As per the title.
Why does the word socialism in the US cause frothing at the mouth? Not comming from the US I don't understand this, I can see socialism and capitalism both have positive points as well as negative ones, but it seems crazy to me that when Obama talked of changing the healthcare system there were all these people protesting saying "Government hands off my health" and such.
After watching "Sicko" on TV the other night I think the average US person has little knowledge on socialism. I live in Australia with what would be called a "socialist" healthcare system and I think its great but we are not a socialist country.
So, without getting political, why is the culture of the United States of America so fixated on capitalism?
I'm absolutely fine with this.
Hitler and Stalin only got cozy the way the scorpion who wanted to cross the river got cozy with the frog, except both of them were scorpions. (Well, frogs are kinda murderous carnivores too, even to the point of using poison, but that's not the point of the folk story.) I was mainly poking psychoak because he hates it when I agree with a minor point and still scoff his larger argument. Besides, he and I are from the US, so we have no fucking idea what it is like to live on a continent where the old folks remember WWII as a local experience. Our WWII folks all got to come home to an intact nation that was only beginning to dismantle its traditions of liberty in the name of fighting the Cold War. The Europeans had to clean up an awful lot of shit, and there are still plenty of wounded spots both architecturally and socially speaking.
Mondays thru Wednesdays, I'm usually a difference feminist, but on Thursdays and Fridays I like to put time in as an equalitarian (with erratic pro-androgyny tendencies). I keep my weekends flexible.
No, but FDR was. Protestations of the hero worshipping left and revisionist history lessons aside, he was a communist. His legislature wasn't. What was settled for were significant fascist policies in place of communist ones he didn't have a prayer of moving. The NRA(not the National Rifle Association, look it up if you haven't heard of it) for instance, picture perfect fascism put in place by a communist.
Radical Marxists had proven themselves dangerous to the survival of an already crippled Germany by significantly hampering economic activity in neighboring countries. The difference between fascists and communists at the time was intelligence. The communists were flat fucking stupid. Where they'd taken over, they murdered the productive people, destroyed their own infrastructure, and sent otherwise wealthy areas into poverty. Germany was already starving without such difficulties. They needed to motivate production, their cure was nationalism. They still accomplished most of the goals Marx put forth for socialism, production was handled indirectly and inheritance wasn't taken out of the picture, but that's about it.
By the way, one of the ten points Marx wrote was to strip immigrants of their property. It's not exactly an order for genocide, but when Hitler took everything away from Jews and other undesirables that were polluting his country, it was textbook Marxism.
Edit:
That man whore also likes giving me karma for stupid reasons.
So, if facism is "a political ideology that seeks to combine radical and authoritarian nationalism with a corporatist economic system" then isn't the USA partly a facist country?
The corporatist economic part yes. Radical and authoritarian nationalism? Nationalism yes. Radical? The potential is certainly there given the right circumstances. Authoritarian I guess no, as the OP sets out to discover why. But then the USA government projects fear onto its citizens (Today the terror alert is..... Yellow! Remain stressed, and know the war in Iraq will end the terror!). Nobody really seemed to question why Iraq after 9/11 (Iraq hated Osama and vice versa. Al qaeda wanted to liberate Kuwait from Iraq, except USA jumped in first), maybe nobody really cared. And so what was done was done.
Now Iran is sandwiched between Iraq and Afghanistan, how fortuitous for threatening a cranky Iran and securing oil reserves in the region for the coming 20-30 years (as "peak oil" theory says will be much more important each passing day). Bad luck for the Iraqi people, how many thousands dead?
Authority, is it the right to tell others to do as you want or is it the ability to do what you want without outside interference because you have the authority to do so?
Interesting indeed.
The problem in America is that people use the terms "capitalism" and "socialism" freely without really understanding their actual meaning. People will use the word capitalist to describe America's economy and then use the word "socialist" to describe anyone who proposes ideas of any type of government intervention.
In reality, America's economy is neither pure capitalist or pure socialist. It is a mix between the two and it is better for it!
There are pros and cons to each economic system and America's economy takes the pros from each system to off-set their cons. This what makes America's economy so great. The problem is that American's don't understand that it is really a mix and instead think of it as purely capitalist because of the ideology behind such a system. "Freedom" in America is a big thing and America's thoughts on a capitalist economy often confuses individual freedom with corporate freedom.
I'm American and I love the fact that our economy is not purely capitalist or socialist. It is what makes our economy unique and so great. But, at the same time, I understand that it is a mix. I understand that at times, the government needs to get involved. I also understand that there are times where the government should take a step back. The problem is that in politics, things can get messy and people will use the word "socialist" to degrade someone's proposals and ideas because of the negative ideology behind the term socialism. In reality, that person is no less American than anyone else.
