..............................
More Mythbusting about the US presidency: It ain't nearly as powerful for domestic policy as it is for foreign policy. At least it hasn't been so far, and this Obama voter hopes that any change we see soon will be *further* reductions of presidential power.
When it comes to our "private" sector, Congress, the judiciary, and our federal bureaucracy, the presdident's job is far closer to herding cats than it is to commanding armies. It isn't presidential "authority" that can have much effect here--it is really whether the back-channel politicking and public pep talks work well enough, or if the bully pulpit is used for nagging people, whether or not a given president is taken seriously (Bush 43 shows how this can change dramatically for a single president). Unless you wear a DoD uniform or are one of the relatively small number of political appointees in federal service, the president has no direct "authority" over you at all.
Nope, not astrology land at all. I can see the numbers on my paycheck. I can go to the websites of nearly any publicly traded organization and get their reports, statements, releases, etc with a wealth of information, including how much they pay in taxes. Maybe you can argue about how a business uses the extra money from lower tax rates, but there's no question that taxes are a real number on real budgets and it really affects businesses. The problem is not a lack of hard data, rather the issue is usually how to interpret it.
What is astrology is stuff like the "societal inertia" that Ron mentioned that has no basis in any sort of facts.
Well, I'll ignore your rant on morals and self awareness, and focus on the biological boom/bust cycle as a metaphor for economics.
While it is interesting that people are claiming to be ale to control the boom/bust cycles of economics, I am far from convinced. When a lot of control of a single group is placed over an economy and they place tight controls on everything, it nearly always gets worse as the controls are tightened and eventually breaks down. That's what killed the Soviet Union IMHO. They overcontrolled their economy and it blew up on them.
The best thing for an economy is to have some checks and balances systems in place, and to keep corruption to a minimum. So yeah, there is a bit of control over an economy. But too much control can kill an economy just as much as having no control over it.
IMHO, some form of checks and balances should serve to keep the economy at a desireable level - not some hard line somehwere where you say "This is how far you can go, and you will be punished if you go further."
I would agree with this. The president is an easy to blame target, and many people overstate how much control he has over the economy.
./cough Irrelevant to the point I made -- yes, his power is relatively weak, but he still has more power than any other single individual
Facts... or common freakin' sense? (Edit: To clarify, the word 'societal' really was pulled out of my rear -- but the concept of inertia applies in a lot of places, not just physics. My point was that even with a lot of power, it's going to take time for incompetance of one man, even at the highest level, to radically effect the economy)
Did you know unemployment and poverty were lower before the progressive era than after?
At the start of the progressive era, the business cycle was absolute, boom, bust, boom, bust. The employment rose and fell several points in cycles that only lasted a few years. As they kept adding programs in, the cycles got less severe. The average rate got larger. The great depression comes along, more and more programs keep getting added in, the rate keeps getting larger. WW2 comes around, the unemployed finally have stuff to do, the wartime draft and following reconstruction era is the first time the average rate of unemployment is lower than before the changes. The draft is ended, the oil crisis hits, poof, back to higher unemployment!
Progressive, or counter productive?
Wish in one hand, shit in the other. Refusal to accept reality will not change it.
For thousands of years, people have been attempting to change reality by denying it, form a utopia where people don't act like animals. It still hasn't worked. We're animals.
The individual is a relatively intelligent being, just as a dog is a relatively intelligent being. Society is a collection of idiots. This is proven countless times every day. You need only turn on the tv to see just how dumb society is. The first commercial you see is proof that people are fucking stupid. If they weren't, commercials would be simple information spots instead of propaganda.
Global warming is going to kill us all. Global warming, the single greatest achievement mankind could possibly hope for. The nightmare scenario where the polar caps melt means doubled food production, increased range of habitat, less destructive weather. Yeah, people wont be able to live on some of the sand bars they're currently inhabiting. We're in a brief lull between ice ages and the world panics over a temporary, and already finished warming period that would have been helpful anyway. This alone proves that people are about as intelligent as sheep when in a large group.
