So you think that you should come from a wealthy enough background to pay for college out of pocket, work a shitty minimum wage job for 20 hours a week and magically pay for thousands in tuition in addition to living expenses, or rely entirely on scholarships, otherwise you don't get to go to college?
I'm not saying they shouldn't be able to take out loans but there should be some control with this.
Yep, heterosexual privilege.
I think that even on economic policies there are many fundamental differences. Banks though, are where the two come closest, you're right. There's just no support for big changes and everything is largely cosmetic.You're right I forgot the social aspect of politics. Though when you look at Occupy Wall street it was virtually solely focused on the economic area.
This is interesting.Without any context, sure, that's fair, but isn't that kind of viewpoint only reasonable when you have other options for going to school and you chose to take out a loan? A lot of kids take out student loans because they have to, because if they want a better live they have to take out a loan.
My wife and I will have more in student loan debt than I'd like to admit publicly when we're both done with graduate school, but we still agreed to take out a loan. Context or not, regardless of circumstance, you agreed to pay back a loan. It's a horrifically shitty system, but you should still pay your debts because you knew the downsides going into it. Hoping to change how we finance higher education is fine, but wanting to absolve everyone of debt they've built up just because is unreasonable.
So you think that you should come from a wealthy enough background to pay for college out of pocket, work a shitty minimum wage job for 20 hours a week and magically pay for thousands in tuition in addition to living expenses, or rely entirely on scholarships, otherwise you don't get to go to college?
This is interesting.
I think we've just pointed out the two conflicting things that show we need to completely overhaul the system and socialize it.
Basically with the system we have now you can either allow anyone to get a loan and thus allow poorer people to be able to get higher education, but you face the risk that you're putting an enormous burden on them that might potentially ruin a lot of lives. Alternatively, you can regulate who's taking out those loans and mitigate the bad effects, because people who won't be able to pay it won't be taking out loans... but then this means that those from poorer background won't be getting that leg up.
Or you could go the third way and just socialize the system like other countries have done. Pay for schooling for everyone. The fact is that earlier on in our country's life you only needed a high school diploma to get into the middle class and earn a working wage. Essentially all your schooling you needed was paid for by society at large, and that's a good thing. College was extra, and that's fine. Now that is not the case. You need a college degree. Thus, we need to go back to that and make sure all the schooling that you realistically need is provided for by society. It does us all good to do this. We get nothing by sticking with the shitty either or we're on right now.
True.College diploma is a must now. There is no choice here, really, besides a choice of possibly have a better life and failure.
Only kind of related to this point, but I'll say it anyway. Setting aside that pro-life may or may not be a legitimate viewpoint, the Pro-Life Movement in America is far more about controlling women's sex lives than it is about abortions.
Indeed. That's what you get when you try to force/demand abstinence in this day and age. When I think of these people I always remember the fact that my grandparents got married at an age where I was still watching cartoons all weekend. People got married so incredibly early in the old days, abstinence wasn't even a fucking issue! By the time you even really start being into the other sex and start thinking about having sex you're almost at an age to get married lol. Nowadays plenty of people don't get married until they've been to college and have a job. Who's going to wait until 30 to get their fuck on!They should be the number one advocates of birth control, not its number one enemy.
I was pretty much cut off from the estate, so to speak.Personally, I'm not wealthy. But I've been saving for my kids college every month since they turned 1 year old. But they will be in the vast minority of their peers.
Personally, I'm not wealthy. But I've been saving for my kids college every month since they turned 1 year old. But they will be in the vast minority of their peers.
There should never be a legitimate market for certain drugs like cocaine and heroin.
This is a big problem.That's the kind of shitty cycle this stuff creates. I want to help my children, but likely won't be able to, because I'll still be busy trying to pay for the help my own parents couldn't give me, etc.
Not the same molecule.Here I have to disagree with you. There already IS a legitimate market for heroin, it's called "oxycontin" and it's available via prescription.
There's a black market for ivory, but that doesn't mean we should just let elephants get killed off so there isn't a black market anymore.on top of that, you still create a significant black market for this (since people are still going to demand the product, but can't find it, since legally selling it is banned) and this will continue to fuel local gangs, mexican cartels, etc and so on. Regulating the substances and selling them through state run institutions (much like PA does for alcohol) at a minimal profit margin destroys the incentive for black market distributors, and the primary source of funds for gangs and cartels vanishes overnight.