There are many ways that government intervention is a good thing. For example, in America, there is a SFR Act. It stands for Sport Fishing Restoration Act. This act places a tax on any company that makes fishing tackle. Anything from lures, rods, fish finders, etc. The cost of this tax is then passed onto the consumer through increased prices. This money goes into a fund that gets passed to the states. The states then use this money in fishing programs that go on to benefit state fishing. It helps provide cleaner waters, wetland restoration, fisheries, fish stocking, and fishing programs throughout the state. It directly benefits the anglers who pay for it and it plays a large part in why fishing in America is so great. Any angler in American who buys fishing tackle contributes to this fund and in turn it directly benefits them. There are many programs like this. This is hardly something that is capitalist though and yet it is a good thing. The government is placing taxes on specific companies. In a purely capitalist economy, this is not something that would occur.
So there are good things and bad things to each system. The key point to remember is that America's economy is not either/or, it is a mix of both. We need government to have a place in our economy and we also need government to know when to stay out of it.
The problem is that when people don't understand this, they think that as soon as someone proposes government intervention, they call them "socialist".
Yes.
Nonsense, the lot of it. Calling the USA nationalist is about as wrong as one can possibly be, it's a nation of immigrants, and it takes a crisis to bring states together even now. The terror alerts are ignored, so the theory that the government is projecting fear only works for a few months after a major disaster. It was protecting Saudi Arabia that Al-qaeda wanted to do, not liberating Kuwait.
The US is partly fascist because corporations have bought politicians. The current president is one, most of the green movement, the oil backers to a lesser degree. There are other minor roles, but GE takes the lionshare at the moment. The other traits this country shares with fascism are irrelevant to the particular subject. They're shared by all of the socialist ideas. None of them are constitutional, and none of them have anything to do with a free market economy. Corporations aren't bad, corporations running government are bad.
I knew you'd be brainless in every subject, but at least you got this part right.
The country has been running deficits since it started this idiotic mix of socialism and capitalism for a reason. We can't afford all the horse shit we're paying for. If not for technological progress, the crippling effect it's had on the country would have destroyed us in the seventies at the latest.
You mention a program you claim is "good" for the country. The salmon runs have been almost entirely depleted in the northwest states, some rivers have lost their population entirely. Overfishing on the east coast has all but ruined the industry there. How's that government control working out, really?
The FDA doesn't protect us from bad drugs, or tainted food. The various national security agencies don't protect us from terrorist attacks. The FAA doesn't protect us from preventable plane crashes. I could go on, but it's just so boring.
Lawsuits. It's really about the only thing that consistently works. What government runs, government generally fucks up just as bad as it would have been unmanaged, while costing money.
That's not to say it's impossible for government to do something right. The Alaskan fishing industry is still going strong despite the best efforts of Japan, China, Washington and Oregon. They're rather protective of it, probably over-protective. It's simply unlikely that government will do something right and continue to do it right for any real length of time.
You also open the door for other actions. If we can regulate fish, why not control the amount of farm land? After all, that's habitat for animals being turned into something else. We'll just control where you're allowed to live, how you're allowed to live. In the end, everything you do has an impact on the environment, and regulating the fishing industry to protect fish has brought you all the way to totalitarianism, one step at a time. We've run rather far down the path as it is.
Idiots will think "Conspiracy theorist nutjob, the slippery slope argument is a joke!" Cyclamate. A once popular sweetener in the US. It causes cancer. Lab rats developed bladder cancer at a rate of .3% taking in the equivalent of you drinking 350 cans of soda a day. That was cause for the FDA to take an excellent sugar substitute with minimal side effects, invaluable to diabetics, and ban it. Saccharin, which does the same thing, is still legal. There are countless everyday food substances that are vastly more dangerous, like by a thousand to one at normal intake levels, bacon for instance, tap water, bread, whole grain oats... Various meats and cheeses are illegal imports because they aren't preserved to FDA standards. Sausage in general is a far more powerful carcinogen than cyclamate, it should be banned entirely, along with frying, grilling, baking... Really, boiling is the only thing you should ever do to food, and even then only just enough to kill the germs. Any charring at all adds significant quantities of carcinogens into your diet. Cooking itself is far more dangerous than cyclamate...
Government is dangerous, for any potential benefit you can point to, there are thousands of potential drawbacks, and the benefit wont be there forever.
You say that the government has been running deficits since it started a mixed economy. Well, it has always run a mixed economy and the USA has always had a deficit since its inception. What is your point? What is your proposal?
Are you saying that a mixed economy is bad? Are you just saying that Government spending is bad? Government spending is very different than economic policy and they don't necessarily go hand in hand. Yet your paragraph there calling the mixed economy idiotic and then going into government spending leads to the idea that they do go hand in hand, when in reality they do not.The problem is that I think you feel that because the government doesn't get things right 100% of the time, then government should be non-existant. But, the truth is that no system will ever get anything right 100% of the time.