Healthcare is definitely the left's most important issue right now. I will grant you that countries with national healthcare systems are better than the system America has right now. However, I am severly critical of any notion that anyone can plan adequately looking 50 or more years into the future. We are going to end up with a system which is harder to change than social security, however in contrast to social security, the healthcare policies will be over 200 million pages long. And every technological breakthrough will throw the budget estimates to the wind.
Quoting CobraA1, comment 73 "Joe the Plumber isn't a business owner. He's intending to buy the business he works at.... . . and I'm assuming he intends to do stuff with it. I don't think he'd buy itif it didn't have potential for growth."
"Joe the Plumber isn't a business owner. He's intending to buy the business he works at.... . . and I'm assuming he intends to do stuff with it. I don't think he'd buy itif it didn't have potential for growth."
"Joe the Plumber" is a fucking liar that tried to press the issue on Obama's tax plan. In reality, not BS, Joe benefits far more under Obama then he would have done under McCain. The guy went out there and started speaking publicly and was a total asshole in just about every interview that was conducted outside Fox News. If you've only watched Fox, you wouldn't know any of this as they never corrected the story like they always do, but it's already old news. The guy was a plant and isn't even a registered plumber for fucks sake, he's broke, and was NEVER going to buy any business in the first place, let alone start making 250k + a year. All of this is so damn dumb to begin with. The extra 3 percent that he would have to pay AFTER 250k is whopping 3 percent! Oh, he's doomed to fail for sure, yep. That would have prevented him from buying a business in the first place? That's just crazy talk, which was his implication to Obama. That's insanity and stupid. If you noticed, McCain singled him out first in the debates, this is politics 101 man. Problem is, it didn't work or have the effect it was intended to have. The Republicans and especially Conservatives have a hard time connecting with most of the working class in America. Joe the douche was an asshat that got caught with his pants down, and on top of all that, owes back taxes, which I hope McCain will pay off for him since he used him like a cheap prop.
"Tax Cuts certainly have benefits, but have very little impact on job growth. Let's look at a very recent example that's glaring and punching both of us in the face right now. The Bush Tax cuts." Okay. I'm waiting for your numbers and statistics. With sources, please.
"Tax Cuts certainly have benefits, but have very little impact on job growth. Let's look at a very recent example that's glaring and punching both of us in the face right now. The Bush Tax cuts."
Okay. I'm waiting for your numbers and statistics. With sources, please.
"Bush and company have been a cancer to this Economy, and we'll be very lucky to get out of this current downturn in the near future." I think blaming him is nuts. We didn't have this crises until very recently. If his policies were as truly horrible as you claim, it should've collapsed dirung his first year. Personally, the only thing I'd blame him for was not seeing it coming. I'd blame other people for the crises itself.
"Bush and company have been a cancer to this Economy, and we'll be very lucky to get out of this current downturn in the near future."
I think blaming him is nuts. We didn't have this crises until very recently. If his policies were as truly horrible as you claim, it should've collapsed dirung his first year. Personally, the only thing I'd blame him for was not seeing it coming. I'd blame other people for the crises itself.
Have you not seen the news lately? Numbers are everywhere boy, there's a fucking massive mess out there, just start with Retail sector first, since that's the latest, then make sure you take a look at all of the financial institutions, including banks. The Economic policy takes years to kick in, and the Bush Administration's policies are certainly due their portion of blame(since they're a direct extension of Reagan's policy which is the bottom line culprit), along with the system we're running on, which is unregulated Capitalism. And why should it?