I think we can all agree that the education system in the United States is grade A garbage. This is the greatest problem this country faces that it seems like no one ever talks about.
Stagnating wage growth has a lot to due with the decline of unions. See: Canada.The fact that we have to pay for schooling of any kind I find ridiculous. Education is a human right. Personally though I think the college fiasco is ignoring a much bigger problem of the fact that there really aren't enough middle-class jobs that pay well. I mean hell bachelor's degrees are becoming less and less useful now. Imagine in the utopian society where nearly everyone has one. What's next? Masters? Doctors? Is everyone really gifted enough for that or at least can live up to that potential in an environment of parents having 40 hour work weeks? The middle class has had it rough as we got to the latter part of transferring to an industrial economy to a service one.
Abortion is the only one I can think of right now. No matter how you slice it, you're basically killing something that was (most likely) going to become a human being. But I wouldn't vote based on it and if I were a deciding supreme court justice or whatever, I wouldn't vote to ban it. Though I guess that's perhaps not really ''taking a conservative stance''. If you meant to imply that it's something you would vote for in a conservative way, if you were in some kind of position of power, like say supreme court justice.
I think the hardest part about abortion is properly defining when's something is a life and when something isn't. Biologically, there's really no difference between a baby in the womb a week before birth and a baby right after birth. Only a month into pregnancy? Huge difference.Oh, I completely agree, I should've been more specific. The movement in America is largely made up of complete hypocrites. They should be the number one advocates of birth control, not its number one enemy. I understand the view that life begins before birth though.
Not the same molecule.
There's a black market for ivory, but that doesn't mean we should just let elephants get killed off so there isn't a black market anymore.
I think the hardest part about abortion is properly defining when's something is a life and when something isn't. Biologically, there's really no difference between a baby in the womb a week before birth and a baby right after birth. Only a month into pregnancy? Huge difference.
Lots of crimes are the result of various addictions to incredibly damaging and addictive drugs. There are external victims too.The ivory black market has the downside of oh, torturing and needlessly killing endangered animals. drug abuse only hurts the user. It's not anywhere near equivalent. Come on man, you're better than this.
Lots of crimes are the result of various addictions to incredibly damaging and addictive drugs. There are external victims too.
Rather than reducing crime, Prohibition had transformed the cities into battlegrounds between opposing bootlegging gangs. In a study of over 30 major U.S cities during the prohibition years of 1920 and 1921, the number of crimes increased by 24%. Additionally, theft and burglaries increased by 9%, homicide by 12.7%, assaults and battery rose by 13%, drug addiction by 44.6% and police department costs rose by 11.4%. This was largely the result of “black-market violence” as well as the diverting of law enforcement resources elsewhere. Despite the hope of the prohibitionist movement that the outlawing of alcohol would reduce crime, the reality was that the Volstead Act led to higher crime rates than were experienced prior to prohibition and the establishment of a black market dominated by criminal organizations.[69]
Why are you going off on a tangent? You expect me to think that since two different opiates are abused that I shouldn't worry as much as if only one was?I don't see how this is relevant. Crack isn't "the same molecule" as powder cocaine either, as it's usually cut with all kinds of additional nonsense. Functionally, it's the same thing. Oxy isn't the "same molecule" as heroin, but the effect is largely the same when you crush it and snort it. One can even argue that oxycontin abuse is a much, much larger problem than heroin is at this point, and it's totally legal to buy.
Absolutely false. I'm not even going to bother explaining why.The ivory black market has the downside of oh, torturing and needlessly killing endangered animals. drug abuse only hurts the user. It's not anywhere near equivalent. Come on man, you're better than this.
Alcohol has the key distinction of being especially entrenched in western society. The mere fact it was made illegal does not explain the impacts of Prohibition by itself.Let's look back at when alcohol was illegal.
drug abuse only hurts the user.
Why are you going off on a tangent? You expect me to think that since two different opiates are abused that I shouldn't worry as much as if only one was?
Absolutely false. I'm not even going to bother explaining why.
Alcohol has the key distinction of being especially entrenched in western society. The mere fact it was made illegal does not explain the impacts of Prohibition by itself.
Legalizing drugs that could be considered equal to alcohol is fine, but there's a whole list of drugs that cannot be considered equal in any way whatsoever and shouldn't be legal. The war on drugs is bad because it's a war on all drugs.we can see the exact same effect as a result of the war on drugs, most notably in the inner cities. It's a long conversation and worth having, but I don't think I could do it justice in the limited time I have to post this afternoon.