You very statements about the SFR Act further support this reasoning. I never said it was good for the "country". I said it is good for sport and recreation anglers. Just because there are fishing shortages in certain regions does not mean that the program has been a failure. Quite the contrary. Much of the shortages around the country is simply due to poor water quality, habitat reduction, and over commercial fishing. The program helps directly counter the first two of those. Don't confuse sport fishing with commercial fishing. Most sport anglers practice catch and release and don't contribute much of anything to over-fishing. Just because the program can't balance out all three threats to fish populations doesn't mean that it is a complete failure out right. Imagine what the fish population would be like without the $500 million SFR provides. The fact of the matter is that the program is funded by a user-pays-user-benefits tax. Without it, sport fishing would be in a much dire situation across the country. Your mention about "fishing regulations" tells me you don't fully understand what the SFR Act really does. Anyone who fishes in the United States would feel it is a good thing. You should read up on something before commenting on it.
This same type of thinking can be applied to many of the other examples you mention. Just because government doesn't get it right 100% of the time, doesn't mean government shouldn't exist at all. You further go on to say that all government successes will only be short lived. But, what does this type of thinking really lead to?The opposite of that could also be shown to be true throughout history. Without government intervention, there are many examples of markets that went unchecked for too long and turned poisonous. Does that mean that the government should turn completely socialist? No. In the same respect, just because government doesn't get it right 100% of the time, doesn't mean that the government should never get involved. The reason being that it does get it right sometimes and when it does, things turn out for the better.
It is for this very reason that the mixed style economy and government that we have now works best. Are you trying to say that the mixed system is not best?
In recent news....
You mentioned earlier:
I think we may agree on something else for once, Psychoak! ...maybe...
So I take it that you are also appalled by the recent Supreme Court decision to allow free corporate spending on independant election campaigns? Their decision will open the flood gates to allow corporations to pour money into their own private campaigns for candidates. Such freedom should be allowed under a capitalist economy. Why shouldn't this be OK, right?
Judging by your above quote, I would think you would disagree (as do I), feeling that we don't need more corporate money being injected into our election process. We need less corporate money being spent on our elected officials. While it may help bring about new faces that might otherwise not have stood a chance in an election. The end result is the same. The more money that gets spent by corporations on elected officials, the more likely those officials will be swayed by corporate influence rather than public opinion. It isn't so much that the election process will turn into a joke so much that after the election process, elected officials' decisions will be biased toward corporations that helped get them elected.
You know, I know this supposed to be your "shocker point" where you point out the inherent injustice of the Marxist system, but this makes a lot of sense to me. I mean, if you're going to move to a commune, and they tell you, "we don't believe in personal property" and you say "nope, I'll sit here with my stacks of money" that doesn't make any fucking sense. Since the Nazis believed in personal property to call murdering Jews and stealing their things "textbook Marxism" is at best fucking stupid.
This is purely unhinged paranoid nonsense. First everything is socialist, now everything is fascist. Get a grip, man.
USA isn't nationalist because it's a nation of immigrants? Oh man... America is nationalist because it is a nation of immigrants. In addition to all of the immigrants that love this country to pieces, I've never heard so much nationalist rhetoric in my life, with all those people talking about "what this country was founded for" and "we're a nation of liberty" and even "this country is the best!". There are nationalists movements all over the country... what do you think this Tea Party Movement is all about? (Except you'd probably think they were socialists too) Even the left in this country is nationalist. If you don't think this nation is nationalistic, then you must've been living under a rock and avoiding public discourse.
So America is socialist and fascist, but it's not nationalist? I'm starting to understand that you only really see things how you want to see them.
I don't know what you expect out of capitalism then. In a world with no rules the guy with the most money is going to win, and then, guess what? He's going to build a new government in his own image. Oh yeah, and it's going to be efficient.
Rich people have been saying they need more money for millenia. And there have been thousands of rationalizations, the absolutely nonsensical trickle down theory being one of the more recent. Do you know how much a completely free market would rely on trickle down theory? Otherwise, money would slowly congregate to just a few institutions. If you don't believe me... what company in their right mind would go into net loss rather than a profit? Companies only ever spend money to get it back.
Redistribution of wealth is not an ideal. It's an absolute economic necessity. It took a long struggle to get the wealthy to even pay taxes and when they finally did pretty much everybody benefited. It wasn't the dispossessed peasants who were on the forefront of this "rich people paying taxes" thing. It was the nobles themselves.
And if you can't have redistribution of wealth, you have to have anti-trust laws. Which necessitates a government.
I feel like for the level of freedom you want you literally have to go into a jungle and live there. The fact is in a healthy society there are controls to stop individuals from becoming too powerful and from doing whatever they want to to whomever and in an unhealthy society there's a few powerful interests that dominate everyone else or there's complete anarchy. Really, that's the only line that matters. In that respect, who gives a shit about capitalism and socialism?
Ignorance really is bliss.
You could at least read up on the Manifesto before getting into this argument. I know, the father of Socialism couldn't possibly have been a racist sack of shit, it's just not possible!