The system we run in doesn't care for external problems outside of it's own interests. Our economy has been built on a house of cards, for years and years, and now it's coming down hard. Ownership is down, everything is being borrowed at usery like interest rates, the complete opposite of what Bush talked about for years with the "ownership" society, which is complete fucking BS. Not buying any of it. Debt is through the roof, just go look up the average debt the American household has, and compare that to a few generations ago, previous to Reagan. Let's also not talk about Deficit spending, which happened because the POTUS decided to ram through the Tax Cuts immediately once in office, and then take our Country to War, weakening the dollar. If he had a backbone, he would have rolled the tax cuts back until the Wars were at a level of spending that wasn't crippling our Country.
Outside of Government, which were enablers to all of this, the Private sector took advantage of every inch of the subprime lending scheme and went after everyone under the sun that needed to borrow money. If my Wife didn't work for one of the biggest Firms for a long period of time, I wouldn't know half the things I do about this particular mess, or probably even be aware of just how f'ed up all of this is. The Democrats don't have clean hands either at all, but were in the minority for 6 of the 8 years with Bush, and could get nothign done, even if they wanted too. They were supposed to be there in speaking out against the complete lack of regulation in the industry(Which Obama did do to his Credit, but was part of only a few), and make no mistake about it, there was basically NO regulation at all. People would get pre-approved without any documentation whatsoever, and then bulk combine these loans together and sell them off to investors domestic and foreign. This built up to enormous proportions and it exploded. The President and the Republican congress blocked many proposals, some bipartisan, to place regulations on this industry, but nothing was done about it, since these firms were making ungodly amounts of money selling these loans on the secondary market, and most of these companyes (GS, AIG, ETC,,) all have ties directly to this administration. This just can't be ignored. The Administration should have come out years ago, preferably back in 2004, and said to all financial institutions, "STOP DEALING IN BAD PAPER", they all knew it back then and did nothing.This would have had an enormous effect in the market, and probably would have eased some of the crash we saw just a month ago.
So it's your word against his. Do you have anything better than ad hominem attacks against him and accusations of lying? I'm not very impressed.
This financial crises has to do with owning homes and Franklin D's Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, not with lower taxes. If you're gonna whine about Bush's tax cuts, the least you can do is provide proof that they caused what you claim they cause. I'm seeing plenty of financial mistakes, some perhaps even by Bush, but lower taxes isn't one of them.
If you want to blame Bush for this crises, at least blame the right things and provide links - our bills and whether or not they passed - and why they did or did not pass - are public knowledge, do some digging. You want to claim the President and Republican congress stopped proposals you think may have helped? Okay, I'd like at least the bill numbers and possibly some links.
Well, since quibbling is clearly fair game in this thread, I'd say that you're confusing power with influence. Power is the ability to get people to do that which they otherwise would not. Influence is the ability to get people to adopt your point of view voluntarily. Perhaps more importantly, the US is (hopefully still) a democratic republic, so being best-in-class (CEOs in this case) pales in comparison to being part of an alpha gang (say, the US Chamber of Commerce or the Business Roundtable). To get large shifts in federal spending, federal regulations, or even federal employment levels, a president *must* work *with* Congress, major interest groups, and our increasingly byzantine bureaucracy. He can't even get all that much done in the bowels of the Pentagon, else we'd have a fairly big chunk gone from our national debt (busting bad defense contracts was one of my favorite things about McCain; hope he gets back to it).
On a different quibble, I wasn't saying that there's no info, just that it is self-delusion to treat *any* information about economic processes as the same kind of data you'd get running white cell counts on a patient's blood sample. Money is the purest abstraction I know of (it's almost like "concrete" postmodernism), and the past few years of business news has made it clear that what ends up on public balance sheets is often a loooong way from "the truth," much less a hypothesis that can be confirmed by repeating a consistent experiment in multiple labs. A sufficiently skilled astrologer can run predictive and analytical rings around a mediocre psychologist. Just like picking an astrologer or shrink, picking your economist(s) is a personal matter in the end--a question of faith in another person's superior understanding.
Actually, I just choose not to make a distinction since they both come out to the same thing in the end
Actually, its a lingual issue -- the English language really doesn't have all the words it needs (I did not just say that!) at times.