Legalizing/Decriminalizing these things will do a lot more to lower and eliminate crime than keeping it illegal will. For the record, i'm also for legalizing and regulating prostitution, and eliminating the age to buy tobacco and alcohol entirely.
Actually, it's a discussion rooted in chemistry so handwaving this part isn't a good idea.replying that "it's not the same molecule!" is entirely irrelevant when we're in a conversation about drug abuse.
Stopped reading. I'm done here.not going to bother? or can't?
Actually, it's a discussion rooted in chemistry so handwaving this part isn't a good idea.
Stopped reading. I'm done here.
Legalizing drugs that could be considered equal to alcohol is fine, but there's a whole list of drugs that cannot be considered equal in any way whatsoever and shouldn't be legal. The war on drugs is bad because it's a war on all drugs.
So you think that you should come from a wealthy enough background to pay for college out of pocket, work a shitty minimum wage job for 20 hours a week and magically pay for thousands in tuition in addition to living expenses, or rely entirely on scholarships, otherwise you don't get to go to college?
It is absolutely very damaging and the fact that it's so entrenched in society - to the point that if you don't drink you can't even go to parties (according to Gaf!) and are looked at weirdly - is worrying. The question of what is more damaging and how damaging, but also how many users suffer from the most damaging effects should be considered before we can determine which drugs can or can't be ''accepted''.Now we're talking about what's "equivalent" to alcohol. There's a lot of different ways you could do this, but the effect of alcoholism on the human body is far, far worse than the effect of cocaine addiction on the body. Cocaine withdrawal is just unpleasant. Alcohol withdrawal can kill you.
I think the prevalence of alcohol in society has done a lot to obscure just how damaging alcohol actually is to the body when used in excess. It's really, REALLY nasty.
I think we talk about how fucked up the U.S. educational system is all the time. We just don't do much about it. As usual, we have any number of studies that show what we're doing is counter-productive, and we do it anyway.
Of course, as a liberal, I think college tuition should be free to those who desire an education, while simultaneously setting up trade colleges for those who want to work in a trade. And I think your loans should be forgiven. I'd rather have you dumping your cash into the economy than sending it to a bank who's too afraid to loan it out.
It is absolutely very damaging and the fact that it's so entrenched in society - to the point that if you don't drink you can't even go to parties (according to Gaf!) and are looked at weirdly - is worrying. The question of what is more damaging and how damaging, but also how many users suffer from the most damaging effects should be considered before we can determine which drugs can or can't be ''accepted''.
WASHINGTON -- Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) did not rule out allocating the state's electoral votes proportionally Saturday.
"It's an interesting idea," he told a Newsmax interviewer at the National Review Institute Summit in Washington after speaking at a lunch. "I haven't committed one way or the other to it. For me, and I think any other state considering this, you should really look at not just the short-term but the long-term implications. Is it better or worse for the electorate?
Said Walker, "Some might argue that it would give more opportunity for candidates to jump in; others suggest it might reduce it."
"I think we have to very careful in changes like that. But I think it's worth looking at," he said.
A Huffington Post analysis showed that if the electoral college allocated its votes proportionally by congressional district, then former GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney would have won the 2012 election. In the 2012 election, Republicans retained a majority in the House but lost the House popular vote, thanks to gerrymandered districts in several states. Nebraska and Maine currently allocate one electoral vote to the winner of each congressional district and two to the winner statewide.
RNC Chairman Reince Priebus backs changing Wisconsin and other mostly blue states' electoral votes. Such a plan would likely give Republicans more electoral votes in national elections because blue states like Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan have substantially red districts. Walker has previously expressed interest in the idea.
Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R) came out against a similar plan percolating in his state's legislature Friday, with a spokeswoman saying the governor believes the state's system works "just fine."
I don't know, 2000 was pretty bad and you'd think it would have been enough to demonstrate that we have a semi-flawed method of running elections, but no one really gave a shit until it was too late.The good news is that it would probably only work once. Can you imagine Romney winning the presidency after losing the popular election by 5 million votes? The backlash would be enough to destroy the electoral college and probably get rid of gerrymandering at the same time.
There's an implicit social contract that states that you take out loans for college because you'll get a job and contribute to society afterwards. If there are no jobs, society has broken its social contract with you. Why should you have to start paying your loans if that's the case? I'm not talking about isolated instances, but the aggregate. When a significant percentage of college graduates can't find jobs after graduation, their society has failed them, and they should be absolved from their part in the implicit social contract.
