Cooter said:Clinton didn't have fiscal responsibility he had a historic period of high revenue due to the tech boom. Without the tax cuts we would have been in bad shape after 9/11. The spending by this adminstration is deplorable and one of Bush's biggest failures.
joinsGary Whitta said:
Again: Anything good that happens while a Democrat is President is credited to the previous Republican President. Anything bad that happens while a Republican is President is the fault of the previous Democrat President.reilo said:Yeah, I forget the old republican line:
"The democrat didn't do anything to bring this country fiscal responsibility and a good economy. It was all by accident! He's a tax and spend liberal! How could he have?!"
relio said:Yeah, I forget the old republican line:
"The democrat didn't do anything to bring this country fiscal responsibility and a good economy. It was all by accident! He's a tax and spend liberal! How could he have?!"
Gary Whitta said:
Trurl said:If McCain wins a 2012 election between Hillary and Palin seems really likely. Kind of incredible.
Three of the four now-official candidates on the major-party presidential tickets are scheduled to sit down for questions: Democrat Barack Obama on ABC's "This Week," his running mate, Joe Biden, on NBC's "Meet the Press" and Republican John McCain on CBS' "Face the Nation."
Appearing on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" show, [top McCain aide Rick] Davis said, "I'd never commit to anything in the future. ... Our strategy is in our hands, not the media's. We're going to do what's in our best interests to try to win the election. If we think going on TV news shows are [sic] in our best interests, we'll do it. If we don't, we won't."
Chiggs said:Of course not. But would have 9/11 still occured? Would Katrina still have wrecked New Orleans? Bush was a shitty President, but he also had a lot of shitty things happen during his 8 years.
Cooter said:I give him credit for not going crazy but he really couldn't with a Rep congress. Was I wrong about the huge influx of revenue to the feds during Clinton's administration?
Cheebs said:Hillary would indeed be a lock in 2012. The problems left by Bush are extensive to say the least, it would take a lot of cooperation with the congress to get much done, hell even then it'd be hard. A stronger dem congress bitter about the loss of Obama would likely be very resistant to the McCain white house leaving things likely in the same place as they are right now for Hillary to swoop in in 2012.
2012 would thus be about how change backfired and the dems need the Clintons again to redeem them.
Cooter said:Is it hard to believe that tax cuts stimulate and strengthen an economy? Is it that hard to grasp?
reilo said:Five things that would have been different under Gore and would have made a huge difference:
1) No Iraq war
2) Greenspan would not have been allowed to run like a chicken with his head cut off and cut the Fed rates to sub 2%, in combination with...
3) ... there would have never been a rapid deregulation of the housing market, which is directly affecting our economy in ways not seen since the Great Depression
4) The DOJ would not be run by religious fanatics from Messiah College
5) Gore's passion for the environment and understanding of needing a great infrastructure to be successful would have at least moved us a few steps forward and not fifteen steps backwards like the Bush administration
And shit, I'll throw in a bonus sixth option:
6) The republican congress would not have been allowed to do whatever they fuck they wanted
Cooter said:You're letting this get to you. No matter who wins nothing is going to change. It will be business as usual. There are some differences between the two parties but the important issues will continue to go unaddressed.
Things like immigration, national debt, and the continuing SS disaster will still remain.
"The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little."
The wealthiest 1% of the population doubled their share of the pie in just 15 years. In 1973, CEOs earned 45 times the pay of an average employee (about twice the multipler in Japan); today it's 500 times.
Thirty years ago, managers accepted that they operated as much for their workers, consumers, and neighbors as for themselves. Some economists (notably Michael Jensen and William Meckling) decided that the only stakeholders that mattered were the stock owners-- and that management would be more accountable if they were given massive amounts of stock. Not surprisingly, CEOs managed to get the stock without the accountability-- they're obscenely well paid whether the company does well or it tanks-- and the obsession with stock price led to mass layoffs, short-term thinking, and the financial dishonesty at WorldCom, Enron, Adelphia, HealthSouth, and elsewhere.
The nature of our economic system has changed in the last quarter-century, and people haven't understood it yet. People over 30 or so grew up in an environment where the rich got more, but everyone prospered. When productivity went up, the rich got richer-- we're not goddamn communists, after all-- but everybody's income increased.