Power: Possession of Control -- since influence is a kind of control, its a form of power
You're tossing quibbles with a former political scientist, so I both have to defend your right to defining your own terms *and* try to clarify my distinction so I can "win."
With power, you *get* what you want, period; with influence, you work hard, and *maybe get* what you want. I'd throw a Pong graphic in if I could make myself bother with 3rd-party pic hosting...
I'm not going to bandy swords with you on this topic -- the point I was trying to make was something else anyway.
WOAH!
English is the biggest language with over 800,000 words!
Just because you may not know them doesn't mean it doesn't have them.
Compare it to French, with about 80,000 operable words. Sorry Frenchies
And it's technically not a "lingual issue" it's a semantics issue, to clarify
More like a bullshit issue.
Shit for brains, er Dozer, since you get your news sources from the Barack Obama News Network, some details they um... missed intentionally.
Plumbers don't have licenses. Contractors have licenses. Plumbers that own their business need contractors licenses. Plumbers that work for other plumbers don't.
"Joe the unlicensed plumber working for a contractor that has a license Plumber"(kinda long huh?), is currently studying to get his contractors license so that he can get a loan and purchase the business he works for or start his own. It's a common practice, the old fart running it retires and sells his business to one of the guys that works for him.
Plants of the non-flora kind. A plant is someone sent to the enemy gathering, not someone that lives there.
Typical of a liberal crazy, rant and rave whenever one of the regular people you're supposedly looking out for disagrees with you. OH MY GOD, he owes back taxes, like several sitting Democrat senators do! That LIAR, he didn't specify that he was an employee working as a plumber for a plumbing company that has a contractors license and just said he was a plumber!
One of these days, you should watch an actual news show on Fox News instead of just watching the Hannity clips on youtube. They're hilarious, but one side of a debate show that is clearly labeled as opinion isn't representative of their 24 hour news coverage. It might even give you a clue, but I'm being uncharacteristically optimistic here. Who knows, maybe along with not picking on some poor single parent plumber you liberals are supposed to be looking out for, you might even stop blaming one side of congress in a near 50/50 split where even lower circuit judge nominations couldn't get voted on. I'm all for bashing the congress, I'd be overjoyed if every last member had a heart attack and died tomorrow, but you really haven't been paying any attention at all if you think Republicans have had power in the senate since before Bush was elected. That slim majority kept everything locked up, including the reforms to the mortgage mess you claim they should have passed. Enough of those spineless shit republicans are in the senate that they wont even make a filabuster go to the floor. They just bend over and take it. Frank and Dodd killed them, the fucktard Republicans just let them slide without fighting.
Who knows, maybe one of these days you'll be mature enough to argue like a five year old.
Umm Psychoak - that math doesn't even make sense.
Reagan didn't submit a balanced budget - the budget he submitted was 20/21sts of the way to the 6% of GDP budget that was finalized. The Democrats chose not to accept *all* of the cuts he made in democratic plans, which added a final 1/20th of the budget.
No matter how you calculate that, that doesn't mean Reagan submitted a balanced budget in the first place - Democrats were responsible for adding 5% of that budget, not adding 5% of GDP.
Sorry, that's the stupidest bit of Karl Rove/Fox News math I've ever seen. Even Dick Cheney said "Reagan proved deficits don't matter". It turns out they do, but being less in touch with reality than Dick Cheney is a bad sign.
Jonnan
Umm - no. uh, Joe the Plumber turned out to be broker than I am. He wasn't 'on the verge of buying a business' and he'll get a lot closer to buying a business with some middleclass tax breaks, not tax breaks for his boss.
Actually, no, it does not make sense for them to change the price based on taxes. Your're conflating two separate things - the supply demand curve, and the profit per unit.
The supply demand curve determines the point at which the revenue/unit * unit's sold gives the maximum number. Actually determining this curve obviously varies greatly depending on elasticity etcetera, but tax does not actually affect where that point is - assuming a smooth curve with no inflection points (i.e. demand always goes down as price goes up), there is one and only one point of maximum revenue.
