack

    Joniemack Beta brainwaves in session

    Location:
    Reading, UK
    I'm not sure what Bush's point was this instance.

    "It's just funny money anyway?"

    Which is mostly true. The real value of any currency is the faith based these days.
     
  5. roachboy

    roachboy Very Tilted

    the idea of "overspending" by a state is close to entirely meaningless. the united of states pisses away around 40% of federal outlays on the military and god only knows how much on the national-surveillance state. because the budgeting is secret, you see. eisenhower was right about the national-security state. at this point, it's a successful parasite, replacing the subjectivity of its host with its needs. reagan and bush one threw money at this sector to prop up the american war economy and pay off one of the right's main patronage systems. clinton continued it. bush two had this idiot "war on terror", which was a gift from the gods for the national security parasite. obama has done little to alter the continued metastasis of the national-security/surveillance state. stopping iraq was a good thing---of course it never should have happened and is a gift that keeps on giving in ways that amuricans seem unable to quite get their heads around (think syria for example)....afghanistan continues to be a fiasco...but the "legitimate war on terror" that is the spinning wheel at the center of the metabolism of the military-entertainment complex...that has spurred a continued expansion and institutional normalization of the national-security apparatus under obama. because it's all legal, you see. because, in significant measure, of the utter collapse of anything like oversight from congress after 9/11/2001. insofar as the parasite is concerned, then, obama has done a fine job.
     
  6. Baraka_Guru

    Baraka_Guru Möderätor Staff Member

    Location:
    Toronto
    Obama's legacy will be as the "status quo" president (despite reactionaries' cries of socialism and progressivism). This isn't a bad thing in and of itself. It sure beats continuing the path of Bush, Jr. and his willingness to carry out the objectives of the Project for the New American Century. (Whether or not he misinterpreted or corrupted these objectives is another story all together.)

    I mean, correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems the only idea of Bush's that Obama has taken and amplified is the drone war.

    What about the surveillance fiasco, you ask?


    View: http://youtu.be/fJmvKXqFuIk
     
  7. rogue49

    rogue49 Tech Kung Fu Artist Staff Member

    Location:
    Baltimore/DC
    Baraka_Guru, I think it's a bit early to designate his legacy.
    We're only half-way through the first year of his 2nd term...a lot can happen.

    And you're ignoring everything else he has done or accomplished.
    I think he also had a hand in pulling the US and maybe the rest of the globe out of the primary part of the financial crisis.

    Let's just take a wait and see attitude.
     
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  8. Baraka_Guru

    Baraka_Guru Möderätor Staff Member

    Location:
    Toronto
    Everything else? You mean the stuff that brings the U.S. closer to being on par with the rest of the developed world?

    And what he did during the financial crisis was fairly common according to the strategies of developed economies.

    There is little indication that he will suddenly change tack. Not with the worst Congress in history.
     
  9. Aceventura

    Aceventura Slightly Tilted

    Location:
    North Carolina
    I agree. The important metric is the efficiency of resource allocation. Spending does not gauge efficiency.

    For example if 100% of a nations resources are directed towards social needs and 0% to national defense. That spending can easily be rendered meaningless if an invading country enslaves or kills the nation's population.
     
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  10. roachboy

    roachboy Very Tilted

    so...therefore pissing away approximately half of total federal outlays (likely more) on shiny military and/or surveillance related toys is justified, and along with that all conservative whinging about those evil social programs that would have the appalling effect of making the lives of actual human beings better.

    because the united states faces a grave danger from the canadian hoardes. and, of course, mexico. and grenada. as you know, the history of the united states is much like that of poland, invaded by first one outside power then the other.

    if that's not the case, then your argument is simple, stupid hyperbole.
     
    Last edited: Jul 15, 2013
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  11. Aceventura

    Aceventura Slightly Tilted

    Location:
    North Carolina
    I think my point was clear. Spending on military can be inefficient. Spending on social issues can be inefficient. In either case the measure of total dollars spend is meaningless until put in some context - the context I suggest is efficiency.

