The last 8 years and your post are the clearest indication of that.Damn the typical American voter is dumber than a door nob.
The last 8 years and your post are the clearest indication of that.Damn the typical American voter is dumber than a door nob.
I would never make such an assumption.No, it is totally private, assuming the election officials are not sneaking an unauthorized peak.
I would never make such an assumption.
Here's the problems with reverting to the old rates:
When all is said and done the Iraq war and the bailout will probably cost in excess of $2 trillion. We could have had a first class high-speed rail system for that, and it would have been something the average taxpayer might actually greatly benefit from (plus it would have more than paid for itself in terms of less pollution, no more need to fight wars for oil, etc.) And the $10 trillion "war on poverty". Poverty rates are higher than they were before it started. The primary beneficiaries have been social service providers, not the poor. And making taxpayers pay for these programs, most of which they'll never be eligible for, is tyranny of the worst kind. No, cut spending, not raise taxes.
Main arguments in favor: Electric-powered bullet trains between major population centers would ease traffic and airport congestion, help curb air pollution and reduce dependence on foreign oil. Nearly $1 billion would be spent to beef up commuter rail systems feeding the high-speed trains.
Main arguments against: It could cost $90 billion or more while failing to achieve projected speeds, trip times or ridership. It would deepen state's fiscal hole; money would better serve law enforcement, healthcare, education and an upgrade of existing rail and highway systems.
You're fooling yourself if you believe that. Anyone who criticizes him will instantly be branded a racist regardless of how legitimate the complaint is. The race industry will not go into the night quietly.I hate to say this but in a way I think this is the best possibly outcome. The last bit of ammunition about blacks still suffering the effects of slavery is gone forever with the election of our first black President. Granted, he's only half black but in the minds of most that's good enough.
I honestly feel we will see a bloody revolution in my lifetime, but now's not the time.
Simple, this election was just a big episode of American Idol. Most of his voters are too apathetic to fight either way. Most revolutions are fought by a vocal minority.But how will that succeed when over half of the country has voted for Obama?
As chairman of the High-Speed Rail Authority, I pledge to honor the spirit of those who established our state's pioneering transportation system, by working to build a first-in-the-nation high-speed train system to benefit future generations.
This effort will improve our once-matchless transportation systems in California by delivering a high-speed train system that will cost two to three times less than expanding freeways and airports to accommodate millions of new Californians by 2030.
A reliable 220-mile-per-hour electric high-speed train system will reduce our dependence on foreign oil by more than 12 million barrels per year and reduce greenhouse gases that cause global warming by 12.7 billion pounds annually. In short, we seek to reduce traffic congestion, protect our environment and give energy and life to our economy to the tune of 450,000 new jobs.
Feinstein also waxed nostalgic. The Democrat senator recalled riding Japan’s bullet train back in the 1960s while on her honeymoon. “We traveled 341 miles in roughly three hours with no lines, no hassles, train on time,” she said. “I will never forget it.”
Which would be correct. I personally know people who would have voted Democrat but didn't due to Obama's "tan".I have already heard on the news a black leader saying that this does NOT mean America is not still fundamentally racist . . .
Right, that's why folks like Jessie Jackson were opening weeping with joy last night.Liberals do not want racism to end. Ever.
Jessie was weeping because is wasn't him and he wasn't on the stage.Right, that's why folks like Jessie Jackson were opening weeping with joy last night.
Uh... because people like to vote straight tickets. The Senate and the House usually follow the presidential ballot.You can claim that Obama was voted in because it was a popularity contest similar to American Idol but how do you explain so many Congress seats transferring to Democrats?
I never said that... IMHO, John McCain was the worst possible candidate the Republicans could have run. The current administration as not done a perfect job. They're screwed up a lot of things. It just hasn't been a complete and utter failure in every possible aspect like the media portrays it to be. My opinion was and still is that Obama would be a worse president than John McCain.You're right, it has nothing to do with people being sick of the past administration.
The Republican's have run a perfect administration the past 8 years, I can't believe they didn't win just because the Democrat was more charismatic.
Cause he's a moderate. The whole theory was for him to appeal to moderate democrats and independents bringing them into the fold allowing him to win without energizing the conservative base. Clearly it didn't work.I'm curious why you think McCain was a bad choice? I thought he was a good choice; they muffed it up when they added Palin to the ticket.