He was, get over it. Those damned immigrants were depressing wages! Oddly enough, it's the same problem you're still having in Europe. Not enough jobs, too many workers. While you rationalize to yourself how Marx wanting to strip immingrants, and just immigrants, of their property in obtaining his socialist state on the path to communism means something other than the same damn thing the Nazi's did when they stripped immigrants of their possesions, I'll enjoy myself at your expense.
How many posts have I just spent telling you they amount to the same damn thing in most aspects? I am paranoid though, just not a black helicopter kind of paranoid. I absolutely hate it when there's someone walking behind me. Drives me bonkers. That said, when the men in white suits come for me, they better come armed.
Did I just spend hours of my time pissing all over the stupidity of my own government? When the feds stop recieving an approval rating in the 20's and 30's, you might have a leg to stand on. A country cannot be nationalist when they want to lynch their own leadership more often than not.
To be a nationalist, you must also be a national in the first place. We have like sixty million people in this country that don't even follow "American" culture, let alone think it superior to everyone elses. A large percentage of the Italians still live in Italian neighborhoods with a lot of Italian culture still present, and they've been here for generations. The Cubans and Chinese both have multiple areas where they've literally taken the place over, completely ignoring our culture. The Mexicans aren't quite so organized, but there are a hell of a lot of permanent residents that don't even speak the language. None of these people can be called nationalist.
I love how the Tea Party movement is a nationalist movement by the way. Do you view propaganda as entertainment, or do you see it as a news source? Personally, I love the neo-Nazi propaganda. It's fucking hilarious, Jew this, Jew that, everything's a Jews fault. They're usually communist Jews too. It's comedic gold. They're only slightly more out of touch with reality than you are.
You're such a tease. Read the top line again, it's a hint as to why I'd love to suffer this particular affliction.
Ahh, the fallback crutch of the liberal idiot. Somehow, law itself magically disappears if you get the fuck out of business. How does not regulating a particular industry unfairly lead you to believe your local corporation can take over the world? Do the laws that apply to individuals magically vanish as soon as one forms a company? Extortion is illegal, bribery is illegal, coercion is illegal. Congratulations, you just stopped Standard Oil from becoming a monopoly without Anti-trust laws by, of all things, enforcing laws that already existed and had nothing to do with it!
Ok, I'll bite. Why did you refute the above with the following line?
No, seriously. It's a completely valid question. You just called trickle down theory nonsense, that money would slowly congregate to just a few institutions. You then stated that companies spend money to make money. Hiring more employees, building more infrastructure, buying more equipment. It doesn't happen in a vacuum you know, they have to pay people for this self serving activity. That's trickle down economics, rich people can't make more money by stuffing it under their mattress. It has to be used, which means they either need to clone themselves, invent time travel, or pay other people for goods and services. I know, it's a shocking concept for someone that thinks wealth comes from a pie. I leave the flavor to you, no mincemeat though, disgusting stuff.
As no company lasts forever, companies not in their right mind might be the only kind that go into net loss instead of profit, but they all do eventually.
I'm sure you thought you had a point here, but what is it? Was it that the nobility in Europe got back to taking money from the peasants, after losing their own wealth to all those upstart peasants that were, of all things, making money through hard work and not giving it all to them like they used to? Yeah, all that added spending towards war really benefited everyone in Europe...
These don't even relate, never mind the absurdity of your supposition that I'm an anarchist. Go take economics 101, please. It's for your own good.
Jungles are humid, I hate humidity. I could go for some nice arctic tundra though, cool and dry, very comfortable.
There used to be controls to prevent this danger. They're on that worthless and irrelevant piece of paper known as the Constitution. As the Judicial branch seems to be ignoring what it actually says, and the other two are loving the freedom from those limitations, we're fucked. Oh right, you were making a point about big business taking over...
I can work with that, wild conspiracy theory time! The CEO of GE will buy up politicians left and right and get a bill through congress. A worthless patent for overly expensive lightbulbs containing dangerous pollutants and harmful side effects to user health will become valuable by making the primary competing design illegal!
Nah, that could never happen...
You fail again to be at all factually correct, not surprising. Do you ever look anything up? You do realize there are records of this shit, right? Deficit spending has been the norm since the progressive movement at the turn of the century, and only since then. We didn't have any great depressions, no income tax either. Funny how we went through the invention of the railway and the automobile without needing the feds to take all our money to build infrastructure, huh?
Ignorance strikes again. Companies have been doing this all along. They donate to a PAC, the PAC runs commercials, and you get to follow a paper trail from here to the moon to find out who really paid for it. What's so scary about them being allowed to fund their own, directly disclosed political advertisement?
Not to mention corporations are run by people, they aren't exactly hobbled in any case. Unless you want to strip the right to free speech from someone simply because they run a company?
The rest of your post is too pointless for response, like the SFR funds specifically going towards the regulating of the commercial fishing industry. How you can know about such an obscure program that 99% of the population hasn't even heard of, but not know the primary use... You're truly a mystery.
