cartoon_soldier
Member
Anyway to access the Boston Globe story in full?
It has nothing to do with MMT.
Please read my post again more carefully, if you still think I'm making a case for unlimited spending or that the amount of government spending doesn't matter (which again, I'm pretty sure no MMT proponent actually suggests, but I'm neither an MMT-er nor an expert on the subject), let me know and I'll give it another stab.
http://www.boston.com/news/politics...ident-obama/2QWkUB9pJgVIi1mAcIhQjL/story.html
Hilarious. What did they think the offices and staff were used for? Obama gift giveaway parties or something?
“He wanted to be president less than anyone I’ve met in my life. He had no desire to . . . run,” said Tagg, who worked with his mother, Ann, to persuade his father to seek the presidency.
No, my (I thought stated but apparently) unstated premise is that we need to do a cost benefit analysis of each government program, and again, it's perfectly fine to consider the fiscal impact there (in fact, I think it's required).Well I'm not sure what you are saying. I guess your unstated premise is that we need even larger tax hikes than just the expiration of the Bush tax cuts? I don't think that is in the realm of the current political reality.
No, my (I thought stated but apparently) unstated premise is that we need to do a cost benefit analysis of each government program, and again, it's perfectly fine to consider the fiscal impact there (in fact, I think it's required).
What I don't accept is that there's is this overriding meta imperative for "making cuts" or whatever.
And I'm no just being pedantic here, that rhetoric have been deliberately used to obfuscate the implications of policy positions, and I don't think we should participate in that game.
I think I get what you're saying. To bring up a concrete example, there's the raising of medicare eligibility age. Your premise is that we should not do that, because it benefits us more as a society. By raising it, it may cost the government less, but it would cost us the citizens more. Thus, the benefit of the age as it is now, or even lowering it is worth its cost, because otherwise it would cost more. If you accept the premise, though, that "we can't afford it" and thus have to cut things, then perhaps this could be on the chopping block, because, again, "we can't afford it."
We should never start the conversation by what can we afford to do, in other words. We should start it with "What programs could we do that would benefit us the most?" and then "fund" it accordingly. After all, if it's a benefit, it should be funded.
By contrast, I would like them to run more. I want them to run every Republican presidential campaign for the next 40 years.Did they think Obama was playing around in 2008 and accidentally won? How does a campaign not understand basic shit like that; none of them had experience running a local election? This is the type of thing that would have been obvious early to an old campaign vet. You can just imagine the scene from the upcoming adaption where dramatic music and a montage of voter contact scenes quickly flash, then the rugged Romney campaign guy drops his scotch and says "they're running a local campaign...on a national level. Get me the governor on the phone." That will be in Game Change 2, mark my words.
These guys better not run another campaign ever again.
And yet he's offering social security cuts.Politico narrative buildingPolitico: Why Obama isn't caving
Which probably won't be in any final offer, now that it's become clear Boehner will need huge Democratic support to pass anything. Hopefully.And yet he's offering social security cuts.Politico narrative building
Playing M:TG was the best thing that ever happened to me. So much experience with Central Banking that I didn't realize I was getting.For the record, MMT is not something that "one is." It is the name given to an empirical description of the monetary system. So, for example, when I say "We have unlimited amounts of money, which is a mere accounting unit," I am not "being an MMTer," I am merely describing the empirical world. Abstract accounting units are not empirically finite. To worry that we are running out of money is like worrying that the NFL scoreboard operator might run out of points if the teams keep scoring. MMT is great precisely because it focuses its attention on the underlying real things to which the social constructs relate rather than on the constructs alone.
It is unfortunate that we ever had to represent social abstractions like money physically, i.e., paper money, because it tricks people into believing that money itself is a thing that is finite and requires conservation. Hence the complaint always turning to "printing money." The sooner we get rid of paper currency and coins the better. It will help people to better understand the nature of money when it ceases being represented in physical form at all.
Playing M:TG was the best thing that ever happened to me. So much experience with Central Banking that I didn't realize I was getting.
That's what Tagg Romney, Mitt's oldest son, told the Boston Globe for its big post-mortem on his father's failed presidential bid published on Sunday.
