Mercutio said:flagreen, have you looked into Paul O'Neill's book yet? I haven't, but I understand it's highly unflattering to your guy.
O goodie! I'll run right out and buy it then.
Mercutio said:flagreen, have you looked into Paul O'Neill's book yet? I haven't, but I understand it's highly unflattering to your guy.
sechs said:I'd like to preface these comments with some background. I consider myself to be a moderate socialist. I have a degree in philosophy (which means I can bullshit fairly well). I studied public policy for two degrees (although no one will higher me for this stuff). I do not own any cats.
Mercutio said:Now, when those people screw up, as they inevitably will, won't they be glad there was some portion of their savings they didn't - couldn't - touch? I think so.
People are, in general stupid or ignorant. Corporations tend to be a lot stupider. Furthurmore, bad things happen to good people. Bad things also happen to rich people.
Government can either set up things so that it's fair, so that some people get rich and others become poor and die on the street; or they can take from the rich to protect everyone from themselves and others.
Personally, I like the idea of government as an insurance system. If something goes wrong, I have a backup. Now, the smart and somewhat wealthy would, of course, insure themselves, somehow; but most people don't know or don't understand how they could do that, or don't have the facility available to them. This is why we have things like Social Security.
Don't make enough money to save for your retirement? Enron eat your retirement? Well, at least you can eat while on Social Security.
Maybe because your government spends all your money in war operations and military equipment instead of investing internally to enhance the lives of its own citizen?flagreen said:Why not educate our young people in how to take care of themselves and their familes instead of how to take care of everyone else?
The guy is basicly saying (confirming) what I've been killing myself to write during the past three years : that Bush is lying badly to his people in order to mask his true actions. Never had the shadow of a proof regarding WMD in Irak. Used September 11th as a catalyst to achieve his dubious goals, etc. But the difference between little me with apparently no credibility to the eyes of Flagreen and other Republicans' followers and O'Neil is that the latter has been in Bush's neighborhood for years. Probably that Flagreen's reality distortion field will again find a way to dismiss O'Neil somehow, but hopefully, it will open the eyes of many others.Mercutio said:flagreen, have you looked into Paul O'Neill's book yet? I haven't, but I understand it's highly unflattering to your guy.
Your response has nothing to do with my post, which is not unusual for you as we have seen before. I'd suggest that if you do not understand what is plainly written that you refrain from replying to same - lest making a fool of yourself become a way of life for you rather than merely a bad habit.CougTek said:Maybe because your government spends all your money in war operations and military equipment instead of investing internally to enhance the lives of its own citizen?flagreen said:Why not educate our young people in how to take care of themselves and their familes instead of how to take care of everyone else?
I beg to differ, it is not me who is unable to objectively evaluate the administration. Rather it is those whose hatred for the administration runs so deep as to allow it to interfere with their personal relationships who are unable to separate fact from conjecture. Oh wait a minute.... that's you come to think of it.Probably that Flagreen's reality distortion field will again find a way to dismiss O'Neil somehow, but hopefully, it will open the eyes of many others.
flagreen said:Why not educate our young people in how to take care of themselves and their familes instead of how to take care of everyone else?
Wouldn't we have a better nation if everyone took responsibility for themselves and their families? The personal attributes which are required for this are worthwhile and an asset to any society.
Flagreen said:What positive attributes are associated with forcing people through taxation to take care of those who refuse to take care of themselves? Does this not merely build resentment rather than character in a people?
flagreen said:I beg to differ, it is not me who is unable to objectively evaluate the administration. Rather it is those whose hatred for the administration runs so deep as to allow it to interfere with their personal relationships who are unable to separate fact from conjecture. Oh wait a minute.... that's you come to think of it.
My reply has everything to do with your post. Education needs money and when too much money is invested in certain fields, not enough is left for others. I'd suggest that if you do not understand what is plainly written that you refrain from replying to same.flagreen said:Your response has nothing to do with my post, which is not unusual for you as we have seen before. I'd suggest that if you do not understand what is plainly written that you refrain from replying to same - lest making a fool of yourself become a way of life for you rather than merely a bad habit.
Every year there's are polls where high school graduates are asked to, say, find Canada on a map, and some percentage of them can't do it. I'm five years done with college where I had 6 semesters of math classes and six semesters of German. I don't remember THAT much from either. In 6th grade I had a super-basic finance class where I was shown how to write checks and how living expenses and savings eat away at your income... and that's as much education on finance as I ever got in an organized setting.