If you were part of the World War II generation, the reality was that you had access to subsidized education and housing, you lived better every year, and you were almost unimaginably better off than your parents.
We were a middle-class nation, perhaps the first nation in history where the majority of the people were comfortable. This infuriated the communists (this wasn't supposed to happen). The primeval libertarians who cranky about it as well, but the rich had little reason to complain-- they were better off than ever before, too.
Conservatives-- nurtured by libertarian ideas-- have managed to change all that. When productivity rises, the rich now keep the gains; the middle class barely stays where it is; the poor get poorer. We have a ways to go before we become a Third World country, but the model is clear. The goal is an impoverished majority, and a super-rich minority with no effective limitations on its power or earnings. We'll exchange the prosperity of 1950s America for that of 1980s Brazil.
Atrus said:Marcus Aurelius' reign was filled with war, natural disasters, outbreaks of plague and secessionists.
So why is he known as the last of the 5 great emperors of Rome while Bush one of the worst? Why did people try to closely associate with him after his reign (and death) while people are repulsed by Bush?
The difference is that in spite of the disasters to incur during his reign Marcus Aurelius was himself not one of them. When disasters broke out, he served the people in a way many dictators of Rome never desired to do.
That bad things happen is not enough to justify failures of leadership. If anything, thats the time when regular leaders achieve greatness.
Manmademan said:clinton had a democratic congress for half of his administration, FYI.
Tamanon said:Also, I doubt the Patriot act.
I am curious about your thoughts on this because you said Obama should ignore Palin:Incognito said:2012 Republican primary frontrunners:
Palin, Jindal, Huckabee, and Romney.
:lol
This thinking doesn't make a whole lot of sense. Build a road capable of transporting the military quickly to any point in the country isn't exactly a new idea. It makes a good deal of sense. Just because Hitler happened to implement one sensible idea, it must now never be used again?reilo said:He's referring to Hitler's idea with the autobahn, which was primarily used for swift transportation of his military units. Yeah, let's do what the most evil son of a bitch in the history of this world wanted to do!
Incognito said:2012 Republican primary frontrunners:
Palin, Jindal, Huckabee, and Romney.
:lol
Then why not vote for Obama?Cooter said:You're letting this get to you. No matter who wins nothing is going to change. It will be business as usual. There are some differences between the two parties but the important issues will continue to go unaddressed.
Things like immigration, national debt, and the continuing SS disaster will still remain.
Freshmaker said:This thinking doesn't make a whole lot of sense. Build a road capable of transporting the military quickly to any point in the country isn't exactly a new idea. It makes a good deal of sense. Just because Hitler happened to implement one sensible idea, it must now never be used again?
Trains running on time? Oh nOES! Police state! :lol
Cheebs said:I am curious about your thoughts on this because you said Obama should ignore Palin:
http://thepage.time.com/2008/09/06/obama-to-palin-you-cant-just-make-stuff-up/
No, just agreeing with you. Text > "." IMO.reilo said:The hell? Are you arguing with me? Because that was my entire point.
Hitler wanted to use the autobahn for military use, and I am saying that we should use it for civilian purposes!
Cheebs said:I am curious about your thoughts on this because you said Obama should ignore Palin:
http://thepage.time.com/2008/09/06/obama-to-palin-you-cant-just-make-stuff-up/
McCain Camp response said:Barack Obama has requested the equivalent of one million dollars in new pork barrel spending for every working day hes been in the U.S Senate, while John McCain has never once asked for an earmark, and Governor Palin has vetoed hundreds of millions in government spending including killing the infamous bridge to nowhere. Just like so many other issues Barack Obama is all talk, has no record to back it up and isnt ready to make change.
Cooter said:I have no doubt in my mind the Clinton's are pulling for an Obama loss. If not she is pretty much screwed with an Obama re-election.
Stoney Mason said:You can't make this shit up.
bob_arctor said:He is ignoring the side-show of her personal life and attacking her on what she actually said in a speech watched by millions by bringing up her record. That's exactly how he should attack her. He's also on record as stating that she will be treated like any other political opponent regardless of gender. So this is m.o is par the course for his campaign.