Fair enough. I'm the sort that disdains labels -- or uses them ironically -- while quoting trendy Frenchmen.
Well, if you're right, they'll be men in brown coats with red armbands. Say what you like about fascists, but they're quite good at political killings.
You sir, are a moron. SFR doesn't go toward commercial fishing regulation. Sorry. Try again.
It provides Federal aid to the States for management and restoration of fish having "material value in connection with sport or recreation in the marine and/or fresh waters of the United States." In addition, amendments to the Act provide funds to the states for aquatic education, wetlands restoration, boat safety and clean vessel sanitation devices (pumpouts), and a nontrailerable boat program.
Uhhhh, no. You are wrong. The USA has been in debt ever since we've been a country. In fact, the US has only been debt free one time in its entire history (1835) and it was for only a brief period. Don't mistake budget surplus and budget deficit with being completely free of debt. They are 2 different things. It looks like you failed to look at any of the records that you've mention.
Those two statements contradict each other to an extent. All I am saying is that less the less corporate money that gets put into our government, the better. By allowing corporations to spend money on our elections, it allows them to run our government. I'm not disagreeing that they haven't already been able to do it. That doesn't make it any more right.
I am not talking about striping the right of free speech from some individual. Corporate funds are different that private individual funds. I am merely pointing out the fact (hypocrisy) that you feel that corporations running our government is bad, but then don't think the Supreme Court ruling is wrong. But, I'm sure you won't see the hypocrisy in that...just a guess.
What a crock. Or maybe it's just a derailment into ill-fitting terminology. Let's try swapping "nationalist" for "jingoist" and/or "American exceptionalist." You of all people can't seriously be arguing that flag-waving, framer-naming, etc., aren't a major factor in both how we work our internal politics and how we are perceived abroad?
Or are you taking Rick Perry's talk about Texas seceding from the union seriously?
America already has a slew of dysfunctional social programs. Our track record speaks for itself. The problem lies where maintaining the institution and any votes it generates trumps practicality and producing results. Sometimes I wonder if one more program is really what we need.
Wow. Maybe you could have read up on the manifesto, because you're fucking wrong.
Actually the manifesto said, and I quote: "Confiscation of the property of all emigrants and rebels." Geez... you challenge me to fact check you and call me ignorant and it turns out you don't know your shit. What a suprise. But yeah, thanks for pointing it out so I can clear this up.
But, to be fair, you probably didn't understand the difference between "emigrant" and "immigrant", being the opposite of one another and all. I know you have difficulty with that concept. Still, it makes your whole "texbook marxism" theory even more absurd.
http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/communist-manifesto/ch02.htm
"Trickle down" theory is better described as "trickle up" theory. While companies spend money in the short term, they'll get profit in the long term. This is a benign process in general. Long term, however, consumers will always make a net loss while companies get a net profit.
It's an extremely simple process. Money goes to wealthy people because they have the resources to make more money. Poor people get poorer because they don't. It's not as if it's the fault of wealthy people... they're just doing exactly what they're expected to do.
If you haven't looked outside of the window, you'll notice that America has an increasing wealth gap between the poorest 20% and wealthiest 20%. This isn't a suprise in a free market, even though it's not healthy. To argue trickle down theory is basically to argue that everyone can be wealthy, which is nuts.
Fact is, the only reason we're a well educated country now is that the government paid for college educations of all our soldiers after WWII.
Trickle down theory is basically debunked except in politics as a rationalization for heavy-handed supply-side policies.
You could have fooled me, with your supposition of the government being evil and all.
I suppose the military is evil, being "government controlled" and all. And our police force. And the fire department. The marine corp is so inefficient these days. Blackwater could do all the fighting much better. *end sarcasm*
As a response to an earlier comment... why would the police ever enforce laws against bribery and coersion if they are a part of the "evil government"? You don't make any sense.
Either government is evil and completely unreliable.... or it's not. Make a choice. Hint: One of the choices is sane.
The constitution? You mean that socialist document that says that one of the purposes of government is to "promote the general welfare"? Yeah, I agree.
What GW said.
Actually I have a theory based from my University degree.....
Bacteria can survive a certain stress up to a point, eg temp around 54oC OR aW of 0.936 ect., But if they have two stresses together they can survive neither as well eg temp of 49oC AND aW of 0.944. Humans I figure must be the same. If you have a safety level for a known carcinogen then thats deemed safe. In the real world you may have heaps of different carcinogens all at their safety levels, collectively increasing the chance of cancer to not so safe levels. Cancer, don't play with it.
I guess the government is only as evil as the people who are in it. US government has corruption, and its based on money being so needed to advertise your party. Its funny how companies have fulltime lobbyists but the public has only one chance every four years and even then its mainly "he said/she said" rubbish that they decide from anyway..... For example at the last election people were saying Obama was a muslim. Firstly, who cares?, secondly, it matters!.