    My view as presented is not ideological. I have an ideological point of view on the issue, but here I am simply agreeing with your premise that the idea of "overspending" is meaningless. And I say so because it is context that is required. I would further argue that "relative" spending is meaningless.

    I agree that the example was simple and hyperbolic. I am not sure about your use of the term "stupid". Simplicity combined with hyperbole is something I routinely do as a literary devise. If you want to discuss the effectiveness or efficiency of this, do so without me. But I will read what is written on the subject.
     
  12. rogue49

    rogue49 Tech Kung Fu Artist Staff Member

    Location:
    Baltimore/DC
    Uh Guys, I think you're spoiling for a fight. Aceventura actually made a valid balanced rational statement.
    His example was an obvious extreme to make a point.

    I don't think he was implying that opposite was totally true either.

    And to boot roachboy , he was agreeing with you.
     
  13. roachboy

    roachboy Very Tilted

    policy goals are shaped by political objectives. efficacy is measured with respect to those goals. this creates a circularity, of course. but the same circularity characterizes any indexing.

    what that an indexing tells you about the world is a function of the factors that are included in the measures. for example, if you were politically inclined to see a more equitable distribution of wealth than is possible under the tyranny of markets, you might calculate wealth in ways that include measures of overall quality of life--access to education and/or health care and/or morality rates for example---which would make of wealth a social relation.

    "efficiency" is not some magic term; it is not "objective"---what is "efficient" is so with respect to certain criteria. in the context of industrial production, for example, "efficiency" is typically connected to increasing the rate of production and minimizing costs incurred through such pesky obstacles to total accumulation as labor. efficiency can be figured otherwise, but that presupposes a politics of industrial production quite distant from the tyranny of markets and assumptions on the order of the only function of a business is to maximize shareholder returns.


    to suggest "efficiency" as some meta-criterion is merely to substitute one circular problem for another.
    the preference for it is merely aesthetic, like whether you prefer food spicy or bland.
    so all ace is doing is suggesting an aesthetic preference.
    at that level, there's not even an argument in his post--merely a series of restatements of his aesthetic preference.

    but to suggest that "efficiency" is somehow not ideological...that is just stupid.
     
  14. rogue49

    rogue49 Tech Kung Fu Artist Staff Member

    Location:
    Baltimore/DC
    roachboy, I think I'll take it as it was intended.

    I think he was implying that Congress, President and the bureaucrats be more effective and thoughtful of their resources,
    with some projection based on situation, needs and availability...ALL aspects being considered, not just ideal.

    And I would suggest myself too, the increase of efficiency or productivity of the departments of the government.

    You're taking it from an exact economic definition, your background being obviously more studied in this science.
    He was using a more layperson's term, perhaps more general or umbrella in its context...which I'm not going to fault him for at all.

    Formalism can be a bias in itself, you can express and extract good ideas even from those who do not communicate in those terms.
    Your tone is harsh...and blocking any debate with a scholastic elitist condescension.

    And that is just being aggressive...and could be considered flaming.

    Why don't we just debate it like gentlemen?
     
    Last edited: Jul 16, 2013
  15. Baraka_Guru

    Baraka_Guru Möderätor Staff Member

    Location:
    Toronto
    I'm not sure whether Aceventura means efficient or effective.

    And I think what roachboy mentions about policy goals is about being effective.

    Just so there's no confusion, I'll borrow from Wikipedia:
    Efficiency - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    And if you will forgive me for going all b-school on you:

    “Management is doing things right; leadership is doing the right things.”​
    ―Peter F. Drucker, Essential Drucker: Management, the Individual and Society

    Good governance requires both managers and leaders, don't you think?
     