My point is, even if those things were taught, would anyone remember them? Would the things that were discussed still be relevant by the time you were old enough to need them, or to care? Probably not.
And what do we add or take out of our lives to ensure that everyone receives this education in personal responsibility?
Personal responsibility is all fine and well and good, but it only means something if you've got something to lose, and there are way too many people who don't have anything at all to lose. That's why the auto dealership is only too happy to send a guy in section 8 housing home with a Cadillac he'll never make more than two payments on: The salesman didn't lose anything (probably got a commission, even). The Welfare guy doesn't lose anything: He gets to drive around in a Caddy until the bank repossesses it. The bank doesn't lose anything: They get a car they can re-sell and thousands in penalties to the welfare-guy, who already doesn't care because he's on welfare and can't pay to begin with.
Where the hell is the responsibility in that sequence of events?
"What positive attributes are associated with forcing people through taxation to take care of those who refuse to take care of themselves? Does this not merely build resentment rather than character in a people?"
I'd like to say compassion and human empathy.....
CougTek said:My reply has everything to do with your post. Education needs money and when too much money is invested in certain fields, not enough is left for others. I'd suggest that if you do not understand what is plainly written that you refrain from replying to same.flagreen said:Your response has nothing to do with my post, which is not unusual for you as we have seen before. I'd suggest that if you do not understand what is plainly written that you refrain from replying to same - lest making a fool of yourself become a way of life for you rather than merely a bad habit.
What?And you certainly don't have shown me the required level of intellect to be so pedantic.
Keep telling yourself that, maybe you'll start to believe it.As for making a fool of yourself, you've put yourself well in front of me while impersonating The Giver.
When the last polical party here reformed the educational system some ten years ago, it cost a few millions. And we're only a fraction of what the States are. Reforming your educational system somehow would be a non-negligeable investment, which cannot be done with public funds in the red like they are right now.flagreen said:What we teach has nothing to do with money.
CougTek said:When the last polical party here reformed the educational system some ten years ago, it cost a few millions. And we're only a fraction of what the States are. Reforming your educational system somehow would be a non-negligeable investment, which cannot be done with public funds in the red like they are right now.flagreen said:What we teach has nothing to do with money.
Changing an educational program requires new books, formations for the teachers as well as support for them and the families going through it. It's not something that can be done with a turn of magic wand.
While the simple fact of paying the taxes wouldn't be an act of charity, voting for a candidate who would advocate taking care of the poorer would most certainly be. I think that's what Mercutio meant.flagreen said:Mercutio said:"What positive attributes are associated with forcing people through taxation to take care of those who refuse to take care of themselves? Does this not merely build resentment rather than character in a people?"
I'd like to say compassion and human empathy.....
Ordinarily I would agree with you but not when taking care of others is involuntary such as it is with taxation. Such is not charity, compassion or the result of empathy.
CougTek said:Is there any candidate who has included anything about improved education and/or some kind of self-responsability program?
jtr1962 said:Nixon was a general? Wasn't he a career politician (like most of our leaders unfortunately)?
jtr1962 said:CougTek said:Is there any candidate who has included anything about improved education and/or some kind of self-responsability program?
I think every candidate for public office gives at least lip service to improving education, but in the end they all make little difference. Right now New York's Mayor Bloomberg is fighting the unions tooth and nail to try to get rid of stupid union work rules that make firing bad teachers next to impossible. Strangely enough, the unions remain opposed to merit pay, even for hard to find math and science teachers. Provided the pay was based on the results of standardized tests and not the recommendations of superiors, I don't see why they would oppose it. Maybe the fact that less than half of the students read or do math at grade level has something to do with it. In fact, many of the teachers couldn't pass a high-school literacy test, so how can we expect their students to?
Mercutio said:Lieberman and Arlen Spector need to switch parties.
Mercutio said:Lieberman and Arlen Spector need to switch parties.
flagreen said:Is it time to stick a folk in Dean?
Mercutio said:Kerry, as I've said earlier, does not inspire me. Dean doesn't, either. I'm pulling for one of the moderates (Clark or Edwards), who will play better to centrists in the general election.
Anyway, I don't think you can call the primary season yet. Clinton came out of nowwhere in '92. The press fell in love with him in Iowa and New Hampshire and he went from back-of-the-pack nobody to frontrunner. Super Tuesday will be interesting with all the "statistical dead heats" in polling.
flagreen said:Edwards could come on strong next tuesday.