I think people have evolved a brain to keep them safe when its dark, and thus it keeps them safe in the dark. Now why are we all bothering to post here, go outside and exercise in the sun!
How does people ranting about the framers intent being lost make them nationalist? If anything it should be the reverse, they're unhappy with the course of the nation, not blindly following it. Texas shouldn't need to secede for rank displeasure to discount nationalism as a driving force behind the activity of the population.
Noted, that is a rather stupid mistake isn't it? You win, I'll leave the immigrant property siezure off the list of similarities between fascism and marxism. I guess I get to add emigrant property though, they did steal that too. Not exactly a win for marxism, but whatever. Speed reading does have it's drawbacks.
[quote]"Trickle down" theory is better described as "trickle up" theory. While companies spend money in the short term, they'll get profit in the long term. This is a benign process in general. Long term, however, consumers will always make a net loss while companies get a net profit.[quote]
Wealth is a fixed amount, the more one person has, the less another has. This is pie theory. Pie is not economics, it's generally a fruit filled dessert.
Wealth is created when you improve resources. I can farm, cook, work wood and metal, I have architectural knowledge complex enough to build my own lodging and such. With a few minutes time, I can find diagrams on building simple engines and distilling fuel alchohol. It's technically possible, with my varied skillset, to build my own home and modern transportation, live entirely at a subsistance level while still staying modern. I have the tools and the land required to do it. I don't have the time. I can't build a house anywhere near as fast as a team of construction workers purchasing materials from a supply depot can. I can't build a car anywhere near as fast, or good, as Ford can. I can't grow my own food with as little work as the agricultural industry does with all of the high volume equipment they use to make it easier.
I can cook better than any storebought crap, and probably most restaurants. I'll accept that I'm shorting myself if I eat something I haven't prepared myself. I gain from my purchases, I do not lose. If I did lose, a subsistance life would grant me superior free time for the same level of improvement.
[quote]It's an extremely simple process. Money goes to wealthy people because they have the resources to make more money. Poor people get poorer because they don't. It's not as if it's the fault of wealthy people... they're just doing exactly what they're expected to do.[quote]
This isn't economics. It's propaganda. Income mobility has been proven, there are plenty of previously rich people on the poor list this year. Some of them lost hundreds of millions to find themselves middle class or worse. Wealthy people that continue gaining wealth do so because they provide a product others want to pay them for. Shortcut gamblers in the stock market aside.
Everyone that works is wealthy. Most of the people that don't are wealthy. Why must you compare a poor person in this country to a rich person in this country? Why not compare them to a rich person in a country where people have a subsistance lifestyle? Hell, just comparing our poor with France would be enough. We have people on welfare with new cars in this country. How can you call someone poor when they have adequate food, shelter, transportation, and a high level of completely optional property and free time? I was supposedly poor as a kid, qualified for food stamps and whatnot, not that we bothered to apply. Fifty years earlier I'd have been filthy stinking rich, the envy of the neighborhood.
The expansion has less to do with how much money rich people make, and more to do with how they aren't being taxed at 70% in the first place. People have been screaming about the expanding gulf since the 80's, oddly enough when they dropped the tax rate. That's also about the same time the middle class stopped working three jobs to support a family, but I guess we're going to go back to that pretty soon.
We're a well educated country? As of 2004, less than 25% of veterans over 25 have a bachelors or higher. Even at peak numbers, only 49% of college admissions were veterans, that was 1947. Only 7.8 million WW2 veterans persued any sort of education. They're running larger percentages than the general population, but they're nowhere near a majority of college educations, and never have been. The GI bill has helped a little, but it's hardly the cause for higher education. What passes for higher education anyway.
As opposed to Keynesian economics, which was debunked in 1920, yet still got to give us a Great Depression and stagflation in the 70's? Kennedy cut taxes, revenue went up. Reagan cut taxes, revenue went up. Bush cut taxes, revenue went up. The only problem is the assholes in congress perpetually spend more money than they bring in, outpacing economic expansion with government bloat. Supply side tax cuts have never failed to increase revenue. Even as a percentage of gdp, each round has put the country further above the average.
Option C, necessary evil, although it is completely unreliable, your sanity aside. It's the most dangerous force in the country and must be very carefully monitored and controlled or it will destroy you. How many military take-overs have there been in the last century? How many democratic republics have become dictatorships after a gradual expansion of power?
How many haven't? There's a reason the United States, a baby of a country with a scant 234 years and a full scale civil war to show for, is the longest running in existence. They don't last very long, Athens made it a whopping 280 years as a democracy, if you discount the interruptions. Switzerland is the only place where democracy is actually lasting, and they make the US with it's republic look like an oligarchy. They're far more similar to what we started as, and they've managed to maintain it for the most part.
Countries destroy themselves vastly more often than outside forces do, your own government is your biggest threat.