He wanted to be president less than anyone Ive met in my life," Tagg Romney told the paper. "He had no desire to ... run. If he could have found someone else to take his place ... he would have been ecstatic to step aside.
Riiiight.Maybe I missed this being discussed, but Lolz at Mittens and his shitty family:
Mitt Romney had no desire to run, says Tagg Romney
Such fucking pathetic losers
Politico: Why Obama isn't caving
President Barack Obamas stiffening resolve during the fight over the fiscal cliff can be traced directly to the lessons he drew from his hard-won triumph of the 2012 campaign.
Maybe I missed this being discussed, but Lolz at Mittens and his shitty family:
Mitt Romney had no desire to run, says Tagg Romney
Such fucking pathetic losers
Riiiight.
Maybe Ann Romney should have taken his place. She seemed to have wanted it more.
I cannot wait for the next generation loser from that shitty family to fail at winning the biggest political office as well. It's like an anti-dynasty.
Tagg ur it.
Playing M:TG was the best thing that ever happened to me. So much experience with Central Banking that I didn't realize I was getting.
The same thing happened with me, only it was M:TG and computer programming. Not just the stack but the discrete nature of events.
Besides the Bank's money, the Bank holds the Title Deeds, and the houses and hotels prior to purchase by the players. The Bank pays salaries and bonuses. It sells and auctions properties and hands out the proper Title Deed cards when purchased by a player, it also sells houses and hotels to the players and loans money when required on mortgages.
The Bank collects all taxes, fines, loans and interest, and the price of all properties which it sells and auctions. The Bank "never goes broke." If the Bank runs out of money, the Banker may issue as much as needed by writing on any ordinary paper.
What a gutless family. They all deserve one another.Maybe I missed this being discussed, but Lolz at Mittens and his shitty family:
Mitt Romney had no desire to run, says Tagg Romney
Such fucking pathetic losers
M:TG's very nature makes the creator (WoTC/Hasbro) a central banker because they control the capital supply necessary to build decks with. Learning to understand why this (http://blacklotusproject.com/cards/Zendikar/Scalding+Tarn/) happens was a huge help to grasping economic concepts.Games are great for understanding money because the point systems they employ are no different from money. Points are accounting units for the game. Money is just the "point" tally for society's economic game. In fact, I wish we called them points, because it would make money's nature more transparent. I accumulated 1,500 points from my work this week!
In Monopoly, for instance, the game comes with a set amount of "printed" money. But the game is actually not bound by this money supply. Monopoly rules dictate that when the printed money supply is gone, the banker simply starts accounting for it with pencil and paper (or "prints" more of it). In short, the board instructs that when their economy has grown so much as to outstrip the money supply, additional money will be created:
http://www.hasbro.com/common/instruct/00009.pdf (PDF)
Like the bank in Monopoly, the US government never goes broke and may issue as much as needed. Any video game that has a point system works the same way. It can only be point-constrained if it is programmed to be. So we never need to worry about not having enough money, which we can create and destroy at will, but we should always be asking how much money ought to exist at any given time. And most people believe that this is the amount of money that generates full employment without inflation, which may well change over time. (It will certainly and typically need to increase over time as the population increases and economy grows, but it is possible it would have to decrease, too, if, say, a disaster happens that substantially reduces the real productive capacity of the economy.)
Any video game that has a point system works the same way. It can only be point-constrained if it is programmed to be.
For the record, MMT is not something that "one is." It is the name given to an empirical description of the monetary system. So, for example, when I say "We have unlimited amounts of money, which is a mere accounting unit," I am not "being an MMTer," I am merely describing the empirical world. Abstract accounting units are not empirically finite. To worry that we are running out of money is like worrying that the NFL scoreboard operator might run out of points if the teams keep scoring. MMT is great precisely because it focuses its attention on the underlying real things to which the social constructs relate rather than on the constructs alone.
It is unfortunate that we ever had to represent social abstractions like money physically, i.e., paper money, because it tricks people into believing that money itself is a thing that is finite and requires conservation. Hence the complaint always turning to "printing money." The sooner we get rid of paper currency and coins the better. It will help people to better understand the nature of money when it ceases being represented in physical form at all.