The good news is that it would probably only work once. Can you imagine Romney winning the presidency after losing the popular election by 5 million votes? The backlash would be enough to destroy the electoral college and probably get rid of gerrymandering at the same time.
Volunteered on one and served as a party precinct chair (but never was asked to do anything because of that.)Great post Squirrel, thanks for the insight. Did you work on any campaigns last year?
I don't know, 2000 was pretty bad and you'd think it would have been enough to demonstrate that we have a semi-flawed method of running elections, but no one really gave a shit until it was too late.
PoliGAF is full of liberals (like myself). For you guys, is there an issue (if any) for which you take a conservative stance?
That's why I don't think we should as a whole properly define it. It's a scaling process from one extreme to the other. At one end it's almost nothing, and at the other it's a baby. That's a large reason why I think we should stay out of it politically. It should be up to the individual where they feel comfortable drawing the line given whatever circumstances they're faced with. Not only life in this process a sliding scale, but so are the circumstances leading up to such a choice.
Interesting question. I'm very socially liberal and I've become more liberal on other sorts of policies over time. For example, I'm comfortable with robust spending programs that have high returns on investment, like early childhood care and education. I think that "liberals" (which I'm assuming are people to the left of the Democratic party) get the economics wrong on some issues, however.
1) Free trade. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I remember a pretty strong liberal backlash against NAFTA, to the point where Obama sort of ran against it in the primaries before embracing it again. I'm a strong supporter of lowering barriers to trade, migration, and investment around the world, because such actions lead to higher national output and more choices for individuals. One of my biggest foreign policy gripes with the current administration is that they're not putting any real effort into reviving the DOHA trade talks.
2) Energy subsidies. I believe in climate change (and I think it's sad that that can't be taken as a given in this political climate), but I don't think that subsidizing currently existing technology is the way to address it. A carbon tax will do far more to realign the incentives of energy producers towards finding long term solutions. Subsidies, on the other hand, often go to things with little merit beyond their political popularity. See: "clean coal."
3) Immigration. Liberals are certainly better about this than Republicans, but I'm familiar with the sentiment that only "high skilled" workers should be let in while low skilled workers should be kept out. I disagree with this and think that more immigration for individuals of all skill levels should be encouraged. The demographic benefits of more immigration in general should be obvious when you consider our aging population, but in addition to that, an influx of immigrants of all skill levels doesn't significantly affect the wages or employment prospects of low skilled native workers.
I'm also not concerned about low skilled immigrants being "exploited" under less restrictive immigration policies. It would be much better for them to be legal citizens earning at least minimum wage than it is for the illegal immigrants currently filling the market's demand for low skilled labor to continue to earn far less than minimum wage.
4) Misc. tax policies: High corporate tax rates are not a good thing; there are far more effective ways to reduce inequality that are less damaging to economic activity. Sales taxes, however, are generally fine. You guys have already discussed this over the past few days, but sales taxes have relatively small dead weight losses and their regressive aspects can be addressed by targeted spending programs. Most of the countries that are more progressive than the United States use sales taxes to a larger degree than we do.
I think we talk about how fucked up the U.S. educational system is all the time. We just don't do much about it. As usual, we have any number of studies that show what we're doing is counter-productive, and we do it anyway.
Of course, as a liberal, I think college tuition should be free to those who desire an education, while simultaneously setting up trade colleges for those who want to work in a trade. And I think your loans should be forgiven. I'd rather have you dumping your cash into the economy than sending it to a bank who's too afraid to loan it out.
Our best bet is that Corbett is denied a second term in 2014 and we get a Democratic Governor who would not allow this kind of thing. Really hoping this happens. But I can't think of anyone who is strong enough to win. Maybe Nutter? If he can secure the turnout in Philly it's a done deal. Being that he is from there he should hopefully have no trouble. Onorato sucked so bad, being from Pittsburgh I knew that as soon as he won the primary, given the climate was bad for Dems to begin with, he didn't have a chance in hell.The problem is that gerrymandering has made it extremely difficult to remove the representatives that are FOR these things.
I live in PA, and even though democrats outnumber republicans here we're all concentrated into a small number of districts, and republicans control both houses. Backlash in blue or purple counties would have almost no effect on this.
maybe a backlash on such a wide scale that it resulted in a constitutional amendment might work, but i wouldn't hold my breath on that- we're simply too polarized.