Nice, contextual argument there... I tell you what, you tell me what Marx says, I'll tell you what the Constitution says, deal?
The general welfare did not refer to the welfare program. They're rolling over in their graves every time some neanderthal politician uses that to justify the latest state program. The general statements in the preamble are expressly named under the expressed powers given to the federal government, those being the only powers given to the federal government. Redefining a document doesn't change the original meaning, it just makes you wrong.
"With respect to the two words 'general welfare,' I have always regarded them as qualified by the detail of powers connected with them. To take them in a literal and unlimited sense would be a metamorphosis of the Constitution into a character which there is a host of proofs was not contemplated by its creators."
“Having not yet succeeded in hitting on an opportunity, I send you a part of it in a newspaper, which broaches a new Constitutional doctrine of vast consequence, and demanding the serious attention of the public. I consider it myself as subverting the fundamental and characteristic principle of the Government; as contrary to the true and fair, as well as the received construction, and as bidding defiance to the sense in which the Constitution is known to have been proposed, advocated, and adopted. If Congress can do whatever in their discretion can be done by money, and will promote the General Welfare, the Government is no longer a limited one, possessing enumerated powers, but an indefinite one, subject to particular exceptions. It is to be remarked that the phrase out of which this doctrine is elaborated is copied from the old Articles of Confederation, where it was always understood as nothing more than a general caption to the specified powers."
--James Madison
Cant get much more authoritative than the author. He also wrote the original works it was based on in the Federalist Papers.
Yeah, I am. Yes, it does. Sport fishing doesn't happen if there aren't any fish because the commercial fishermen caught them all. All commercial fish have a "material value in connection with sport or recreation in the marine and/or fresh waters of the United States." Alaska Fish and Game regulates commercial fishing in Alaskan waters. Alaska Fish and game is funded by the SFR Act. The SFR Act funds the management of the commercial fishing industry. Any commercial fishing done in state waters is under direct management of the state fishing regulatory bodies, and they're all funded by the SFR Act. Government not doing the job you pay it to do is the norm.
Out of curiosity, why, when calling me a moron, do you also call me sir? It seems... pointless?
[quote]You say that the government has been running deficits since it started a mixed economy. Well, it has always run a mixed economy and the USA has always had a deficit since its inception. What is your point? What is your proposal?[quote]
As you cede my point, you can stop arguing with yourself now.
Expressing your view is not running the government. Corrupt politicians that do favors for companies because they put out some advertisements in favor of them are criminals. For you to say corporations spending money on advertisements is wrong, you must apply that standard to other things. A politician is no less corrupt for doing an individual favors in return for campaign money, so no money should be allowed. A state where only rich people can get elected?
If I have a billion dollars, I can run for president. I can blow a couple hundred million and make a go of it. Ignore that I'm a complete jackass and would call you all a bunch of fucking retards on national television and end my political career before it began, pretend I'm normal. If I don't, I'm pretty much fucked, good luck getting through party machinery just to win a local election. If I don't want to run for president, I can't give my money to someone intelligent that does. These limitations on financing have done nothing but cement power in the two primary political bodies, they're the only non-billionaires that can run.
Campaign finance laws criminalize completely normal behavior in place of prosecuting the illegal activity that is already illegal to begin with. Most of congress should be in jail, so should most of our presidents. Making this or that form of contribution illegal hasn't even put a dent in it. Until this population of idiots stops electing crooks, it's not going to change. If we ever do, who can contribute is irrelevant. Exxon can walk up to Joe Shmoe and say hey dude, we'll give you a billion dollars to buy your presidency, and Joe Shmoe will say fuck you, I'm calling the police.
Wonderful post, but there's absolutely no rational reason to make a sugar substitute illegal for doing less than sugar itself does. It's status as a carcinogen isn't even real. It doesn't cause bladder stones in people even at such high levels like it does rats. it's why Saccharin is still legal in this country. The reverse is true in most countries. Saccharin is illegal for no reason and Cyclamate is legal. They did it because they were morons.
Edit, gah! Too long...
That was way too long indeed
They probably made Saccharin illegal because of the uncertainity of what it could do. I agree things in society seem stupid, why cigarettes are still legal is beyond me, except I know they bring in lots of money for both the Government and the owning companies. Also because in a Democracy it can be a case of the children telling the adults what to do, and no party would ban cigarettes while in power and then ask a population of withdrawn nicotine addicts to vote for them and expect them too.
So if you were originally talking about spending while under a budget deficit, then you are still wrong going by your original statement.
This country has always had a mixed economy. It has fluxed throughout history, but it has always been mixed. Yet, even though that is true, we haven't always had a budget deficit. Do you care to adjust your original statement? In fact, it wasn't until about the 1980s that spending really got out of control. Where does the 1970s come into play that you talk about our "destruction"? Federal spending was actually under control from the 1950s through the 1970s. That is why I was originally thinking you were talking about national debt and not just spending while under a budget deficit. Either way, you statement lacks any sort of actual facts.