Finding where the point is exactly may be a trick, and with a very low elasticity to demand it may stay very stable across a large range of prices, but fundamentally, there's only one spot where price per unit*unit's sold maximizes, every other spot is inferior to that one.
So assume for a moment that the optimal price is $20 per game, with a profit of $5.00 per game.
If I tax you 5% , and you raise your price$1.00 to compensate . . . you have made a fundamental mistake. Because your total revenue has gone down - you left the optimal spot - the exact amount you are losing by leaving the optimal point is going to vary highly by elasticity (Theoretically, in the corrupt case of elasticity=0, you lose nothing by raising the price $1.00. Practically there's no such thing as elasticity zero but there are things that come close - addictive drugs, gasoline, et al. The problem with these is the the optimal price is exceedingly high, and never used in practice.)
To be fair - the government can raise taxes sufficiently that it is *unprofitable* to sell units (In this case, 25% tax). But given anything with a sane demand curve, it's almost always a mistake to raise prices in response to it's being taxed.
English words do not always have a 1:1 mapping to a word in another language. There can be a group of words that mean approximaly what is intended. Even if a 1:1 mapping exists, the literally translated word may not be what a native speaker would use in that context. Selecting the right one for these words is the most difficult thing when translating from/to English.
If English has 800000 words, at least Dutch has more of them. Source.
That's the truth - and it's not just words. It's grammar as well. Not to mention figures of speech and cultural differences. People who have not been involved much in translation do not realize how much we uses phrases that have completely different meanings when taken literally.
Offtopic, but-- counting different forms of words is not kosher. I'm pretty sure Dutch does different endings for different cases. Consider these two sentences: 'The cow is in the barn. I own the cow.' One of those cows is nominative, one is accusative. Your Dutch word count counts them as different. Probably plurals, too.
Well, according to the source article, the number of words is estimated between 1 and 60 million. If you count the different forms of words you get to 60 million words. The low estimate of 1 million is still larger than 800.000.
As for the example word Ron Lugge had trouble with, "power", I know at least 4 Dutch words that map to the English word "power": kracht, macht, vermogen, mogendheid. Words that all have a different meaning, i.e. if a device is powerfull, is it "krachtig" in Dutch, but if someone has a lot of power, he is "machtig" in Dutch. Translating such words to English often looses information.
On the other hand, there are also usages of the word "power" that don't map directly to a Dutch word, for example, when "power" is meant to be "electric power", In such case you could translate it with "electriciteit", but that is not a 1:1 mapping, so in that case you loose information when translating to Dutch.
The moral of the story is that while English may not really have a lack of words (nor do other languages have), it can be a challenge to write down what you want to say, because the available English words do not 1:1 match what you want to say.
Actually, my math was perfect. My reading comprehension on the other hand appears to have some issues. If you didn't just skim my post that should have been obvious since I said 2.5% to 6% deficit. I'm not awake that early in the day.
The 1983 budget was 23.3% deficit spending. Reagan proposed a 758 billion dollar budget, they passed 802 billion dollars instead. With nothing but the automatic built in increases from programs enacted before his presidency, the budget would have been 827 billion. Reagan reduced the deficit spending, Congress forced the reduction to be less.
So, I'm a tard for not being able to read at 5 in the afternoon, and you're a tard for having no clue. Fortunately this doesn't alter my perspective on life, as I assumed we were all idiots to start with. This is the address he gave after that little budgetary problem. Excellent reading, but then Reagan was one of the very few intelligent people on this planet with enough stupidity left to be dumb enough to run for office while still being honest.
I totally agree. But I tire quickly of political arguements because there's no perfect answer so no one can win. Everyone is so mired in their own opinions that they'll never change their minds. You can't win an arguement on the Internet. Period.