Speaking of par the course:
Really wonder why they keep referring to the Bridge to Nowhere but then I remember they are the GOP and don't give a fuck about reality.
AniHawk said:Didn't Palin uh... keep all the money she received for the Bridge to Nowhere?
Atrus said:Marcus Aurelius' reign was filled with war, natural disasters, outbreaks of plague and secessionists.
So why is he known as the last of the 5 great emperors of Rome while Bush one of the worst? Why did people try to closely associate with him after his reign (and death) while people are repulsed by Bush?
The difference is that in spite of the disasters to incur during his reign Marcus Aurelius was himself not one of them. When disasters broke out, he served the people in a way many dictators of Rome never desired to do.
That bad things happen is not enough to justify failures of leadership. If anything, thats the time when regular leaders achieve greatness.
Freshmaker said:This thinking doesn't make a whole lot of sense. Build a road capable of transporting the military quickly to any point in the country isn't exactly a new idea. It makes a good deal of sense. Just because Hitler happened to implement one sensible idea, it must now never be used again?
Trains running on time? Oh nOES! Police state! :lol
MassiveAttack said:Roland Martin comes close to using the F-bomb to describe Palin's speech on CNN:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KGWthR7vdfI
Let us also not forget the fact that if Obama loses Hillary will take a big part of the blame and her political career is over. She needs Obama to win.Tyrone Slothrop said:yeah that's why she's stumping for him like crazy.troll?
no, but really this so stupid. i know painting hillary as some megalomaniac who'll step on babies to get to the white house adheres to your predisposed opinion of her, and it makes for good political theater. but it's grounded in no reality whatsoever
Stoney Mason said:I'll even use the Republican friendly heritage foundation gifs as a source btw.
This includes defense which is the proper way to look at it.
Change in Average Revenue and Spending, by Administration
![]()
Now this takes out defense and is only non-defense spending growth which the republicans always like to pretend is the only way you should measure government spending.
Average Annual Real Growth of Non-Defense Federal Outlays in Inflation-Adjusted 2000 Dollars
![]()
So in both cases Clinton was far better in this regard than what came before and after him. And better than Reagan when you include military spending. Yet the democrats are the fiscally irresponsible party. You can't make this shit up. If a Democrat had ran this sort of government that Bush has run that's all you would be hearing about.
laserbeam said:People seem to downplay the fact that the US Government made our highways that are cross country in the exact same fashion as Hitler. Cross Country movement of massive amounts of military hardware was its intention.
Obviously the People benefit from it but that was not its primary goal. Local highways are designed primarily for civilians but even then they make sure they are large enough for Military forces.
reilo said:Yeah, so, the US government's goal to build highways was in case that New York needed to attack Delaware?
Get that shit out of here.
AniHawk said:I thought the original goal of freeways (that connect the country) was to create a way to transport tanks and the like easily in the case of a Russian attack during the Cold War.
Trurl said:I just saved both graphs. They are all the more sweet coming from the Heritage Foundation. Finally that group is good for something.:lol
Attack, invasion, same thing.reilo said:And from where would the Russians have attacked exactly?
If Obama loses, I'm done with Democrats. No moving to Canada or anything like that but, coupled with the Kerry loss, the only lesson I think the Democrats will learn is you have to fight sleazy to win. And with Hillary Clinton as the inevitable nominee, that's the kind of campaign the Democrats would run.PhoenixDark said:Which is why I've done my absolute best to keep expectations/hope down on my side; hell if Obama wins in November I won't believe it until he's officially sworn in. An Obama loss would be devastating no matter what though, and really ensure that things stay the exact same for years.
It'll mean no more 50 state strategy, no more shunning lobbyists, no more "change"/populism, etc.
PhoenixDark said:Can someone explain the second graph to me? My brain is dead right now
PhoenixDark said:Can someone explain the second graph to me? My brain is dead right now
The interstate system is a result of the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act of 1956. It championed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who was influenced by his experiences in 1919 as a young soldier crossing the country (following the route of the Lincoln Highway) and his appreciation of the German autobahn network as a necessary component of a national defense system.AniHawk said:I thought the original goal of freeways (that connect the country) was to create a way to transport tanks and the like easily in the case of a Russian attack during the Cold War.