Do you just spew out crap thinking that no one will know that you're wrong or fact check you? Yes, Alaska Fish and Game does receive money from the SFR program. But, there are many divisions of ADF&G and the money goes strictly to the Sport Fish division which has nothing to do with commercial regulation. So none of the money that comes from SFR goes toward commercial regulation. Like I said, commercial fishing is different than sport fishing and the money from SFR is strictly for the development of sport fishing. Just because the money goes toward an organization that also handles the regulation of commercial fishing, doesn't mean that the money from SFR can be spent on that. If it was, then the state would lose that money. And considering that nearly all of the funding for the Sport Fish Division comes from SFR, then you can be sure that the Sport Fish Division isn't going to want to share those funds with any other division like the Commercial Fish Division.
http://www.sf.adfg.state.ak.us/statewide/SF_about.cfm
Anyway, talk about SFR is getting off-topic of this thread.
I think the rule is if a thread goes more than 3 pages then people can legally talk about anything AS LONG AS THEY ARE PASSIONATE ABOUT IT.
Congratulation, you discovered a web page noting that SFR funds are part of the Sport Fish Division budget. Guess which division manages harvests?
Taken directly from the 06 overview of the DIVISION OF COMMERCIAL FISHERIES. Note the words PERSONAL USES
Except my original statement says deficits, and you tell me we've always been in debt and the two are different things. Shit for brains. Doing a stupid once is enough, you're supposed to get over it instead of carrying on. Even an asshole like me can do that, emigrant versus immigrant?
Do you understand the concept of inflation? Your argument only makes sense if you don't. The biggest non-wartime deficit spending level we've ever had was 1918-1919 when we spent more than three times the intake. Even WW2 spending wasn't as high as a percentage of the receipts. The 80's don't come anywhere near there, being 30% deficit spending at the highs, as opposed to nearly 400% in 1918 when the progressives had total control for the first time.
The highly selective time frame you picked is at least accurately lower than the 80's, but to call a typical deficit spending rate in excess of 10% under control is really fucking stupid. Bush would have been under that ratio till his last year, did we have spending under control then?
How is this for passionate....
So I just got off of the phone with Charlie Swanton. He is the director of the Sport Fish Division in Alaska. I asked him how the funds from the Sport Fish Restoration program are used. More specifically I asked him if the funds can be used toward any type of regulation or enforcement. He said that the funds have specific limitations on how they are used and that they can NOT be used for any type of enforcement or regulatory purposes. However, he did say that they receive funding from other sources and they those funds have no particular limitations on them and those are used for regulations and such. So that is why you see mention of regulations and such in their 2006 Overview, but you took it out of context and misinterpreted it (as you often do). Obviously they do regulate (I never said they didn't). What I did say was that the SFR funds couldn't be used for such!
He was actually very nice and talked more than he needed to (I'm sure he's busy). lol. I just called up the phone number (it is listed right on their website) and the secretary there passed me through with no problem. I figured, why deal with Psychoak when all he is going to do is continue to post non-sense when I can just call up the director of the program and find out for myself?
...so how about that. I was right and you were wrong...who woulda thunk?! Yes, I enjoy fishing a lot, so don't mess with my fishing!
I'd buy that, but SFR funds aren't restricted from going towards regulations, nice or not he told you horse shit, whether the books say they're not using any towards the commercial department or not.
Law enforcement costs are barred, regulations are specifically allowed. Along with wetlands management(yes, it's really going towards the protection of all those mosquito farms), boating safety, water resources education(it's wet?), all kinds of bullshit besides keeping fish levels up. Administration can't exceed 3%. Read the act and it's amendments, talking to a career beaurocrat(sorry Swanton, you are, nice guy or not) to find out the rules another division has to follow regarding funds they may or may not recieve is pointless, that's not even his job.
As regulations are specifically allowed, even if they don't help pay for it that's just further wasting of your money. Effective management of those resources is the one thing most worth doing. If it's really not paying for any of the hatcheries or quota management that keeps Alaska's fish levels up, the best use it is going to would be boat docks. That's a great great expenditure considering they blow 900 million a year on the project.
I knew you were going to come in and say something along the lines of "government is corrupt and don't be fooled, the funds are being used toward regulation." You're an idiot. The SFR Act specifically states (all amendments included) what its uses are for. Just because it doesn't state that the funds can't go toward automobile highway improvement doesn't mean they can go toward automobile highway improvement. The same goes for fishing regulation. If you want to believe that the funds are being used inappropriately, go ahead. But you can even view on their website where the funds went to for every fiscal year. No where in there do any SFR funds go toward regulation.
http://faims.fws.gov/reports/rwservlet?faimskeys&report=fwrg0040_p&P_GP_in=SPORT%20FISH%20RESTORATION
Keep being an idiot. What was that about you being able to say you were wrong?
ITT: americans abuse and misuse political terminology. tsk tsk.
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