Let's just drop this topic before the inevitable happens, and someone calls someone else either a racist or a facist.
The ultimate revenge of rightwingers. Yes they're easy to disprove but the annyance of having to dredge up the factual data to disprove something that should be obvious on the face of it will cause migraines.
CBO Historical Budget Data here --> http://www.cbo.gov/budget/data/historical.xls
Download it and play to your hearts content. The budget deficits under Reagan and Bush I were worse than under Jimmy Carter's worst year . . . *every* year. That would be the Jimmy Carter Presidency with a democratic congress.
But hey, rather than looking at the numbers, we could read a speech from 1982 in which Ronald Reagan claims that the problem was all in the automatic program increases demanded by those democrats, certainly the three years in a row in which he demanded defense spending be increased 17%, 17%, and 12%. Oh, and that spot there where he says
It's an interesting word there 'misinformed'. Since, actually, they were completely correct - Ronald Reagan actually cut domestic spending to, y'know, less than they were spending before, from 136.3 Billion to 127.1 Billion, while increasing Defense Spending from 158 to 185 Billion. So the only place that budget actually increased that year was in the areas Reagan specifically wanted.
While he was telling you about how the Democrats were forcing him to not keep the budget balanced.
The technical term for this is 'lying'.
But I'm not that nice a guy - politicians blame the other guy, and if you're dumb enough to look up a speech instead of an actual budget figure, that's on you, not them. The more important factor is that by buying guns not butter, he helped drag a recession that, historically under a Democrat would be over in six months on for *TWO FRICKIN' YEARS*.
But no - the data's all laid out there in black and white. Deficit spending *can* be good in a recession - Democrats are good with Keynesian Economics, and it works. The problem here is that A: Reagan wasn't spending money where it would do any good, B: he was raising your taxes while lowering taxes on the wealthy while he did it, and C: he was sitting there spewing these lies in speeches blaming the whole thing on the Democrats.
Well, and D: there are people dingy enough to swallow them whole without checking to see if they even made sense. I mean come on - he's increasing the military more than the deficit is increasing for his entire term, he's increasing foreign and domestic spending by *less* than the deficit is increasing for his entire term, and it never crosses your mind that these things have to, y'know, average out to what the increase in the deficit is?
That's just logic man. Sheet F7 - Foreign spending took two years to recover, Domestic spending didn't go back to where it was in 1981 until 1985. The part of the deficit he was blaming on Democrats had gone down.
I don't know any Dutch to speak of, but I've known a fellow native Floridian who got fluent at a pretty young age. Not only could he do neat cognate tricks (saying whole sentences in Dutch that all us ignorant yokels could follow), he told me that Dutch has four (more?) words for "reasonable."
Apparently, being reasonable is very important to the Dutch, but mabye a bit odd from a typical Southern US point of view. This guy was once in a long line for a Dutch night club, in the wee hours of some morning back in the '80s. A very drunk couple in the line decided that the best way to pass the time was to lie down in on the sidewalk and copulate. The other folks in line proceeded to spend their time discussing whether that was "reasonable." IIRC, the local consensus was that the copulators were not being reasonable, but calling the cops was also not reasonable. Alas, I forget the Ductch flavors of "resonable" and which one was in play for those chats.
I fail to see how attempting to not quadruple the level of domestic spending and increasing military spending to kinda sorta keep up with the Soviets makes him a liar when he blames congress for adding a bunch of the domestic spending back in.
Instead of assuming republicans don't pay attention, perhaps you could consider that maybe they don't want the government to be coddling a third of the population? The Soviets were outspending us bad on defense, it was necessary. Domestic spending was going through the roof, cutting it down far more than he did was also necessary. We ended up with a significant portion of the country on welfare as a result, but that's just evil republican lies. Just like the welfare reform they forced Clinton to sign that has done enough good even that socialist Obama has commented on how well it worked.
The income tax was created for national defense, not a national tit from which all things flow.
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