I don't care what you say, this is funny.
http://www.theonion.com/content/video/obama_win_causes_obsessive
Vote libertarian. Libertarians basically won't interfere in either social or financial issues. My favorite part of their platform is getting rid of the income tax. I sincerely hope the GOP adopts that as part of their platform. I think if they had it would have put them over the top this election.Furthermore, I am a fiscal conservative and a social liberal; is this really that unusual a position to be lacking representation? I get to choose between being taxed to death or losing countless personal freedoms; and to be honest either party could fall on both sides of that coin at the moment.
Voting libertarian, or any 3rd party is akin to throwing your vote away with the electoral college system in the US.Vote libertarian. Libertarians basically won't interfere in either social or financial issues. My favorite part of their platform is getting rid of the income tax. I sincerely hope the GOP adopts that as part of their platform. I think if they had it would have put them over the top this election.
I don't agree. If the Republicans want to win they need to run as conservatives, not as moderates trying to out liberal the democrats.In fact, until the Republicans ditch the religious right they hold little hope of winning nationally again. Many who traditionally vote Republican want low taxes, and as little interference from government as practical in both personal and business matters.
Obama is a full blown lefty. Don't be fooled by the smooth campaign. He was the most liberal person in the Senate. They are going to go HARD left, not run from the center!As for Obama, I fear his followers more than I do him. It seems in the 11th hour he moderated his views on taxes/social issues somewhat. Good for us if he sticks to his guns, even at the risk of alienating the far left in his own party. You can't effectively govern via politics of the extreme. That applies to both left and right.
Voting libertarian, or any 3rd party is akin to throwing your vote away with the electoral college system in the US.
I don't agree. If the Republicans want to win they need to run as conservatives, not as moderates trying to out liberal the democrats.
Obama is a full blown lefty. Don't be fooled by the smooth campaign. He was the most liberal person in the Senate. They are going to go HARD left, not run from the center!
Not yet. We'll have to wait and see. I'm concerned enough that it's even being suggested. Are they going to come for our property rights next?Do you have anything that says Obama's administration, which has yet to be anywhere near fully fleshed out, will seriously consider Ghilarducci's idea? With your citations, it's just one of possibly many possibilities and there's nothing substantiating it as being the favored direction.
I don't agree. The only thing voting 3rd party does is give the Democrats an easy victory. The core of the Democrats power are the people who will never vote for another party because they are dependent on the current Democrats for their free handouts. That would be the 35-40% of people who don't pay taxes due either getting 100% or greater refund of their federal taxes. Those people will never never bite the hand that feeds them. The Democrat are well on their way towards increasing that percentage to over 50% so they never ever lose power ever again.Only if no one else does. Remember the Reform party? I know that it was backed by Perot's billions when he was running, but it had a real, larger, more effective apparatus than the Libertarians, Greens or US Constitution Party, all of which have been around for decades with nothing to show for it. People who liked the idea of fiscal conservatism and fairly neutral stances on social issue had a place to go then, and they did well enough to win a governorship and to receive federal funding in 2000.
Robert Heinlein said:The America of my time line is a laboratory example of what can happen to democracies, what has eventually happened to all perfect democracies throughout all histories. A perfect democracy, a "warm body" democracy in which every adult may vote and all votes count equally, has no internal feedback for self-correction.... [O]nce a state extends the franchise to every warm body, be he producer or parasite, that day marks the beginning of the end of the state. For when the plebs discover that they can vote themselves bread and circuses without limit and that the productive members of the body politic cannot stop them, they will do so, until the state bleeds to death, or in its weakened condition the state succumbs to an invader — the barbarians enter Rome.
I must have missed it. Where was fiscal conservatism on the ballot? McCain isn't a fiscal conservative. Ok, so he was anti-pork, but he voted for the 700 Billion dollar bailout and against Bush's tax cuts. He wrote McCain-Feingold a terrible piece of non fiscal conservative legislation. The list goes on and on. The Republicans ran a moderate Democrat who couldn't contrast himself again the democrat candidate because he supported all the same things and those are things that the bulk of the Republican base doesn't support.What the Reps can take from 2008 is that appealing to fundies at the expense of moderates can carry an enormous cost. Fiscal conservatism usually does play well with many Americans, but it doesn't get the bible thumpers that the Reps have needed to win elections for the last few cycles excited. If they make a play for the social conservatives, they become less appealing to the vast middle of the political spectrum. My overall impression is that by moving ever rightward, all the Republicans are doing is alienating the middle.