    Last edited: Jul 17, 2013
  16. Charlatan

    Charlatan sous les pavés, la plage

    Location:
    Temasek
    It also requires leaders that are willing to listen to the advice of their managers.
     
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  17. roachboy

    roachboy Very Tilted

    rogue49:

    so what you're saying is on the order of: "o all those ill-considered notions that lay at the heart of your position are just fine. politeness requires we gloss over them."

    suffice it to say that it's pretty hard to get anything of interest from a discussion if the basic assumptions that put positions into motion don't make sense. it's not that hard to be a little precise. it really isn't.

    i will say that i find the lack of movement in discussions to be exasperating.
    but it's summer and there are many things to do.
     
  18. rogue49

    rogue49 Tech Kung Fu Artist Staff Member

    Location:
    Baltimore/DC
    No, that's not what I meant.
    I mean you're jumping on the formalism of the words with derision.
    And ignoring the context & intent and sincerity that it was stated.

    Again, you can take something from the meaning it was intended, rather than suffocating an idea just because it doesn't meet your specifics.

    Example: I taught myself everything in science & computers...and have thrived & excelled. But I'm not a formalist, don't think like one, don't talk like one.
    So despite the fact that I can figure out things others experts can't and design faster, it upsets many formally trained associates greatly that I don't communicate in those overly-formal terms.
    I communicate well, even more so I train others and relate ideas so they can understand them, and I'm not wrong either. But the more formal-minded are condescending in their attitudes, even if wrong.

    You can take the words as they are.
    And you can do it fair minded.

    While Ace can be extreme, one-sided or even exasperating himself at times...this time he was not.
    And actually I agreed with his statement....and he WAS agreeing with you.
    I take people as they are at that time.
    And I take what they say as they are intended.

    Government CAN strive to be more efficient in its resource allocation...and pragmatic about it, as he was implying.
    More over, it SHOULD have an obligation to do that.

    Now...back to the ongoing topic...Obama.
     
    Last edited: Jul 17, 2013
  19. Aceventura

    Aceventura Slightly Tilted

    Location:
    North Carolina
    I think any spending depends on context. We always have to analyze spending in some context. For example - Spending billions on defense systems when the population lacks education to operate them would be wasteful. Some balance is needed in this example between education and defense spending.

    I think his point is correct, we may disagree on how one arrives at the point.
    --- merged: Jul 17, 2013 at 2:57 PM ---
    I disagree with the above. Primarily the underlying assumption that political objectives drives policy goals. Somewhere in this we have to account for the none political needs and desires of individuals. For example - for me 99% of my daily activities have nothing to do with politics, but are related to my personal needs and goals. I act accordingly. And so does 99% of the rest of the population.


    Efficiency is the context I prefer. I have no issue with you defining your context. I simply ask what is it?
    --- merged: Jul 17, 2013 at 3:05 PM ---
    One can be effective and not efficient. In theory (not my view) one can be efficient and not effective - meaning you do not accomplish a goal. For example a surgeon can be efficient (doing everything the best way and the most timely way) yet the patient still dies - lack of being effective. personally I would argue that without effectiveness the suggestion of efficiency lacks credibility.

    I think both are needed.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Jul 24, 2013
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  20. rogue49

    rogue49 Tech Kung Fu Artist Staff Member

    Location:
    Baltimore/DC
    Ok, back to the topic...

    It seems like he's backed off Rock-Star mode, into Chessmaster mode.
    Like it knows that no matter what he says...or big-time move, he'll get outrage or resistance on.
    So he's playing the subtle hand, move the pieces he can actually move...negotiations to be done by others, big stuff letting the Congress play the game instead.
    Actually, this is more his style...not going to win cheers or fans...but it will get the job done.

    This article does a good job summarizing what I think I'm seeing. (although I think the headline itself is a bit of a leading question)

    My question is this...does he REALLY need a 2nd term strategy? Or can he just wing-it with pragmatism...play it as it comes, with some "down-the-road" viewing.