What happens to the psychology of people during the transition process to a moneyless society? Is there any research on this kind of thing? Some people spend more on a credit card for example because they don't feel like they're losing something the way you 'feel' like you're losing if you let go out a bunch of 20 dollar bills.
Would a moneyless society in your view be based on something like credit cards or something like Marxian wage slips that can only be used once? I don't know anything about this sort of thing I'm just interested.
Would that blog be a good starting place to understand how modern day economies function? (and alternatives or fixes to certain problems?) What you say always makes a lot of sense to me but I know there are people who think you're crazy and I'd like to know what their arguments are as well.
In hindsight, Obama was practically handed a second term.
Well, the funny thing about this example is that this isn't true -- any video game will have a point limit by default because of the memory constraints on number formats, although it is accurate to say that they could be programmed not to have such a limit.* Think of it as a limit to point supply caused by legacy approaches to game programming. Kind of like a zero lower bound.
* okay, technically even this isn't true, but either way.
What happens to the psychology of people during the transition process to a moneyless society? Is there any research on this kind of thing? Some people spend more on a credit card for example because they don't feel like they're losing something the way you 'feel' like you're losing if you let go out a bunch of 20 dollar bills.
Would a moneyless society in your view be based on something like credit cards or something like Marxian wage slips that can only be used once? I don't know anything about this sort of thing I'm just interested.
Would that blog be a good starting place to understand how modern day economies function? (and alternatives or fixes to certain problems?) What you say always makes a lot of sense to me but I know there are people who think you're crazy and I'd like to know what their arguments are as well.
Well, the funny thing about this example is that this isn't true -- any video game will have a point limit by default because of the memory constraints on number formats, although it is accurate to say that they could be programmed not to have such a limit.* Think of it as a limit to point supply caused by legacy approaches to game programming. Kind of like a zero lower bound.
* okay, technically even this isn't true, but either way.
Maybe I missed this being discussed, but Lolz at Mittens and his shitty family:
Mitt Romney had no desire to run, says Tagg Romney
Such fucking pathetic losers
I would laugh so hard if Paul Ryan was Speaker. I think it'll be Cantor though, which sucks because the dude is insufferable and I can't stand his voice. Every word out of that man's mouth makes me want to punch a baby.
The series centers on William Johnson (Christopher B. Duncan), who attempts to balance his family life with his wife Katherine (Kellita Smith) and their two sons and two daughters as they adjust to living in the White House, while maintaining his duties as the second African-American and 45th overall President of the United States. William, in turn, also has to deal with other family members, including his boisterous sister-in-law Pauletta (Jackée Harry) and William's own father Alvin (John Witherspoon), who despite his constant bickering with Pauletta, will sometimes partner together with her for various schemes.
United States killscreen coming up
Killscreen coming up you guys
While elections were going on, we missed this little gem:
The First Family:
Why/how in the world are in-laws and parents going to feature in a show about the president? Are they going to move in? This show is going to be really stereotyped, isn't it?
The T in MMT is apt. It's a model of a monetary system and certain stipulations, but it is by no means the only one nor is it uncontested. It may or may not prove to be the strongest model, but "empirical" does not mean "correct".For the record, MMT is not something that "one is." It is the name given to an empirical description of the monetary system.
The T in MMT is apt. It's a model of a monetary system and certain stipulations, but it is by no means the only one nor is it uncontested. It may or may not prove to be the strongest model, but "empirical" does not mean "correct".
While elections were going on, we missed this little gem:
The First Family
Why do sitcoms always add so many unnecessary children in their shows? Should have just kept it at two.
3 is the Hollywood minimum, surely? Teen to cover "teen issues and situations", pre-teen to cover "pre-teen issues and situations", and the smart mouth annoying young one.
And a baby to introduce when ratings slip.
3 is the Hollywood minimum, surely? Teen to cover "teen issues and situations", pre-teen to cover "pre-teen issues and situations", and the smart mouth annoying young one.
And a baby to introduce when ratings slip.
It just wastes time and leaves one child underdeveloped character wise, especially when the kids aren't the focus of the show, i.e. Meg from Family Guy. Should just have the teen and a younger child.
Did this become the Modern Family OT?